A viral video shows a subway conductor getting pummeled by an angry man and woman at a Brooklyn station this weekend.

Jacob Credell was working on a southbound A train just before 5 a.m. on Saturday morning when an upset straphanger waiting on a crowded platform suddenly yelled at him through the window of his train booth. Video shows the man throw several punches at Credell before trying to pull him out through the window.

A woman then joins in the attack, landing several punches herself.

Transport Workers Union Local 100 officials said Credell suffered a black eye and scratches on his face and arms.

“This young gentleman came up on me yelling and screaming, and before I could say anything he was throwing punches at me,” Credell said in a statement released by the TWU.

The assault is just the latest in a string of attacks on train and workers in the past few months. Agency employees say the attacks have them on edge and that the MTA and union aren’t doing enough to keep them safe.

“Us transit workers don’t come to work to get beat up. When these assaults happen the MTA and our union Local 100 stand idle, put out a statement and hope the members forget about their inaction,” said Trammel Thompson, head of transit worker activist group Progressive Action.

The TWU has asked the MTA to pay for body cameras to keep the employees safe, but they haven’t purchased them yet.

“We are in the process of working it out,” said TWU Local 100 President Tony Utano. “We haven’t gotten them yet. We haven’t signed off on the agreement yet.”

MTA officials said they are discussing the “potential” for the body cameras.

“I’m disgusted by this horrific assault of our colleague. It is absolutely unacceptable, and we are working closely with NYPD to make certain the perpetrators are identified, arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” said New York City Transit president Andy Byford. “We’re also collaborating with TWU Local 100 on ways to combat assaults, including discussing a potential pilot program for bodycams.”

Police said the attackers ran out of the station and have not been caught.

The TWU planned to post flyers in the station to help catch the attackers.

“If you attack one of our members, we are going to do everything in our power to make sure you are identified, arrested and prosecuted,” Utano said. “We’re fighting back against these criminals.”