

With the help of U-Haul, police tracked down the van to Kings Highway and West 4th Street in Gravesend, officials said. Officials said cops also found 33 discharged shell casings, 15 bullets, three extended magazine clips, two detonated smoke grenades, two non-detonated smoke grenades, a hatchet, fireworks and gasoline in a bag the gunman left behind. James appeared on investigators’ radar after police recovered the keys to a U-Haul van, which they say he rented, at the shooting scene. James, who has addresses in Philadelphia and Wisconsin.īy Wednesday afternoon, the NYPD said he was the main suspect in the attack. The shooter fled the scene in the commotion but police Tuesday were on the hunt into the night for a 62-year-old “person of interest” they identified as Frank R. MTA surveillance cameras at the station were “malfunctioning,” officials said. No one died, but five people were listed Tuesday in critical but stable condition. Officials said that in addition to the 10 people wounded by gunshots, 19 others suffered from injuries ranging shrapnel wounds to smoke inhalation and panic attacks.

at the 36th Street stop in Sunset Park, sending panicked commuters bolting from the Manhattan-bound N train, with some collapsing as smoke billowed out on to the station platform. The shots - initially reported as an “unusual loud noise” in an internal MTA alert obtained by THE CITY - rang out just before 8:30 a.m. It’s the latest high-profile horror in a transit system still struggling to win back riders. A heavily armed gunman set off smoke grenades before spraying 33 bullets into a rush-hour train as it pulled into a Brooklyn subway station Tuesday morning, officials said.
