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Lawsuit: BART failed to protect woman pushed to her death in San Francisco

Corazon Dandan2 XGO4i9

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — Corazon Dandan was waiting for a BART train at the Powell Street station in San Francisco when she was pushed to her death in the summer of 2024. Now her family is taking legal action against Bay Area Rapid Transit District demanding that the public transit system improve safety for all riders.

On Tuesday, attorneys representing Dandan’s nephew and six siblings slapped BART with a wrongful death lawsuit in San Francisco Superior Court. The suit claims that the Bay Area’s largest public transit system has a “long history of violent deaths and assaults on BART platforms and tracks.” BART police officers fail to remove mentally unstable criminals from stations, and the agency “enables horrific crimes to continue on platforms and trains,” according to attorneys with the law firm Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy.

A BART spokesperson declined to comment about the lawsuit on Wednesday.

On the night of July 1, 2024, Dandan was working at a hotel in Union Square. After she left work, she went to the Power Street station to catch a train home to Daly City.

Dandan, 74, was pushed by Trevor Belmont, aka “Hoak Taing,” into the path of an oncoming train, according to police and attorneys. “Corazon’s head struck the oncoming train, and she fell backwards onto the platform. She suffered and died,” the lawsuit states.

Corazon Dandan (Photo courtesy Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy and Pritzker Levine)

Belmont was a repeat fare evader and sexual predator who had previously been ordered by a judge to stay away from BART stations, according to the suit. The 49-year-old homeless man is currently in jail and charged with murder.

“This lawlessness has to stop. BART has long been on notice about the need for improved safety and protection,” said attorney Nanci Nishimura.

Dandan’s family characterized her as a highly independent and driven woman. She worked two jobs for over 25 years. When she was far into retirement age, she continued working at the hotel as a phone operator and commuting into San Francisco.

“Corazon demonstrated incredible generosity in her life. Corazon helped to finance the education of many of her family members, including her beloved nephew Alvin. She assisted with the tuition and expenses of medical school, which enabled him to become an intensive care doctor,” attorneys wrote.

A man waits for an arriving train at BART Powell Street station in San Francisco, Calif., on Tuesday, February 11, 2020. (Photo by Scott Strazzante/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

Belmont’s criminal history on BART

Belmont was arrested 27 times in multiple Bay Area counties, attorneys said.

In 2018, he was convicted for engaging in lewd conduct when he publicly exposed himself on a BART train near Oakland’s Lake Merritt. He allegedly told police officers that he struggled to control his “sexual urges,” attorneys said. He was arrested again in 2018 after officers saw him swinging his fists at BART riders on the platform of the Dublin/Pleasanton BART station.

More violence, deaths on BART

The Dandan family’s attorneys compiled a list of violent incidents that happened at BART stations both before and after Dandan’s death. According to the lawsuit, some of those incidents include:

Nia Wilson / Facebook

The lawsuit accuses BART officials of failing to take actions to make platforms safer in order to prevent people being pushed or falling onto the tracks.

​SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — Corazon Dandan was waiting for a BART train at the Powell Street station in San Francisco when she was pushed to her death in the summer of 2024. Now her family is taking legal action against Bay Area Rapid Transit District demanding that the public transit system improve safety for all […] 

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