Metro

NYC stabbing suspect baffles neighbors who recall hospital greeter as ‘loving young man’ without history of trouble

The unassuming New York City hospital greeter charged Thursday with a string of random stabbings had no rap sheet or history of mental illness leaving neighbors and cops trying tꦜo figure out what could have caused him to snap.

Jermain Rigueur, 27, a former Long Island resident who worked at Woodhull Hospital in Bedford–Stuyvesant, allegedly attacked a 61-year-old grandfather with a hunting knife on Jan. 8 — and then went after at least four more victims Tuesday and Wednesday before he was nabbed by cops.

“I can’t believe that. I wouldn’t think he would be capable of that,” said retired NYPD cop Cherise Broadus, who lives next-door to the raised ranch home in Wyandanch where Rigueur grew up.

“Jermain was always a very loving young man,” Broadus, 62, told The Post, saying she has known the suspect since he was a boy and watched him grow up.

“He was always very loving to me. When I lost my mother, he came up to me and gave me a big hug,” she continued.

“I never thought anything like that of him. I trusted him. He would watch my granddaughter.”

Jermain Rigueur, 27, is charged with attempted murder, assault and weapons possession in a string of random stabbings in Queens that left five strangers injured. Matthew McDermott

Police also have yet to figure out a motive for the chilling spree. Rigeur is accused of stabbing a woman in an unprovoked attack in Springfield Gardens just after midnight Tuesday, then stabbing two men in separate incidents Wednesday morning before he stabbed his fifth known victim after argument over seating in a bus.

“He didn’t indicate any reason for the attack,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said at a briefing Thursday.

“And based on our investigation, it just seems the only incident that he was provoked was the incident on the bus, where there was an argument and a dispute over a bus seat,” Kenny added, referring to the fifth stabbing, in which a 36-year-old man was wounded near Parsons Boulevard and Archer Avenue in Queens.

The others, including a possible sixth incident in Brooklyn, “were random,” Kenny said.

The chief said in that attack, the suspect was “pacing” before the attack.

Police had released surveillance footage of the suspect.

“We have witnesses stating he was pacing the train car prior,” Kenny said. “He stood over the victim, and as the train doors opened up on Flushing Avene, he plunged the knife into his victim’s chest and simply just walked off the train.”

Police also said there was no pattern in the choice of victims — they included both men and women who were either black or Hispanic.

NYPD Commissioner Edward Caban said the unprovoked att🍌acks had cops out in force.

“A violent criminal is off our streets because of good old-fashioned police work,” he said. “Ultimately, it came down to basic detective work chasing down leads, knocking on doors. It was about walking through neighborhoods and talking to people, interviewing witnesses and canvassing video.”

Surveillance images show the victim of a random knife attack inside a dry cleaner on Guy R. Brewer Boulevard. provided

Police said the legwork paid off when detectives were able to track down surveillance 🦹camera footage that captured the suspect as he walked into the two-family home in Jamaica wherꦦe he lived.

“The male was wearing the same clothing and sneakers from the stabbing incidents,” Kenny told reporters. “He was also carrying the same backpack and he was also wearing that distinctive lanyard around his neck.”

The Lanyard was Rigueur’s Woodhull Hospital ID, according to authorities.

Rigueur was charged with three counts of attempted murder, four coun♓ts of assault, one count of attempte🍎d assault and criminal possession of a weapon.

The home at 133-19 160th Street in Queens where accused serial stabber Jermain Rigueur lived with roommates. Matthew McDermott

Kenny said police will also “eventually have probable cause” to charge Rigueur in a sixth attack in Brooklyn on Wednesday for the unprovoked stabbing of a 28-year-old straphanger on a J train.

Th൲e victim in that attack told The Post Thursday that the assault came without notice.

“I was just sitting there, minding my own business,” said Luis Jose Sanchez Medina, the married father of a 7-year-old girl. “He was sitting in front of me. At the next stop, he got up, the door opened, and he stood there for a moment. Then he stabbed me, really hard.

“Without a word, without saying anything. Then he ran off and the doors closed,” Medina said. “At the next stop, I got off, fell to the ground and the police came and they took me to the hospital.

“It was in a matter of seconds,” he said. “I didn’t understand it. I didn’t do anything. No explanation. I mean, he tried to kill me. Now I’m afraid to ride the train. Not after this. I don’t want to ride the train.”

Jermaine Rigueur, 27, is charged with attempted murder and assault in a series of random knife attacks in Queens.

Rigueur was led out of the 113th Precinct staღtionhouse in handcuffs Thursday afternoon and is awaiting arraignment in Queens Criminal laterཧ in the evening.

He gre🌺w up in Suffolk County and only moved to the two-family home in Jamaica where he lived with roommates last year, friends and neighbors told The Post.

Rigueur took a job as a greeter at Woodhull in November, New York City Health and Hospitals President and CEO Mitchell Katz said at Thursday’s press briefing.

Katz said a background check on Rigueur didn’t raise any red flags since he had no criminal history.

“He never worked independently at Woodhull,” Katz said. “He was still 100% being observed as part of his orientation. His job was greeting patients as they came in and directing them to the appropriate place.”

He said ༺Rigueur has been placed on ad🐽ministrative leave.

He sh🎃ared his two-family Queens h🐻ome with roommates.

“I grew up in this neighborhood but I don’t know him,” one neighbor who only identified himself as Michelle said. “I’ve never seen him.”

Another neighbor, Lynae, called it scary thatও Rigueur had been living on the block.

“We think we’re safe but we’re not really safe,” she said. “We think that everyone is just ordinary, just a regular person, then you have somebody walking around with a hunting knife. It’s just like, ‘What?’

“I don’t feel safe anymore.”

Additional reporting by Khristina Narizhnaya and Steve Vago