NEW YORK (1010 WINS/WCBS 880) — A mass shooting at the 36th Street subway station in Sunset Park left at least 21 people injured, including 10 who were shot, during rush hour on Tuesday morning, authorities said amid a massive manhunt for an unidentified suspect who authorities said put on a gas mask , set off smoke bombs and then open fire at passengers on a train and platform.
At an afternoon press conference, the FDNY said 16 people were injured, including 10 who were shot. A short time later, sources said the number of injured had jumped to 21. Five are in critical but stable condition at several area hospitals.
The injuries include smoke inhalation and shrapnel wounds, though not from an explosion, officials said.
“There are currently no known explosive devices on our subway trains and this is not being investigated as an act of terrorism at this time,” NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said, adding that she was “not ruling out anything.”
Sewell said no one suffered life-threatening injuries in the shooting, which happened aboard a Manhattan-bound N train as it waited to enter the 36th Street station at 8:24 am
Sewell said a man donned a gas mask and then took a canister out of the bag and opened it. The train filled with smoke and he opened fire, striking multiple people on the train and platform.
The commissioner said the suspect is a Black male, about 5 feet 5 inches tall with a heavy build. He was wearing a green construction vest and a gray hooded sweatshirt.
At the briefing, Gov. Kathy Hochul said, “This is an active-shooter situation right now in the city of New York.”
Of the victims, the governor said, “They left their homes en route to school, en route to their jobs and to a normal day. That sense of tranquility and normalness was brutally disrupted by an individual so coldhearted and depraved of heart that they had no caring about the individuals that they assaulted.”
Hochul said “we are sick and tired of reading headlines about crime” and that she is committing the full resources of the state “to fight this surge in crime, this insanity that is seizing our city, because we want to get back to normal. ”
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Photo credit AP Photo/John Minchillo
The FDNY said it was called to the scene of a smoke condition a little before 8:30 am at the station and found multiple gunshot victims as well as several “undetonated devices.” The NYPD later tweeted that there were “no active explosive devices,” however multiple smoke devices were found.
Images on social media show multiple injured people lying on a platform of the station or limping around amid pools of blood and clouds of smoke. Blood also covered the floor of the N train.
In video obtained by 1010 WINS, gunshots can be heard on board the train as passengers rush away. Witnesses said people were already shot before the train arrived at the station. Some passengers escaped into the tunnel as others rushed onto the platform.
“My subway door opened into calamity. It was smoke and blood and people screaming,” eyewitness Sam Carcamo told 1010 WINS, saying he saw a gigantic billow of smoke pouring out of the train once the door opened.
A supermarket worker said he saw crowds of people running from the subway station, including a woman with a gunshot wound to at least one of her legs, maybe both. She was screaming for help and laid down in the street, where she was soon attended to. She was said to be among the victims who’s in stable condition.
Photo credit Steven Scammacca
Photo credit Will B Wylde via AP
Photo credit Will B. Wylde via AP
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Mayor Eric Adams, who is isolating at Gracie Mansion with COVID-19, released a video message, saying City Hall is in close contact with city, state and federal officials.
“We’re praying for all New Yorkers who were injured or affected by today’s attack,” the mayor said. “The suspect in today’s attack detonated smoke bombs to cause havoc. We will not allow New Yorkers to be terrorized even by a single individual. NYPD is searching for the suspect at large, and we will find him. But we ask the public to come forward with any information.”
Speaking on CNN a short time later, Adams said “we do not have a positive ID [on a suspect] at this time.”
Adams said the city is doubling the number of officers in the transit system.
“I would say to New Yorkers, we’re going to have, we’re going to hold the day tour of the transit police officers to double the number of officers that are traditionally patrolling the system,” the mayor said.
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Photo credit Will B. Wylde via AP
As the investigation continues, a police official told ABC News that there were no working cameras inside the station at the time but that law enforcement did get an image of a suspect from a bystander’s cell phone video. The police official said the suspect was seen mumbling to himself before putting on the gas mask and shooting.
A law enforcement source told CBS News that it appears to have been “a planned attack.” There is no known motive, and if it was a planned attack, it’s unclear if it was terrorism or a criminal act, the source said. Part of the reason investigators haven’t ruled out terrorism is because they have’t identified the suspect, so they can’t determine if he has ties to a terrorist group.
The FBI’s New York field office is assisting the NYPD in its investigation, as is the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).
“The FBI’s and NYPD’s joint-terrorism task force is made up of over 50 agencies and we are fully-engaged on this investigation,” said Michael J. Driscoll, assistant director in charge of the FBI New York field office. “It’s still very much in its early stages. Our focus right now – our thoughts and prayers are with the victims. We’re following every viable lead and will continue to do so with the NYPD and our other city partners.”
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Photo creditAP Photo/Kevin Hagen
Video shows a massive police and FDNY response outside the station with helicopters overhead and large crowds of onlookers. A number of schools in the area sheltered in place.
Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine said the DOE’s shelter-in-place order impacted all schools within a 1-mile radius of 36th Street and Fourth Avenue in Brooklyn. “This means students may not leave their buildings, and there is enhanced screening for adults entering. This is not a full lockdown, in which no one would be able to leave or enter schools buildings,” he said.
President Joe Biden, Sen. Chuck Schumer, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, US Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, Attorney General Merrick Garland and other local and federal officials have all been briefed on the shooting.
“[Biden] has been briefed on the latest developments regarding the New York City subway shooting,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said. “White House senior staff are in touch with Mayor Adams and Police Commissioner Sewell to offer any assistance as needed.”
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The NYPD urged people to avoid the area at 36th Street and Fourth Avenue “due to an investigation.” It’s the location of the 36th Street station serving the D, N, Q, R and W lines.
“Expect emergency vehicles and delays in the surrounding area,” the NYPD tweeted.
The MTA said there were no D/N/R service in Brooklyn and some stations in Manhattan and that riders should expect major delays on B/D/FN/Q/R trains.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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George is Digismak’s reported cum editor with 13 years of experience in Journalism