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Drawn to Trains, a Well-Traveled Fanatic Is Back in Trouble
The New York Times ^ | June 15, 2004 | MICHAEL LUO

Posted on 06/16/2004 1:11:35 PM PDT by Willie Green

For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.

By now, Darius McCollum's exploits have become the stuff of city lore.

He is the eccentric transit fanatic from Queens who has spent more than a third of his life behind bars for transgressions related to his posing as a New York City Transit worker. Among the notable offenses on his rap sheet are commandeering an E train on a trip to the World Trade Center from Herald Square when he was just 15 and taking a number of city buses for joy rides.

He has long vexed transit officials, who posted his picture at stations and depots. But to a small band of dedicated supporters and friends, Mr. McCollum is the ultimate example of the system's failing someone who badly needs help.

On Friday, Mr. McCollum, now 39, was arrested again, just two months after being released from jail after being held on a parole violation related to his latest transit-related conviction, his 19th.

His mother, Elizabeth McCollum, who has struggled to make sense of his obsession for years, said yesterday that she blamed him for his latest troubles. "Darius brought this on himself," she said. "He flubbed it himself."

He had just spent three and a half years behind bars for sneaking into a subway control tower at 57th Street, tripping the emergency brakes on an N train and descending to the tracks in a transit authority uniform to sort out the mess.

This time, according to the criminal complaint that has been filed against him by the Queens district attorney's office and transit officials, Mr. McCollum walked into the Long Island Rail Road's train yard in Jamaica, Queens, wearing an orange reflector vest and a hard hat, around noon on Friday.

When a railroad worker asked him who he was, he produced a business card that identified him as a captain and an independent railroad safety consultant. He then asked to talk to workers from Bombardier, the company that manufactures trains for the subway, the L.I.R.R. and Metro-North, the complaint said. The employee sent him over to a group from Bombardier that was in the yard.

Mr. McCollum identified himself to the group, again explaining that he was a safety consultant, the complaint said, and began asking a series of questions about the safety mechanisms of the new M-7 locomotives, which the railroad has rolled out in the last few years.

When the worker who first spotted him began getting suspicious and asked him for more identification, Mr. McCollum walked quickly out of the yard, the complaint said. Workers called the Metropolitan Transportation Authority police, who arrested him nearby.

After searching him, the police found several railroad-related keys, including one that would have started an M-7 locomotive nearby and others that would have allowed him to operate other equipment in the yard, the complaint said.

Mr. McCollum is now being held in $250,000 bail, charged with attempted grand larceny, criminal impersonation, possession of stolen property, trespassing and possession of burglar's tools.

Mr. McCollum's supporters, who rallied behind him after his last arrest, say that he suffers from a social disorder similar to autism, known as Asperger's syndrome.

The disorder is also called "the little professor syndrome." Its sufferers often become obsessed with specific topics, talking endlessly about them with stunning expertise; they have problems socializing, make inappropriate comments and avoid eye contact. Obsession with trains and train trivia is common among sufferers of Asperger's.

Typically, the syndrome is diagnosed in childhood. Less is known about adult sufferers. The judge in Mr. McCollum's last criminal case rejected Asperger's as a defense, and sentenced him to two and a half to five years in prison.

Mr. McCollum's lawyer in that case, Stephen C. Jackson, said yesterday that he later asked a psychiatrist at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, Dr. John Pomeroy, to examine his client in prison. Dr. Pomeroy, he said, gave Mr. McCollum a diagnosis of Asperger's.

Reached by telephone yesterday, Dr. Pomeroy did not dispute Mr. Jackson's claim but declined to confirm the diagnosis, citing patient confidentiality. He did confirm examining Mr. McCollum in prison.

Mr. McCollum was paroled earlier this year. Originally, he was supposed to go to North Carolina, where his parents, Samuel and Elizabeth, live, friends said yesterday. But in the end, they got into an argument because he wanted to bring his wife, Nelly Rodriguez, an Ecuadorean immigrant he had met on a subway platform just before he went to prison and married while behind bars, the friends said.

The two went up to Albany to look for an apartment, and he called his parole officer to tell him, his friends said. But one of the conditions of his parole was that he not leave the New York City area, so he was sent back to jail for 90 days. In April, he was released again.

Since then, his supporters have been scrambling to line up help for him. Lori Shery, who runs an Asperger's advocacy group in Edison, N.J., arranged for him to attend a support group that met three times a month on the Upper West Side and was trying to find a therapist for him.

Mr. McCollum attended the group a few times but stopped coming over in the last few months, said Michael Carley, who ran the group. Mr. Carley said he tried to steer Mr. McCollum away from talking about trains to why he liked them so much, a change that helps many sufferers begin to resist their impulses. Mr. McCollum was showing signs of progress before he stopped coming, he said.

Daisy Quinteros, 29, Mr. McCollum's stepdaughter, lived with her mother, Ms. Rodriguez, and Mr. McCollum, who she called Dario, on the Lower East Side.

She described him yesterday as raro, meaning "strange." He and her mother argued constantly, usually about his obsession, she said.

"Sometimes he would come home with all these things connected to trains," she said. "Keys, tools, a uniform."

Mr. McCollum's friends said they thought that he might be able to channel his obsession into a job where he could use his extensive knowledge, and he told them that he was looking for work as a transportation consultant, although he never got his high school diploma.

Jude Domski, a theater director who produced a play based on his life and later became his friend, said yesterday that about a week before his arrest, he stopped by her apartment in a hard hat. He also told her that he had a reflector vest and that he needed the gear for safety classes he was taking for an internship with a transportation organization. She did not know, she said, whether to believe him.

The morning before his arrest, Ms. Shery said, Mr. McCollum told her he got into a fight with his mother. He left in a huff, so he went to the train yard.

" 'It usually makes me feel better,' " she said he told her.

Anthony DePalma contributed reporting for this article.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: mentalhealth
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The disorder is also called "the little professor syndrome." Its sufferers often become obsessed with specific topics, talking endlessly about them with stunning expertise; they have problems socializing, make inappropriate comments and avoid eye contact.

Hmmmm... I think this one is more widespread than what is being reported.

1 posted on 06/16/2004 1:11:35 PM PDT by Willie Green
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To: Willie Green
Wow. I can't believe this guy is 39 years old.

When he took that subway train for a ride at the age of 15, the thing that really impressed the NYC transit police was how much he knew about the subway system, operating the train, etc.

2 posted on 06/16/2004 1:15:27 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("Ego numquam pronunciare mendacium . . . sed ego sum homo indomitus")
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To: Willie Green

You would think he would have gotten a JOB with the subway system.


3 posted on 06/16/2004 1:20:01 PM PDT by GunsareOK
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To: GunsareOK

By the time he was old enough, he was disqualified by his convictions.

But the other poster is right. In specialized areas you often meet people who are obsessed by the subject matter. Usually, it's fairly harmless.


4 posted on 06/16/2004 1:22:29 PM PDT by proxy_user
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To: Darksheare
Relative of yours?

So9

5 posted on 06/16/2004 1:23:50 PM PDT by Servant of the 9 (We are the Hegemon. We can do anything we damned well please.)
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To: Willie Green

I have never heard of this guy before, but I like him.


6 posted on 06/16/2004 1:25:54 PM PDT by Skooz (My Biography: Psalm 40:1-3)
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To: Servant of the 9

No-one I know.


7 posted on 06/16/2004 1:26:32 PM PDT by Darksheare (Can't wait for the day when all my voices are reduced to the space of one.)
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To: Willie Green
Mr. McCollum's supporters, who rallied behind him after his last arrest, say that he suffers from a social disorder similar to autism, known as Asperger's syndrome. The disorder is also called "the little professor syndrome."

Its sufferers often become obsessed with specific topics, talking endlessly about them with stunning expertise; they have problems socializing, make inappropriate comments and avoid eye contact. Obsession with trains and train trivia is common among sufferers of Asperger's.

"I'm an excellent driver."

8 posted on 06/16/2004 1:28:02 PM PDT by ActionNewsBill ("In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act")
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To: Alberta's Child
I drove a trolley a few weekends ago in Yakima, Washington, as part of a tour. It was fun.

Of course when I cranked that controller into 4th position parallel, the regular driver almost had a fit. My passengers, however, thought it has hilarious.

9 posted on 06/16/2004 1:30:09 PM PDT by Publius (VRWC member since 1963.)
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To: Willie Green
I wonder if there might be some actual value in this guys obsession. Is it possible he might be able to spot vulnerabilities to the system.

Former hackers, counterfeiters, and bank robbers etc are often used by law enforcement. Often quite effectively I might add.
10 posted on 06/16/2004 1:32:30 PM PDT by cripplecreek (you tell em i'm commin.... and hells commin with me.)
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To: proxy_user

I really meant to stay on the straight and narrow and then apply at 18 or 21. I agree that after you take the trains and busses for unauthorized rides they aren't going to hire you.


11 posted on 06/16/2004 1:34:06 PM PDT by GunsareOK
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To: Publius
When I was in high school I worked in a small business whose owner was a close friend of an Indy car racing team crew chief. He went to Indianapolis every year in May for the big race, and once got to drive one of the backup cars around the track during the week before the race.

He was told to drive it at a "reasonable speed," which he took to mean 180 mph or so. There was a lot of concern among the crew members that day as he whipped around the track.

Oh, and he was 84 years old at the time, too. LOL.

12 posted on 06/16/2004 1:34:45 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("Ego numquam pronunciare mendacium . . . sed ego sum homo indomitus")
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To: Willie Green
His mother... said yesterday that she blamed him for his latest troubles.

Up until then it was the railroad's fault?

13 posted on 06/16/2004 1:41:16 PM PDT by theDentist (I've got a fever, and the only prescription is more cowbell !)
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To: Willie Green

Willie,

Apsberger's (sp?) is pretty widespread. Lot of computer geeks have it to one extent or another. People who have it are often quite intelligent, but they are shockingly lacking in social skills. It doesn't mean they can't function in society, just that they come across as weird. If it's what this guy has, he has a very severe case.

Been hitting the books on it for a while; it's a tentative diagnosis of a young nephew of mine.

Most sufferers don't have a problem keeping their obsession at least, if not under control, within the bounds of legality.

The wife sounds like an immigrant's marriage of convenience. I was surprized to find out from a Fed buddy that they have no compunction at all about declaring a marriage a sham, getting a judge to nullify it, and deporting people (they don't look for sham marriages, but they often stumble across them while investigating serious crimes). I hope I am wrong about this, and it's just true love between a weirdo obsessed with trains and a middle-aged woman who happens to be foreign.

d.o.l.

Criminal Number 18F


14 posted on 06/16/2004 1:41:22 PM PDT by Criminal Number 18F (Hmmm. Darius is obsessed with transit... Willie frequently posts on transit... hmmmm...)
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To: Incorrigible
Autism/Asperger's Ping.
15 posted on 06/16/2004 1:41:30 PM PDT by Question_Assumptions
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To: Willie Green
Hmmmm... I think this one is more widespread than what is being reported.

No kidding, It has been commented that a Science Fiction Convention is an Asperger's Convention.

It probably applies to everyone who was a computer geek in the 70s or early 80s, to serious car nuts, and collectors of every kind.

So9

16 posted on 06/16/2004 1:42:07 PM PDT by Servant of the 9 (We are the Hegemon. We can do anything we damned well please.)
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To: Servant of the 9
It has been commented that a Science Fiction Convention is an Asperger's Convention.

Wow

This puts the Trekkie thing on a whole new light.

17 posted on 06/16/2004 1:49:54 PM PDT by Freebird Forever
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To: Criminal Number 18F
Apsberger's (sp?) is pretty widespread. Lot of computer geeks have it to one extent or another. People who have it are often quite intelligent, but they are shockingly lacking in social skills.

I've never heard of the specific terms "Asperger" or "little professor" syndrome before.

But over the years, I've certainly known people who display the symptoms.
Usually harmless, but excessively focused obsession that's unproductive.

18 posted on 06/16/2004 1:52:40 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
Here's an article on Asperger's Syndrome that popped up recently:
Michelangelo may have suffered Asperger's syndrome

WILLIAM LYONS

AS AN artist, he was unmatched, an icon of tortured genius whose name became synonymous with the word "masterpiece".

But new evidence has shed fresh light on Michelangelo’s artistic achievements, suggesting that the Renaissance artist might have suffered from Asperger’s syndrome, a form of autism.

Writing in the Journal of Medical Biography, Muhammad Arshad, a psychiatrist, and his Irish colleague, Michael Fitzgerald, say that the artist’s behaviour and personality provide clear evidence of Asperger’s or high-performing autism.

...

His dexterity with brush and chisel was in sharp contrast to his complete inability to conduct normal human relationships.
...

If Michelangelo had Asperger’s syndrome, he would be in good company. According to the two scientists, fellow sufferers have included the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein and the father of modern physics, Isaac Newton.

Other researchers have suggested the Greek philosopher Socrates and the founder of the theory of evolution, Charles Darwin, were sufferers too.

19 posted on 06/16/2004 2:04:41 PM PDT by jennyp (http://crevo.bestmessageboard.com)
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To: Servant of the 9
No kidding, It has been commented that a Science Fiction Convention is an Asperger's Convention.

LOL!

It probably applies to everyone who was a computer geek in the 70s or early 80s, to serious car nuts, and collectors of every kind.

Uh-oh. Um, ahem. UNIX geeks maybe. Yeah, that's it...

20 posted on 06/16/2004 2:07:05 PM PDT by jennyp (http://crevo.bestmessageboard.com)
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