Brooklyn shooting suspect Frank James called Crime Stoppers on himself, terror-related charges expected
April 13, 2022
Frank James is led out of the 9th Precinct on Wednesday
The madman who turned a New York commute into a bloody terror when he allegedly opened fire inside a crowded subway car called Crime Stoppers on himself Wednesday morning — then calmly went for an afternoon stroll through the East Village.
“A call came into Crime Stoppers … The guy says, ‘You know, I think you’re looking for me. I’m seeing my picture all over the news and I’ll be around this McDonald’s,’” a law enforcement source told The Post of the bizarre moment Frank James called cops on himself.
“So the unit responds and he’s not at the McDonald’s, so they start driving around and see a man who fits the description. When they take him into custody, they find his Wisconsin driver’s license.”
A couple of eagle-eyed New Yorkers also called 911 after they spotted James sauntering through the East Village, where he briefly sat down at an outdoor dining shed, and the NYPD swooped in shortly after and put him in handcuffs.
“I’m Frank, I’m the person you’re looking for. I’m surprised it took so long,” James told police as they arrested him, police sources said.
Mohammed Chikh, who alerted police and witnessed the arrest, said James appeared calm and unfazed.
“He didn’t fight, he didn’t do anything, he totally surrendered,” said Chikh.
NYPD officers arrest James after day-long manhunt following Tuesday’s shooting
Subway shooting suspect Frank James is arrested in the East Village
US Attorney Breon Peace said his office would use “every tool at our disposal” in the case
Federal prosecutors wasteno time charging James, 62, with terror-related offenses for firing 33 rounds on a Manhattan-bound N train Tuesday morning, leaving 10 people with gunshot wounds and another 19 injured in a mass shooting that shocked an already rattled city that’s been reeling from a citywide crime surge.
They hit him with a charge of committing terrorist attacks and other violence against mass transportation systems, which could send him to prison for life if he’s convicted.
Police arrested James just before 2 p.m. on First Avenue and St. Mark’s Place and about two hours later, he was walked from the 9th Precinct, grinning as cops shoved him into a waiting police car.
He’s facing one felony charge for committing a terrorist attack against a mass transportation system and faces life in prison if convicted, Brooklyn federal prosecutors said.
“My fellow New Yorkers. We got him, we got him. I cannot thank the men and women of the New York City Police Department enough, as well as our federal agents, our state police, our first responders — from the 911 operators, to the various men and women from our medical professionals. We got him,” Mayor Eric Adams said at an afternoon press conference celebrating the arrest, more than 24 hours after the attack, and after a second rush hour of fear for commuters.
“I said to New Yorkers: We’re going to protect the people of this city and apprehend those who believe they can bring terror to everyday New Yorkers and I want to thank every day New Yorkers who called in tips, who responded, who helped those passengers who were injured. Thirty-three shots, but less than 30 hours later, we’re able to say we got him.”
In the initial aftermath of the attack, cops had trouble tracking down James because surveillance cameras at the 36th Street station where the incident occurred had malfunctioned.
They later determined James had blended in with commuters and took an R train to the next stop at 25th Street, where cameras also weren’t working.
Shortly after slipping out of that station, he boarded a B67 bus and then was back on the rails about 45 minutes later at 9:15 a.m. when he walked into an F train station at Seventh Avenue and Ninth Street in Park Slope, according to police officials.
At the time, police had only released a bare bones description of him and no photo because of the camera malfunction so nobody realized he was the suspect and he was able to ride the train freely.
Prosecutors said James attempted to scratch out the gun’s serial number
The gun used in the attack, a 9mm Glock, was legally purchased in Ohio by an individual named “Frank Robert James” and when the firearm was examined, investigators determined he’d defaced the serial number and attempted to scratch it out, prosecutors said in James’ criminal complaint.
The alleged shooter, who’d previously been staying in an Airbnb in Philadelphia and also has ties to Wisconsin, drove a U-Haul truck into the Big Apple early Tuesday morning around 4 a.m.
Surveillance footage captured him going over the Verrazano Narrows Bridge and driving into Brooklyn, where the U-Haul was later found abandoned in Gravesend, court records show.
Hours after the shooting Tuesday, federal agents conducted a search warrant at a storage unit registered to James in Philadelphia and inside found a cache of weapons and ammunition capable of committing mass carnage.
The items include 9mm bullets, a threaded 9mm pistol barrel that allows for a silencer or suppressor to be attached, targets and .223 caliber ammunition, which is made to be used with an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle.
They also raided the Airbnb where he’d been staying and found an empty magazine for a Glock handgun, a taser, a high-capacity rifle magazine and a blue smoke canister, prosecutors said.
“My office is prepared to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that… James did knowingly and without lawful authority and permission commit an act, including the use of a dangerous weapon, with the intent to cause death and serious bodily injury to passengers and MTA employees on the New York City subway system,” US Attorney Breon Peace said when announcing the charge against James in Brooklyn federal court.
“My office will use every tool at our disposal to bring this individual to justice, and restore safety and peace of mind to all.”
Moira Penza, a former Brooklyn federal prosecutor now in private practice, said: “Frank James is alleged to have crossed state lines with the intent to cause physical harm to individuals using mass transportation, here the New York City subway system, putting his actions squarely within the conduct criminalized as terrorism under our federal laws.”
Julie Rendelman, a defense attorney and former Brooklyn state prosecutor, said James is likely facing federal charges because the penalties are harsher and there’ll be more resources available for the investigation.
“From the information we have learned thus far, it seems clear that the defendant crossed state lines in order to engage in his violent criminal act and committed such acts against a mass transportation system, thus giving the federal government the jurisdiction to handle this case,” Rendelman told The Post.
As the sentencing exposure for an act of terrorism is a potential life sentence, the charging decision sends a clear message that an attack on the New York Transit system is an attack on the United States as a whole and therefore deserves the most severe punishment.”
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