James, 62, is accused of injuring 23 people during the morning
rush hour on a Manhattan-bound N-train in Brooklyn's Sunset Park
neighborhood, in one of the most violent attacks in the history
of the city's transit system. No one was killed.
James in May pleaded not guilty to terrorism and weapons
charges.
U.S. District Judge William Kuntz set the Feb. 27 trial date at
a Monday hearing in Brooklyn federal court, noting that the date
could be pushed back.
When asked by Kuntz at the start of the hearing how he was
doing, James replied, "Not too good." James told the court he
had been watching "a bit of baseball" and had "read things in
the press" that he was not happy about, but did not elaborate.
James is being held at Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center,
where several high-profile defendants including British
socialite Ghislaine Maxwell have raised concerns about subpar
conditions.
Mia Eisner-Grynberg, a lawyer for James, declined to comment
after the hearing.
The attack followed a string of violent crimes in America's
largest metropolitan transit system, including instances of
commuters being pushed onto subway tracks.
Less than two months after the attack, a man was arrested in the
fatal, unprovoked shooting of a man on a subway car crossing a
bridge from Brooklyn into Manhattan, and in June another man was
arrested on suspicion of pushing a woman onto the tracks of a
subway station in the city's borough of the Bronx.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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