Shooting Rampage in New York City Subway
NEW YORK (Dispatches) -- Multiple people were shot in a New York City subway station during rush hour on Tuesday, and a manhunt was underway for a suspect, officials said.
At least 13 people were injured during the mayhem that unfolded at a station in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborhood, the FDNY said, though it was not immediately clear how many of those victims were shot.
A man, possibly wearing clothes that resembled MTA attire, was spotted throwing a device in the subway station before opening fire at about 8:30 a.m., law enforcement sources told NBC New York.
The NYPD, though, said no “active explosive devices” were immediately found at the scene. What was believed to be explosive devices “may just be debris,” law enforcement sources said, according to NBC New York.
Police were looking for a man, believed to be about 5-foot-5, 180 pounds and wearing a gas mask, who shot at least five people, sources said.
Some of the wounded passengers made their escape by jumping on a train, the sources said.
Several commuters posted images of bloodshed and smoke in the Brooklyn subway station immediately after the attack.
Commuters were urged to steer clear of 36th Street and Fourth Avenue “due to an investigation” and “emergency vehicles and delays in the surrounding area,” the NYPD said in a statement.
That corner is the site of a busy station that runs the D, N and R trains. There is no service there and at some stations in Manhattan in the immediate aftermath of the mayhem.
Two schools were put on lockdown and most stores in the neighborhood evacuated, NBC New York reported.
President Biden has been briefed on the subway shooting. White House senior staff are in touch with New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell to offer any assistance as needed.
Tuesday’s bloodshed comes as New York City companies and employees struggle with return-to-office debates and whether workers should be forced back to headquarters they’ve barely seen over the last two years due to the Covid-19 pandemic.