Police last week said the woman was assaulted at the Queens Plaza subway station Thursday night by a 6-foot tall male wearing a dark jacket, blue jeans and holding a cane.
The woman was taken to a hospital and is receiving treatment for a skull fracture and other head wounds, the DA’s office said.
The woman’s family identified her as Nina Rothschild, a scientist for the New York City Department of Health. She was attacked just 15 minutes after leaving work, police said.
Rothschild has had part of her skull replaced with wire mesh, according to her brother, Gerson Rothschild. She also has a drop foot, a condition where the patient is unable to lift their foot. It is unclear whether it was nerve damage or a mental block, he said.
“This was a brutal, gratuitous attack,” said District Attorney Melinda Katz in the news release. “The subways are too integral to the lifeblood of our City for riders to be terrorized when using them. The violence has to stop.”
Another individual, Denise Alston, 57, was also arraigned Monday in connection with the attack. Alston allegedly made a $19 purchase using the victim’s credit card and had additional belongings of the victim in her possession, including department store cards and an identification card.
Alston was charged with criminal possession of stolen property in the fourth degree, petit larceny, criminal possession of stolen property in the fifth degree, identity theft in the third degree and criminal possession of a controlled substance in the seventh degree, according to the DA’s office.
CNN has not yet been able to identify attorneys representing Blount and Alston.
CNN’s Brynn Gingras, Kiely Westhoff, Laura Studley, Liam Reilly and Susannah Cullinane contributed to this report.
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