The man wanted for allegedly donning a gas mask, releasing a smoke bomb and opening fire on a crowded Brooklyn subway Tuesday morning has been taken into custody.
NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said 62-year-old Frank R. James was spotted by bystanders in the East Village Wednesday afternoon.
‘I think you’re looking for me,” the caller reportedly said. “I’m seeing my picture all over the news and I’ll be around this McDonalds.”
By the time police responded, he had left the McDonald’s at East 6th Street and First Avenue. An NYPD official said they are reviewing the 911 call but preliminarily believe he called police on himself.
“My fellow New Yorkers, we got him,” Mayor Eric Adams said. “We got him.”
We hope this arrest brings some solace to the victims and the people of the city of New York,” Sewell said. “We used every resource at our disposal to gather and process significant evident that directly links Mr. James to the shooting. We were able to shrink his world quickly. There was nowhere left for him to run.”
James will face life in prison if convicted in the attack, which left at least 29 people shot or otherwise injured, shaking a city already unnerved by a sharp rise in crime.
Officials said any potential motive remains unclear, but witnesses said the lone gunman was seen mumbling to himself while wearing a reflective vest before putting on the gas mask and removing a canister from his bag that then filled the car with smoke. He then began shooting.
Ten people were struck by bullets, while others were either grazed or hurt in the chaos that followed.
After the shooting, NYPD Chief of Detective James Essig said James boarded an R train that pulled into the station and went one stop before exiting at the 25th Street station. After that, James was seen again at a Park Slope subway stop just under an hour later before fading from view.
Authorities identified James as a person of interest Tuesday night, but by Wednesday, after the investigation linked James to the crime in numerous ways, Mayor Eric Adams said he was considered the suspect and a wanted fugitive.
That determination was made overnight after more than 18 hours of investigation that included video, cell phone data, and witness interviews.
“There was a clear desire to create terror,” Adams said. “If you bring a smoke bomb or would you bring a semi-automatic weapon with a gas mask and in a very methodical way injured…innocent New Yorkers, that is terror.”
They said a pillow inside indicated he may have been sleeping there, and a nearby subway station is where they believe he entered the system.
The keys to that van were found in the shooter’s possessions left behind at the subway station, NYPD Chief of Detectives James Essig said.
Also recovered at the scene was a 9 mm Glock semi-automatic handgun, three extended magazines, a hatchet, gasoline, four smoke grenades (two detonated and two undetonated) and bag of consumer grade fireworks, as well as a credit card authorities say was used to rent the U-Haul. The gun was purchased from a licensed pawn shop in Ohio in 2011, the ATF determined.

The gun, and the purchase of a gas mask on eBay, are among the pieces of evidence that elevated James from person of interest to suspect, sources said.
Investigators also grew more comfortable calling James a suspect after they re-interviewed witnesses who initially gave a height description of the gunman that did not match James’ 6-foot-2 frame.
Phantom Fireworks confirmed in a statement that James purchased products in Wisconsin believed to have been left behind in the 36th Street subway station.
Authorities have discovered no meaningful felony arrests in James’ criminal history, only a number of misdemeanor charges. But James was known to the NYPD with a rap sheet spanning six years, 1992 to 1998, with nine prior arrests.






















