He wanted me to die: woman has broken knee, jaw and nose after attack on SP Metro
A 24-year-old woman suffered several serious fractures, including her jaw, left knee, nose and three teeth, after an attack last Monday night (15) at the Parada Inglesa station, on Metro Line 1-Blue, located in the North Zone of São Paulo. Purchasing assistant Larissa Ramos Raudenberg was brutally attacked.
The incident was initially registered by the police in the 73rd Police District (Jaçanã) as a bodily injury. However, the victim herself classifies the action as an attempted femicide, and must file a new complaint with the authorities after carrying out the forensic examination, scheduled for this Wednesday (17).

As detailed in the incident report, Larissa accessed the boarding platform towards Tucuruvi when she was surprised by a man, later identified as Rodrigo de Oliveira, aged 25, who began the attacks without warning.
Larissa’s narrative reveals that the attack began with the suspect chasing her friend, Ana Claudia Calbo de Oliveira, after brief eye contact. When trying to escape, the attacker hit Larissa, who was closer, knocking her down with a kick to the knee.
Even with the woman already lying injured on the ground, the attacker persisted in the attacks, delivering multiple kicks to her face and head, indicating an unusual intensity in the violence.
“He came at us with everything. It wasn’t a robbery attempt, as I was carrying two cell phones, a corporate one and my private one. The devices fell and he didn’t even touch them, even though he realized that I had passed out, he continued hitting me. He really wanted to kill me, he wanted to take my life”, the victim testified.
Larissa received first aid at the station and was promptly taken to Mandaqui Hospital by a Metro team, where she remained under medical observation. She has already been discharged and continues her recovery process at home.
“I broke my nose, my jaw, my face is quite swollen, I lost three teeth and I fractured my knee, which makes me limp when I walk”, Larissa described the extent of her injuries.
The victim expressed deep dissatisfaction with the perceived lack of security inside the station. “The attacker was on the platform, in the place where passengers wait for the train. This means that he passed through the turnstile and there was no Metro security agent present. They only appeared after the incident”, he reported, highlighting the problem.
“From what I was told, this man already has a history of being arrested by the police for harassing women on the subway. We were calm and he felt uncomfortable with our presence there. I feel completely exposed”, lamented Larissa, who is seeking psychological counseling to deal with the trauma.
“I feel very afraid of using the subway again”, confessed the young woman, demonstrating the psychological impact of violence.
Larissa also vehemently questions the police’s classification of the case as a bodily injury, and not an attempted feminicide. “He was detained, but he is now released, because they registered it as a bodily injury. For me, it was an attempted feminicide. They wanted to release him, today it was me, but tomorrow it could be another woman who might not survive an attack like that.”
Additional information revealed that the attacker did not carry documents that could confirm his identity at the time of arrest.
In response to the incident, São Paulo Metro reported that its security agents acted quickly, identifying and detaining the attacker. The company confirmed the victim’s assistance to Mandaqui Hospital and the referral of the case for investigation by the Civil Police.
The police report details that Ana Claudia, Larissa’s friend, was nearby at the time of the attack and was also hit by a kick in the right leg. The police record shows that Ana Claudia managed to escape the scene to protect herself and had no visible injuries.
















