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The beating deaths of four homeless men sleeping on the streets of Chinatown early Saturday shocked the city.

But for some New Yorkers without a permanent home, the killings confirmed an unease that has them avoiding city streets and shelters overnight, afraid for their safety.

Many find refuge in the subways. But life underground is getting tougher.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently announced plans to hire 500 new MTA cops to deal with various issues. Meanwhile, as THE CITY reported last week, the NYPD is now using surveillance cameras to keep tabs on the homeless in a dozen stations.

Against this backdrop, THE CITY spoke with some people who regularly seek shelter in the subway system. Here’s what they told us:

‘My Safe Haven’

Word about the killings of the four men didn’t reach Joseph Brown until Monday.

When the news spread Sunday, Brown was busy dealing with the loss of clothing he said was stolen while he was sleeping.

“Now I’ve got to start all over again,” said Brown, 52, who tugged a suitcase and a shopping cart at the 42nd St.-Port Authority station.

He doesn’t like shelters. And won’t sleep on sidewalks, like the men who lost their lives Saturday.

“That’s unsafe,” Brown said. “I go on the train. That’s my safe haven.”

Still, he added: “The subway is dangerous, too.”

Lessons From 35 Years

Donna Moody-Scott, who said she’s been homeless for 35 years, noted it took her a decade to stop worrying about being hassled by cops. As she put it, she learned to say “the hell with the police.”

She said she’s been staying in Penn Station on and off for a quarter-century. The 60-year-old won’t go to a shelter, saying she’s through being harassed by homeless men and shelter workers.

“They say they want to protect you, but you can be raped in the shelter,” Moody-Scott said.

Sick of Robberies

Peter Johnson sometimes stays at the Atlantic Ave.-Barclays Center station. That’s because the elevator there can accommodate his wheelchair.

Johnson, 58, said he’d been living at an accessible shelter in Greenpoint, but left for safety reasons.

“They’re always stealing and robbing people,” said Johnson, a former kitchen worker. “They robbed me three times in there — took two cell phones and a pair of shoes.”

Safe on the Subway

Gavin Darden sat on a platform bench at the Forest Hills-71st Avenue station in Queens, wearing tattered shoes and keeping a large suitcase close to him. “Just some toiletries,” he explained.

Darden, 32, said he split his time between the streets and the subways: “I just come down here to watch people, to walk around, to ride the trains.”

He won’t go to city shelters.

“I don’t need any help down here,” Darden said.

‘It’s Cold Out There’

A man who goes by “Trillion Star” said he’s had mixed dealings with the police.

But he said he appreciates the kindness of some officers he’s met after falling asleep on the train and winding up at the end of the line.

“They just want to know if they can get me a coffee, something hot,” he said. “Because it’s cold out there sometimes.”

The 38-year-old Queens native said he “couldn’t even dream” he’d ever be without a home. But after nine years, he’s got his subway routine down.

“I like to be off the street at night,” he said.

‘It’s Just a Home’

Carl Robinson was glad to share his observations from a platform bench at the 34th Street-Herald Square station, but not his age. The burly, bearded man, who uses a cane, said he didn’t want to deal with any “age discrimination.”

Robinson, who noted he’s been without a home since 1985, said homeless people became “public enemy No. 1” during former Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s administration.

While he prefers the trains to the street or shelters, “No place is safe in the world anymore.”

Robinson said there’s “a very simple solution” to homelessness.

“It’s called a home,” he said. “It’s just a home, nothing complicated.”

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