New York subway shooting suspect faces initial court appearance
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[April 14, 2022]
By Jonathan Allen and Tyler Clifford
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The man suspected of
injuring 23 people by setting off smoke bombs and spraying the inside of
a New York City subway car with gunfire was due to make an initial court
appearance on Thursday to face a federal charge of violently attacking a
mass transit system.
Frank Robert James, 62, was arrested on Wednesday in lower Manhattan,
capping a 30-hour manhunt for the lone suspect wanted in an attack that
unnerved riders of the largest and busiest U.S. metropolitan rapid rail
network and renewed calls for greater subway security.
James was taken into custody about 8 miles (13 km) from the scene of
Tuesday's assault, which unfolded during the morning rush-hour as the
Manhattan-bound N-line train was pulling into an underground station in
Brooklyn's Sunset Park community.
Police said 10 people were shot outright, five of them hospitalized in
critical but stable condition, and 13 others were injured in the
stampede of terrified passengers pouring from the smoke-filled subway
car onto the platform of the 36th Street station. All were expected to
survive.
The gunman vanished in the pandemonium, but investigators said they
established James as a suspect when a sweep of the crime scene turned up
a credit card in his name and the keys to a U-Haul van that he had
rented and left parked a several blocks away.
Authorities at the scene also recovered the Glock 9 mm semi-automatic
handgun used in the attack, along with three extended-ammunition
magazines, a torch, a hatchet, a bag of fireworks and a container of
gasoline, according to police and court documents.
The next day, investigators tracked James down to Manhattan's East
Village neighborhood with the help of tips from residents who recognized
him from wanted photos, some of whom posted sightings on social media,
police said. He was taken into custody without incident, according to
officials.
The New York Times and New York Post, each citing law enforcement
sources, reported that James himself alerted police to his general
whereabouts on Wednesday in a call he placed to a tip line from a
McDonald's fast-food outlet. The reports could not be independently
verified by Reuters.
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Frank James, the suspect in the Brooklyn subway shooting, is
escorted from an NYPD precinct in Manhattan, New York City, U.S.,
April 13, 2022. REUTERS/Stephen Yang
A criminal complaint filed by
federal prosecutors on Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn
charged James with a single count of committing a terrorist or other
violent attack against a mass transportation system - a felony that
carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.
He was scheduled to make his first court appearance on Thursday, the
U.S. Attorney's Office in Brooklyn said.
James, a Bronx native with recent addresses in Philadelphia and
Milwaukee, had nine prior arrests in New York and three in New
Jersey, according to the New York Police Department (NYPD).
The subway shooting suspect, described by eyewitnesses as dressed in
construction-worker garb, is accused of setting off two smoke
canisters from the rear of the subway car moments before opening
fire on fellow passengers.
Authorities have offered no possible motive for the assault. But
according to an FBI affidavit filed in the case, James posted a
number of YouTube videos addressing statements to New York City's
mayor about homelessness and the subway system.
A YouTube account apparently belonging to James was taken down
Wednesday for violating the online video platform's "community
guidelines," the company said.
In addition to items found at the subway station, searches of James'
apartment and a storage locker in Philadelphia uncovered more
handgun and rifle magazines, ammunition, a Taser and a pistol barrel
attachment for a silencer, the FBI said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen and Tyler Clifford in New York; Writing
by Steve Gorman; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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