Search for New York subway gunman centers on man who rented U-Haul van
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[April 13, 2022] By
Maria Caspani and Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Police and federal
agents searched into the early hours of Wednesday for a man who set off
smoke bombs and sprayed fellow passengers with gunfire aboard a New York
City subway car, injuring more than 20 people before he fled the scene.
The attack erupted during the Tuesday morning commuter rush as the
Manhattan-bound "N Line" train was pulling into an underground station
in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood, the latest burst of seemingly
random violence that has plagued the city's transit system in recent
years.
Police said 10 people were struck directly by gunfire, five of them
hospitalized in critical but stable condition, while 13 others suffered
respiratory distress or were otherwise injured in the crush of frantic
riders fleeing the smoke-filled subway car.
Some injured passengers collapsed as they poured onto the platform of
the 36th Street station.
All of the victims were expected to survive their injuries, police said
in an evening news conference, in which authorities also offered rewards
totaling $50,000 for information leading to the arrest of a suspect they
believed acted alone.
The manhunt initially centered around a U-Haul van found hours afterward
parked on a Brooklyn street, and on a "person of interest" identified by
police as Frank James, who was believed to have rented the vehicle in
Philadelphia.
Police said they recovered the key to the van at the crime scene, and
that James had addresses in Philadelphia and Wisconsin. Attempts by
Reuters to reach any of the phone numbers associated with James were
unsuccessful.
New York Police Department (NYPD) Commissioner Keechant Sewell told
reporters the shooting was not immediately being treated as an act of
terrorism.
There was no known motive for the attack, but investigators found a
number of social media posts linked to an individual named Frank James
that mentioned homelessness and the New York City mayor, Sewell said.
The subway assailant was described by police from eyewitness accounts as
a man of heavy build, wearing an orange vest, a gray sweatshirt, a green
helmet and surgical mask.
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Police officers patrol in Times Square station, after a shooting at
a subway station in Brooklyn borough, in Manhattan, New York City,
New York, U.S., April 12, 2022. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
The commissioner said the attack
began in the train car as it was about to enter the station. The
gunman removed two canisters from his bag and opened them, sending
smoke throughout the train car.
Police said the man then fired 33 rounds from a Glock 9 mm
semi-automatic handgun, which was later recovered along with three
extended ammunition magazines, a hatchet, some consumer-grade
fireworks and a container of gasoline.
The gun apparently jammed in the midst of the shooting, potentially
preventing a higher casualty toll, CNN and local media outlets
reported, citing law enforcement sources.
New York City has seen a sharp rise in violent crime during the
pandemic, including a string of seemingly random attacks on its
subways. The transit violence has included a number of attacks in
which passengers were shoved onto the tracks from platforms,
including a Manhattan woman whose murder was seen as part of a surge
in hate crimes against Asian Americans.
Mayor Eric Adams, who has vowed to improve subway safety by
increasing police patrols and expanding mental health outreach
programs, called Tuesday's incident "a senseless act of violence"
and pledged to double the number of officers assigned to subway
security.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul pledged "the full resources of our
state to fight this surge of crime, this insanity that is feeding
our city."
(Reporting by Maria Caspani and Jonathan Allen; additional reporting
by Aleks Michalska, Brendan McDermid, Andrew Kelly and Tyler
Clifford in New York; Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; David Shepardson,
Steve Holland, Doina Chiacu and Sarah N. Lynch in Washington; and
Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; writing by Rami Ayyub and Steve
Gorman; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Cynthia Osterman and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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