Daniel Enriquez, 48, was riding the Q train on his way to brunch on Sunday when he was gunned down.
Enriquez, who lived in Park Slope, was on a Manhattan-bound Q train when the gunman opened fire without warning over the Manhattan Bridge mortally wounding him. The shooter then fled from the Canal Street station.
The incident occurred in broad daylight at around 11:42 a.m., police said.
The shooter fled from the Canal Street station and has yet to be caught.
NYPD Chief of Department Kenneth Corey said at a press briefing that the killer — described as a dark-skinned heavyset man with a beard — was pacing back and forth on the northbound train when he fired “without provocation.”
“There was no interaction with the murderer at all,” Griselda told The Post. “How can an incredibly loving man be taken away for no reason?”
Cops recovered a firearm that they believed was used in the crime, sources said. The shooter was on the loose Sunday night.
Daniel’s sister Griselda Vile called out the gun violence in New York that took the life of her 48-year-old brother while he was riding a Q train on his way to brunch.
“No one, no one, no one should have this happen to their family,” Vile told The Post Sunday evening.
“And the worst part is, even if they catch this person he’s going to be out again,” she added, touching on the state’s bail reform laws that have let so many criminals back out on the street.
She added, “I wish you guys would go back to Mayor Adams and tell him the city is not safe. My brother just became a statistic on the way to the city. He was shot at close range.”
Her husband, Glenn Vile, had a more sobering message for Adams, who inherited a crime-ridden city and has vowed to crack down on gun violence.
“Do your job,” he said. “Get crime off the streets.”