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		New York subway shooting suspect to remain in jail, undergo psychiatric 
		exam
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		 [April 15, 2022] 
		By Luc Cohen and Tyler Clifford 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) -A federal judge on 
		Thursday ordered the man charged with this week's mass shooting in a New 
		York subway to remain in custody and undergo a psychiatric exam as he 
		awaits trial for one of the most violent attacks on the city's mass 
		transit system.
 
 Frank James, 62, making his initial court appearance a day after his 
		arrest in lower Manhattan, is accused of injuring 30 people by setting 
		off smoke bombs and spraying the inside of a subway car with gunfire 
		during Tuesday morning's rush-hour commute in Brooklyn.
 
 James was represented by two public defenders as he was formally 
		presented with a criminal complaint charging him with a single count of 
		committing a terrorist or other violent attack against a mass 
		transportation system - a felony carrying a maximum sentence of life in 
		prison.
 
 "The defendant terrifyingly opened fire on passengers in a crowded 
		subway train, interrupting their morning commute in a way this city 
		hasn't seen in more than 20 years," Assistant U.S. Attorney Sara Winik 
		told the federal court in Brooklyn, in an apparent reference to the 
		attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
 
		
		 
		Arguing that James poses a "severe and ongoing danger" to the public if 
		released, prosecutors said in a court filing that he carried out "a 
		premeditated violent attack on unsuspecting commuters trapped 
		underground with their assailant in a subway car."
 The mass shooting followed a string of violent crimes that had already 
		unnerved riders of one of the largest subway systems in the world, 
		including instances of commuters being pushed onto subway tracks from 
		station platforms.
 
 James, dressed in beige jail clothes and wearing a blue surgical mask, 
		spoke only briefly to say he understood the charges.
 
 U.S. Magistrate Judge Roanne Mann ordered James to be held at the 
		Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, the main jail for defendants 
		awaiting federal trial in New York City, and ordered the psychiatric 
		evaluation requested by his lawyers.
 
 The defense stressed the examination was not aimed at determining James' 
		competence to face trial but to establish the state of his mental health 
		for any treatment he needs.
 
 Authorities have offered no possible motive for the attack.
 
 VIDEO RANTS UNDER SCRUTINY
 
 Investigators have said they are examining lengthy videos James 
		apparently recorded and posted to YouTube, which included bigoted rants 
		and comments on New York City's mayor, homelessness and the subway 
		system. The YouTube account was taken down Wednesday for violating the 
		online video platform's "community guidelines," the company said.
 
		
		 
		James was arrested without incident on Wednesday afternoon on a street 
		in Manhattan's East Village neighborhood, about 5 miles (8 km) from the 
		scene of Tuesday's attack, capping a 30-hour manhunt for the lone 
		suspect. His lawyers told reporters after the hearing that James himself 
		had called the New York Police Department's tipline to turn himself in 
		after seeing his photograph in the news.
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			Frank James, the suspect in the Brooklyn subway shooting walks 
			outside a police precinct in New York City, New York, U.S., April 
			13, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly 
            
			 "He called 'Crime Stoppers' to 
			help," Mia Eisner-Grynberg, a lawyer from the Federal Defenders of 
			New York, told reporters. "He told them where he was." Earlier news 
			reports said James placed the call from a McDonald's restaurant in 
			the East Village. He was taken into custody a short distance away. Eisner-Grynberg called the attack a tragedy, which 
			unfolded as the Manhattan-bound N train was pulling into the 36th 
			Street subway station in Brooklyn's Sunset Park community.
 Police said 10 people were shot, five of them hospitalized in 
			critical but stable condition. About 20 others were injured by the 
			smoke canisters the attacker set off before shooting or in the 
			stampede of terrified passengers pouring out of the subway car onto 
			the platform, according to prosecutors. All were expected to 
			survive.
 
 The attacker apparently followed the panicked passengers into 
			another train and rode it one stop toward Manhattan, investigators 
			said.
 
 Surveillance video shows James emerging one station north at about 
			14 minutes after the shooting. An image included in the complaint 
			shows him in a dark outfit, without the fluorescent orange jacket 
			and yellow helmet worn earlier.
 
 Video footage from the scene may prove to be less extensive than it 
			should. The New York Police Department (NYPD) issued a statement on 
			Wednesday saying security cameras were out of service at the 36th 
			Street station and two other subway stops on Tuesday.
 
 Investigators said they established James as a suspect after finding 
			on the platform a credit card in his name and keys to a U-Haul van 
			he had rented and left parked several blocks away.
 
			 Authorities at the scene also recovered the 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.
 James is a Bronx native with recent addresses in Philadelphia and 
			Milwaukee. He had nine prior arrests in New York and three in New 
			Jersey, according to the New York Police Department.
 
 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 Luc Cohe and Tyler Clifford in New York; Writing and 
			additional reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York and Steve Gorman 
			in Los Angeles; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan, Alistair Bell and 
			Lincoln Feast.)
 
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