NYC subway shooting suspect ate at Katz's Deli during manhunt: Sources
ABC News
Frank James, the man accused of opening fire on a subway train in Brooklyn, visited multiple Manhattan neighborhoods as the NYPD hunted for him.
Frank James, the man accused of opening fire on a subway train in Brooklyn, visited multiple Manhattan neighborhoods, including a stop at the famous Katz's Delicatessen, as the NYPD scoured the city for him, according to police sources.
James, 62, was arrested in Manhattan's East Village neighborhood on Wednesday afternoon, authorities said, more than 24 hours after 10 people were shot on a crowded N subway as the train pulled into Brooklyn's 36th Street Station. Twenty-nine people were wounded overall in the chaos.
Police recovered James' phone, credit card and MetroCard at the scene of the shooting, but he had a second phone and second MetroCard which police are now using to track his movements after he eluded capture at the scene of the crime, police sources told ABC News.
After the mass shooting during Tuesday morning's rush hour, James switched subway trains, from the N to the R, and got off the train at the 25th Street Station around 8:35 a.m., sources said. He then took the B67 bus to Park Slope, where he bought a new mask and entered the 7th Avenue subway station at 9:18 a.m.