Solomon said the victim, Daniel Enriquez of Brooklyn, was a “beloved member” of the investment bank for nine years and that he “epitomized our culture of collaboration and excellence.”
“We are devastated by this senseless tragedy and our deepest sympathies are with Dan’s family at this difficult time,” Solomon said, noting that the attack was “without provocation.”
Enriquez, 48, was shot in the chest while the Q-line train was traveling on the Manhattan Bridge from the last stop in Brooklyn to Canal Street in Manhattan, according to a law enforcement official. The shooting suspect, who fled the train when it arrived at Canal, remains at large and no arrests have been made.
Enriquez joined the company’s Global Investment Research division in 2013, according to Goldman Sachs, and supported the firm’s Macro Research team in New York.
“We’re going to get him on a train,” Adams told the Financial Times in an interview. “We’re going to get everyone on the train. He understands the need of getting his people back and leading from the front.”
— CNN’s Matt Egan contributed reporting.