Brooklyn suspect Frank James arrested in East Village: Live updates
NEW YORK – After a manhunt that lasted more than 24 hours, police arrested a man they said opened fire on a Brooklyn subway train during morning rush hour Tuesday, an attack that left more than two dozen people injured.
Frank R. James, 62, was arrested Wednesday after police officers stopped him in Manhattan’s East Village in response to a tip from the city’s “crime stoppers” line, Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell said at a news conference.
“My fellow New Yorkers, we got him,” Mayor Eric Adams said.
James faces a federal terror charge of attacking a mass transit system. He could face life in prison if convicted, said Breon Peace, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York.
The attack unfolded on a Manhattan-bound N train arriving at a Sunset Park subway station around 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. Authorities said the suspect put on a gas mask and threw two smoke grenades before firing 33 times at passengers as the train pulled into the station.
WHO IS THE SUSPECT? What we know about Frank James
After shooting, James got off the N train at the 36th Street station, boarded an R train that had just arrived at the platform and traveled one stop before exiting, said James Essig, chief of detectives for the New York Police Department.
“We hope this arrest brings some solace to the victims and the people of the city of New York,” Commissioner Sewell said, applauding the hundreds of law enforcement officers who helped investigate and find James. “We were able to shrink his world quickly. There was nowhere left for him to run.”
James purchased the 9mm semiautomatic handgun used in the attack in Ohio in 2011, Essig said. He has nine arrests in New York from 1992 to 1998, including possession of burglary tools and a criminal sex act, along with three arrests in New Jersey in 1991, 1992 and 2007, Essig said. None was a felony conviction, meaning he could legally purchase a firearm.
Federal court documents unsealed Wednesday contained a picture of the Glock 9mm firearm recovered by authorities and traced to James, which shows that an attempt was made to remove the serial number before the weapon was discarded.
Federal authorities located a storage facility in Philadelphia, registered to James, where they recovered a cache of 9mm ammunition, a pistol barrel for the use of a silencer, targets and an undisclosed amount of .223-caliber ammunition used for an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle. According to court documents, James allegedly visited the storage unit the evening before the attack.
Court documents state that investigators sought authority for no-knock warrants in applications for the searches of his Philadelphia storage locker and apartments, fearing that an armed James may have fled back to Philadelphia after the attack.
“Specifically, the defendant, James, is accused of using a weapon to attempt to kill dozens of people, and I believe that if law enforcement were to knock and announce their presence before a premises in which they believed he would be found, James could take advantage of the opportunity to ambush law enforcement,” the federal complaint states.
Police did not comment on James’ motivation and asked for anyone who was on the train to contact the department. Investigators were looking into concerning YouTube videos that threatened violence and appeared to come from James.
At least 10 people were shot in the attack and at least 19 others were taken to hospitals for injuries ranging from smoke inhalation to shrapnel wounds. Video from the scene showed chaos ensue as smoke and subway riders poured out of the train. The shooting sparked fears around increasing crime in the nation’s largest subway system, a worry city officials tried to quell Wednesday as they vowed the trains were safe.
HOW THE SHOOTING UNFOLDED:Photos, videos show chaos of Brooklyn subway attack
Here’s what we know:
How Frank James’ arrest unfolded
After riding an R train one stop and exiting the subway, Frank James reentered the system at 9:15 a.m. Tuesday at Seventh Avenue and Ninth Street in Park Slope, a station that serves the F and G lines, said James Essig, NYPD chief of detectives.
The tip that came into the city’s “crime stoppers” line on Wednesday said James was at a McDonald’s in Manhattan, said NYPD chief of department Kenneth Corey. When officers arrived, James was not at the restaurant.
“They start driving around the neighborhood looking for him. They see him on the corner of St. Mark’s (Place) and First (Avenue) and they take him into custody,” Corey said.
Police did not say where James was in between the time he entered the Park Slope station and the “crime stoppers” tip came in.
Will Shellhorn was walking up 1st Avenue close to St. Marks Place a little after noon when he saw James being arrested.
“I saw a police officer walk up to him,” he said. Then three cars arrived and I saw police officers go up to him but he seemed totally nonchalant. He didn’t resist or put up a fight.”
Shellhorn, 20, a student at Parsons School of Design, said he was shocked the suspect was arrested so close to his apartment. “It all happened so fast.”
Erick Rameriz, who works at nearby East Village Pizza, said he saw a lot of police cars in front of the store then crowds forming. “I didn’t know what was happening but then I saw someone brought out,” he told USA TODAY in a phone interview. “We’ve all been talking about it and had no idea at first it was him.” He said it was “bizarre” knowing James was found so close after the search for him. “I’m just happy knowing this is over,” he said.
— Ryan Miller, Christal Hayes and Swapna Venugopal
Sister: Subway shooting suspect has ‘been on his own his whole life’
The sister of Frank R. James said she had little contact with her brother and had not seen him face to face in a long time, according to an interview with the New York Times.
The Times reported Catherine James Robinson confirmed details about her brother and said he was born in the Bronx. He moved often between cities, and the siblings spoke only occasionally on the phone. The last time they spoke was after the death of their sister several years ago, Robinson told the Times.
USA TODAY reached a number listed for Robinson on Wednesday afternoon, but a woman hung up shortly after answering the call.
— Christal Hayes and Ryan Miller
‘So scary’: Subway riders express worries, brush off fears day after attack
Despite the attack Tuesday morning, subway riders were still streaming in and out of trains Wednesday as New Yorkers and tourists alike bustled throughout the city.
At Hudson Yards in Manhattan, Michelle Gil, visiting from Puerto Rico, said she didn’t see heightened security at the No. 7 train station. “After what happened yesterday, you would expect more police everywhere, but there was nothing,” she said.
Len Burton, who is visiting New York City with his wife and two children, said he was not worried about taking the trains. “It was a one-off incident,” Burton, from Redding, Pennsylvania, said undeterred. “We knew about the incident yesterday, but we went all of over the city riding the subway.”
Jasimna Mohmoud runs a vegetarian halal cart outside the 7 station and was so concerned about the incident that she asked her sister, who lives in Brooklyn, to stay home. “The guy is free. It is so scary,” she said. Mohmoud said she wanted the city should to invest in smart scanning machines for weapons. “They check for tickets here but not for knives and guns,” she said.
— Swapna Venugopal
Security camera at Brooklyn subway station had ‘server problem’
The head of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said Wednesday there was a problem with a security camera server at the 36th Street subway station where the train stopped.
“It seems like that one (camera) had a server problem,” meaning the camera wasn’t sending images to the NYPD, MTA Chairman Janno Lieber told NY1. Appearing on CBS, Lieber said the camera was near a turnstile at the station, but there were 600 cameras throughout the N train line Brooklyn.
“There are images of this fellow that are going to be found,” Lieber said.
The MTA has cameras in all subway stations but not necessarily on each station’s platform, where riders board and get off trains.
Essig said the N train was between the stations at 59th and 36th streets when the shooting began. The shooter was in the second car in the rear corner, and he fled after the train pulled into the station, Essig said.
— Kevin McCoy and Ryan Miller
IS IT TERRORISM? Brooklyn shooting is not being investigated as terrorism ‘at this time.’ Here’s why.
Shooting survivor: ‘I don’t think I could ever ride a train again’
Hourari Benkada had just gotten on the N train on his way to work and was wearing headphones Tuesday when smoke began pouring into the subway car, he told CNN on Tuesday night from his hospital bed.
Benkada said he heard a woman shout she was pregnant so he went up to help her. He hugged her as the crowd in the train rushed to the back. Benkada said he was pushed and then felt the gunshot in the leg.
People on the train struggled to open the doors to other cars to try to escape the smoke and shooting, Benkada told CNN. He didn’t initially think his wound was serious, but when he got off the train and looked at his leg, “the size of a quarter is gushing out blood” around his knee, he said.
Benkada said he was sitting next to the shooter but didn’t recognize the photos of James that police released. The shooter was wearing a mask, Benkada said.
“I don’t think I could ever ride a train again,” Benkada said.
— Ryan Miller
Neighbor: Suspect was ‘angry, loud and alone’
A neighbor who lived across the street from the shooting suspect in a Milwaukee duplex said he struck her as “angry, loud and alone” for the sixth to eight months they lived near each other.
Keilah Miller told USA TODAY that James lived in an adjacent apartment. She often heard yelling but no one ever enter the apartment with James. “He was just not approachable,” she said.
Miller interacted with James once when she left her keys in the door. She said he banged on her door “and he’s there saying, ‘Don’t do that!'”
Miller said she left her apartment Tuesday after seeing police circulate James’ photos.
— Kevin Johnson
MORE ON THE SUBWAY SHOOTING:Brooklyn subway train attack injured about 2 dozen people
Police looking into suspect’s YouTube videos, threats of violence
Police found two non-detonated smoke grenades, a hatchet, gasoline and the key to a U-Haul van on the train. Investigators believe James rented the van in Philadelphia and police found it later Tuesday in Brooklyn, Essig said.
James has ties to both Wisconsin and Philadelphia, authorities said.
WHERE IS SUNSET PARK:Subway attack shocks Sunset Park, a hub for working-class immigrants: ‘Nothing like this happens here’
Sewell said police are investigating a number of social media posts appearing to come from James where he mentioned homelessness and Adams. The mayor’s security detail would be tightened out of an “abundance of caution,” she said.
A law enforcement official who was not authorized to comment publicly told USA TODAY authorities were reviewing several social media pages, including YouTube videos appearing to feature James discussing a variety of issues from Black rights and slavery to the recent mass shooting in Sacramento and the confirmation of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.
The videos touch on themes of violence, systemic racism and Black superiority. One video posted the day before the attack, the man in the videos said he wanted to harm people. “I can say I wanted to kill people. I wanted to watch people die.”
Other videos police are reviewing include clips from New York’s subway trains. In a February, a video mentioned the city’s subway safety plan. The man says the plan “is doomed for failure” and refers to himself as a “victim” of the mayor’s mental health program. A January video — called “Dear Mr. Mayor” — is somewhat critical of Adams’ plan to end gun violence, which has become an early focus of the Democrat’s first term in office.
Among the videos that James posted is a 16-minute black-and-white clip from the 1967 movie “The Incident.” Based on a play called “Ride With Terror,” the clip shows two street hoods who terrorize 14 passengers in a New York City subway car; the footage shows a Black passenger being racially harassed by one of the bigoted white aggressors on the train.
— Christal Hayes and Kevin Johnson
Eric Adams: City will look into metal detectors for subways
Adams said during an appearance on MSNBC on Wednesday morning the city was exploring all “legal” technologies to keep the subways safe and detect any potential weapons entering the system.
Asked about adding metal detectors, Adams said it was a possibility but said the detectors would not be like the ones common at airports, rather less invasive technologies that riders may not even notice.
Adams said a safe and reliable subway system was essential for New York City. “It’s the lifeblood of our city. It’s the great equalizer,” he said on MSNBC.
— Ryan Miller
Cities around US ramp up subway police patrols, Brooklyn neighborhood on edge
The attack sparked fears in riders taking the nation’s subway system. Police in other major U.S. cities increased their presence in public transit as a result.
The BART system around the San Francisco Bay Area, SEPTA in Philadelphia and Washington’s Metro were among the major public transit systems adding police officers or on a high alert after the attack.
In Sunset Park, residents were shocked their working-class, predominately immigrant neighborhood became the center of a violent attack Tuesday.
“Violence on the subway isn’t new to our area, but seeing so many people so terrified and so many people saying they saw people covered in blood, it’s crazy,” said Rogelio Miranda, a cashier at a supermarket near the Brooklyn subway stop.
“Nothing like this happens here,” said Rosario Moreno, who lived in Sunset Park for 17 years. “I feel lost and scared.”
Sunset Park was once predominantly home to Scandinavian immigrants until people from Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic began arriving before 1970, followed later by Mexicans and more Central Americans.
Chinese immigrants looking to settle and start businesses outside of the city’s crowded Chinatown began settling in the area during the late 1980s. They often told newcomers from China taking the trains from Manhattan to get out at the “blue sky stop,” a reference to Sunset Park, where the subway lines emerged from tunnels into the open air.
— N’dea Yancey-Bragg and Eduardo Cuevas
Contributing: Kevin McCoy, Gabriela Miranda, Swapna Venugopal and N’dea Yancey-Bragg, USA TODAY; Eduardo Cuevas, Rockland/Westchester Journal News