SICKO Illegal Alien Raped Body of a Corpse for 30 Minutes!

Yellow crime scene tape with blurred lights background.

A five-year prison term for a subway corpse-sex assault forces a blunt question: what does justice look like when the unthinkable plays out on public transit?

Story Snapshot

  • A New York court sentenced Felix Rojas to five years in prison after a guilty plea tied to a subway assault on a deceased man [2].
  • A grand jury earlier indicted Rojas for attempted rape, sexual misconduct, and attempted grand larceny based on late-night R train conduct in April 2025 [3].
  • Police and media said security cameras captured the act and that the victim had died before the assault [4][5].
  • The case spotlights gaps between viral headlines, court records, and how transit safety policy handles extreme crimes.

A subway horror, an indictment, and a plea that changed the ending

Manhattan prosecutors said a grand jury indicted Felix Rojas for attempting to rape a physically helpless man, plus sexual misconduct and attempted grand larceny, after a late-night incident on a Manhattan-bound R train in April 2025 [3]. Police said security cameras recorded the assault and that the victim likely died before it began [4][5]. Months later, reports said Rojas pleaded guilty and received five years in prison and 15 years of supervised release. Those reports did not publish the exact plea count or transcript [2].

New York Post reporting said the assault lasted over thirty minutes, included theft from the victim’s pockets, and ended with Rojas pulling up the victim’s pants and sitting nearby before exit [1]. That description fueled outrage and demands for harsh punishment. Prosecutors emphasized the victim’s helpless state in the indictment release [3]. The mix of camera evidence, a crowded system, and a dead victim created a case that tested public patience with both crime and the process that judges must follow.

What five years signals about proof, pleas, and public safety

Sentences follow the conviction offense and the evidence that can stand up in court. The government’s indictment announcement laid out heavy charges [3], but the final sentence flowed from a later guilty plea to a specific count that media summaries did not name [2]. That gap matters. Confident justice rests on clear records, not just headlines. A five-year term with long supervision tells the public that courts punished the conduct, yet also that plea math and legal elements shaped the outcome, not only moral anger.

Conservative instincts prize order, clarity, and deterrence. Those aims start with facts. The case shows the need for fast, transparent court records: the plea allocution, the judgment, and the sentencing minutes. Without them, rumor fills the void. Camera evidence and a deceased victim sound open-and-shut, but death timing, statutes, and burdens of proof can narrow charges. Common sense says: post the records, show the basis, and let the sentence teach. Secrecy breeds doubt; sunlight builds trust.

The subway as a stage for rare but scarring crimes

Transit crime trends show a mixed picture. Researchers have noted rising assault rates over many years, even as some property crimes fell, and that risk concentrates in certain stations and late-night hours [20]. Police and city campaigns urge riders to report sex offenses and share evidence when safe to do so [21]. These steps likely boost reporting, which can inflate perceived prevalence. Yet even rare events can redefine fear. A corpse assault on a train hits dignity, safety, and civic pride all at once. It lingers.

Policy needs two gears: prevention and consequence. Prevention means targeted patrols on late-night lines, working cameras, and clear reporting channels riders actually use [21]. Consequence means swift arraignments, transparent plea deals, and sentences that match the facts on the record. When a prosecutor says the conduct was egregious [3], the court file should track that claim to the finish line. A city that expects respect underground must also respect the public’s right to see how justice was done.

Sources:

[1] Web – Illegal Alien Who Raped the Body of a Dead Man for 30 Minutes on NYC …

[2] Web – Illegal migrant who raped a corpse on NYC subway is slapped with …

[3] Web – US man gets five years jail for abusing corpse – Punch Newspapers

[4] Web – D.A. Bragg Announces Indictment Of Felix Rojas For Attempted …

[5] Web – Man charged with rape of corpse aboard NYC subway train

[20] YouTube – NYPD seeks suspect in attempted rape at Lower East Side subway …

[21] Web – Just the Facts on New York City Subway Crime

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