A straphanger said being caught up in this week’s horrifying shooting on a packed A-train was every New Yorker’s “worst fear.”
Alanie Aucoin-Jackson, 30, was sitting at the end of the train car Thursday when the deadly fight between DaJuan Robinson and Younce Obuad erupted.
“It was terrifying just because I didn’t know if this was going to be my final moments. I didn’t know when it was going to stop honestly. With all the chaos with all these people, you just never know,” Aucoin-Jackson told The Post through tears during an interview in her Brooklyn apartment.
The nanny said the harrowing experience, which left Robinson clinging to life after being shot through the head with his own gun, has left her traumatized and afraid of the city she calls home.
“Extremely anxious. My ears are ringing. It stopped today. I haven’t been able to eat honestly,” Aucoin-Jackson said.
“It’s hard to move forward when it’s a real possibility that it can happen any day to anyone.”