Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Women Are Speaking Out After Being Randomly Punched In The Face In NYC By Strangers

Screenshots of women who were victims of random attacks in NYC.
@halleykate/TikTok, @halley/TikTok, @olivia.brand/TikTok, @jill_burke/TikTok

Several women are speaking out on TikTok after getting randomly assaulted by a stranger in Manhattan—and now they believe the attacks could be related.

Women are urging other women to stay alert after a disturbing video compilation showed female victims who were physically assaulted, unprovoked, in New York by an unknown male assailant.

X (formerly Twitter) user @ymmayer posted a video featuring the four battered women who said they were recently "punched in the face" while minding their own business walking around the city.


Each victim recounted their attacks in their respective TikTok videos.

"This is so nuts," wrote the social media user, adding:

"There are a bunch of women getting punched in the face in nyc rn all over tiktok."
"I don’t know if it’s all the same guy some of the stories seem slightly different but some of them seem similar."

There was no confirmation of whether or not these violent acts were isolated events or if they were all perpetrated by the same attacker.

One of the women featured in the post was Influencer Halley Kate.

"I was literally just walking, and a man came up and punched me in the face," said Kate.

"OMG, it hurts so much, I can't even talk."

A second victim, Jill Burke, said she's lived in other major cities and was used to being vigilant of her surroundings.

She explained it was around 10 a.m. when her attacker in a "densely-populated" area, pointed a gun symbol at her using two fingers and within a split second slammed a bag filled with heavy objects onto her head, causing her to fall to the ground.

Luckily, witnesses called an ambulance. She suffered a concussion and bruising on her face.

"Even though there was nothing I could do to prevent this from happening, I think it's so important for women to always be prepared," said Burke.

@jill_burke

be safe out there ladies #nyc #assault

Olivia Brand said she was walking when a man approached her and said "Sorry" before punching her in the neck.

She explained in a follow-up video that the incident occurred around the Nolita and Soho neighborhoods of Manhattan.

Brand said she immediately filed a police report and went to urgent care following the attack.

In the comments section, Brand described the suspect as:

“A Black man, wearing a light grey hoodie, probably no taller than 5’10. Short-ish hair. I don’t remember much else about his face."


Mikayla Toninato, who is a student at Parsons School of Design, said she was physically attacked by a guy while she was walking home and texting.

Toninato said she immediately texted her friends after what happened and they wrote back sharing a story about another woman in New York who was punched in the face while she was looking at her phone.

“I don’t know if this is like a thing that’s going around, but I guess if you’re in New York right now and you’re walking while looking at your phone, maybe don’t do that," she said, adding:

"I guess we’re going to be super aware of our surroundings.”


@mikaylatoninato

@halley i quite literally feel your pain this was so insane


Stand-up comedian Sarah Harvard claimed she was also a victim of the random attacks, in addition to the four women she talked about in her Instagram post.

Harvard wrote in the caption:

"It seems like they all got attacked in downtown Manhattan in the LES/East Village/Union Square area."

She said she initially didn't file a police report because she thought her attack was an "isolated incident and that the police wouldn’t do much."

After realizing it appeared to be a recurring incident based on the viral clips, Harvard said she would be filing a report with the police and encouraged those who've been similarly attacked to do the same.


The disturbing incidents led to an online discussion regarding the normalized violence women are facing.




These women are not alone.

Female commuters in New York are now having second thoughts about taking the MTA.


Halley mentioned she was looking down at her smartphone and sending an email when she was attacked, which was a similar scenario for TikToker Taylor Paré.

Paré said in a TikTok clip:

"Three different videos of girls getting punched in the face for being on their phones in New York. What's going on?"
"It reminded me of last year when I got punched in the face because I was on my phone in Union Square."
"And you don't see it coming, and all of a sudden you just think to yourself, what just happened."
@paretay

#nyc #storytime #unhinged #fyp


One of the commenters on the thread pointed out how women are the only ones being attacked in New York, "Yet I haven’t heard one dude being punched for being on his phone."

"It’s ridiculous how many men just buck up to women and women alone," wrote the user.

The NYPD has yet to respond to inquiries regarding the attacks.

In the meantime, ladies, continue staying vigilant and aware of your surroundings while going about your day, just in case there is anyone looking to cause trouble.

More from Trending

Screenshots from ​@Parksyyyyy's TikTok video
@Parksyyyyy/TikTok

Family Called Out For Pranking Family Member's New Fiancée Into Thinking They Run A 10k Every Thanksgiving

Most of us have been in a serious enough relationship that we had the chance to meet our partner's siblings, parents, and possibly other family members.

We can all attest to how nerve-wracking that moment was and the pressure we inevitably felt to impress our partner's family and try to "fit in."

Keep ReadingShow less
Radoslaw Sikorski; Elon Musk
Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu via Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Poland's Deputy Prime Minister Just Epically Ripped Elon Musk After Musk Called To 'Abolish The EU'

Billionaire Elon Musk was mocked by Polish Deputy Prime Minister Radosław Sikorski after Musk called for the European Union to be abolished.

Musk spoke out after an EU decision to penalize X with a €120 million fine (about $140 million) over what regulators described as a misleading use of blue checkmarks and insufficient transparency in the platform’s advertising database.

Keep ReadingShow less
Miss Harris in season 5 of "Stranger Things"
Netflix

'Stranger Things' Creator Shares Sweet Connection To Actor Who Plays Teacher In Final Season

The fifth and final season of Netflix's blockbuster Stranger Things dropped its first four episodes (Volume One) over Thanksgiving weekend, just in time for people to digest from their Turkey dinners.

The hugely popular sci-fi show launched its final season with record viewership. Over the course of Stranger Things' five seasons, several notable actors have made appearances alongside the main cast, including Sean Astin, Matthew Modine, and Paul Reiser.

Keep ReadingShow less
Tim Allen in 'The Santa Clauses'
Disney

Conservative Tries To Claim Disney+ Show Is Somehow Satanic Due To Joke—And Gets Instantly Fact-Checked

It's the holidays again, which of course means the yearly tradition of Christians having a meltdown about supposedly being persecuted by the existence of non-Jesusy Christmas stuff is back with a vengeance.

But the latest flap online is really a doozy in its audacity both because it's incredibly dumb and also a lie, obviously posted as a purposeful attempt to get attention.

Keep ReadingShow less
Immigration and Customs Enforcement badge; nativity scene outside a church
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images; John Nordell/Getty Images

Massachusetts Catholic Church Angers Conservatives With Its Brutal ICE-Themed Nativity Scene

The Christian Bible teaches that the Holy Family—Joseph, Mary, and Jesus—were residents of the Herodian ruled Nazareth, Galilee. Having traveled back to Joseph's ancestral home—Roman ruled Bethlehem, Judea—for the census, Mary and Joseph, in modern American parlance, would have been homeless immigrants/tourists having an "anchor baby" at the time of Jesus' birth.

While Joseph considered Galilee his immediate family's home, the trio would eventually flee to Egypt as refugees to escape from King Herod.

Keep ReadingShow less