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A COVER-UP:

According to the information we have researched from over 100 years of records, a "Bermuda Triangle" effect exists in a specific area of the New York City subway. 

People disappeared without a trace and in some cases reappeared for mere moments over a 40-year period. 

After millions of dollars were paid to families of the missing and members of the media to stifle the story, the city found a solution. They closed the Worth Street Station and re-directed a portion of track to bypass where the incidents took place. 

The tactic worked until October 2017 when the MTA switched several trains back onto the track so maintenance work could be performed on the main line. The city took a six-hour risk that re-opened the portal. 

 

SPECULATION:

Between 1918-1962, riders and MTA workers

reported seeing a male in his 50’s dressed

in circa 1910s conductor uniform walking

through train cars and in tunnels. It is suspected

the individual is an Brooklyn Rapid Transit

conductor named Jack Novak who was employed

from 1904 until his disappearance in 1918.

 

MTA files reveal Novak is believed to have killed himself, another transit worker and damaged a train badly enough that it had to be removed from service during an intentional crash, after learning his son had succumbed to the influenza epidemic that claimed 851 New Yorkers that year. However, the body that was recovered from the wreckage was rumored to have been so badly mutilated and crushed, that a positive identification was impossible by any means that existed at that time.

The Last Stop

  If you've been here before...

 you can never leave.

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