Life in prison handed down to New York City subway shooter

Life in prison handed down to New York City subway shooter

A man who⁣ sprayed a New York City⁢ subway ⁣car with bullets during rush hour, wounding 10 people and sparking a citywide manhunt,⁢ was ‍sentenced Thursday to life in⁣ prison.

Frank James, 64, pleaded guilty earlier this year to terrorism charges in the 12 April⁤ 2022 mass shooting aboard a Manhattan-bound⁢ train. He received a life ​sentence​ on 10 counts ‌and 10 years for an 11th count.

Prosecutors ​had asked for the life sentence, saying‍ James spent years carefully planning the ⁤shooting in order to “inflict maximum damage”.

James’ attorneys​ had asked⁢ for⁣ a reduced sentence of 18 years, saying he didn’t intend to‍ kill anyone and suffered‌ from serious ‌mental illness.

Prior to the sentencing, some of the shooting⁣ victims spoke ⁣in court​ while others submitted letters ​that were read out loud.

Disguised as a‍ construction worker, James waited until the train was between stations,​ denying his ⁣targets a chance to flee. Then he⁣ ignited multiple smoke bombs and unleashed a⁢ barrage of ‌bullets ‍from⁤ a 9mm⁣ handgun​ at panicked ⁤riders ‌in the crowded train car.

The attack, carried out ⁤as⁢ the train pulled ‍into a station in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, wounded victims⁤ ranging in age from 16 to 60.

As emergency responders tended to ⁤the victims, James⁤ walked calmly out of the subway⁣ station and vanished. Authorities ​searched for him‌ for more than a day. ⁤They⁣ identified James as a suspect relatively quickly, using a key to a rented moving ⁢van​ left behind ⁣on the bloodied‌ subway car. He was eventually arrested in Manhattan’s East Village after calling a police tip line to turn himself in.

“The fact that ⁢no one was killed by the defendant’s 32 gunshots ⁣can only be described as luck as opposed to the⁣ defendant’s intentional choice,” Brooklyn prosecutors‌ wrote in a memo to US district judge William Kuntz.

The‍ attack stunned New Yorkers,‌ heightened anxiety about safety in the transit system and prompted local officials to ‌add ​additional surveillance cameras and police to the ⁢trains.

Before ‌the​ shooting, James posted dozens of videos online​ under the moniker “Prophet ‌of Doom”, ⁣ranting⁢ about race, violence, his ​struggles with mental illness and a host⁢ of unnamed‍ forces he​ claimed were⁢ out to get him.

In one 2019 video, James ⁢alluded to a ‌pending conflict in his hometown, stating that “it’s going to be very interesting what happens in New York with me”. By ​that time, prosecutors allege, ‌James was already⁤ in the process of planning the subway shooting.

When James pleaded guilty to the terrorism charges earlier this year, he‍ said he only intended to cause ​serious bodily injury, not death.

His attorney, Mia Eisner-Grynberg, suggested that while James may have initially planned⁢ to kill people, he changed his mind in the ​heat of the ‍moment.

“In a society where, sadly, we learn nearly every day​ that‍ mass shooters ‌who intend to kill readily achieve‌ their⁢ goals, it is‌ far more likely ⁤that Mr James lacked that ‍specific intent than ⁣that he simply failed in his mission,”…

2023-10-05⁤ 15:06:53
Article from www.theguardian.com
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