'Without incident,' police arrested the suspect in the New York train shooting.

The suspect was the one who tipped off police to his location in lower Manhattan, according to the Associated Press and CNN. Police did not respond to questions about the person who called in the tip.

'Without incident,' police arrested the suspect in the New York train shooting.

A guy has been arrested in New York City on suspicion of shooting ten commuters at a Brooklyn subway station during rush hour.

Frank James, 62, is accused of donning a construction worker's helmet, vest, and gas mask before starting a fire with smoke grenades.

Following the attack, a large 30-hour manhunt was started.

Mr. James was apprehended in Manhattan on Wednesday afternoon after police got a tip, according to authorities.

"We got him, my fellow New Yorkers," Mayor Eric Adams stated during a news conference via video.

Officials said Mr. James was the only suspect in the shooting at Brooklyn's 36th Street station on Tuesday morning, which injured 23 individuals, 10 of whom were shot. The attack rekindled calls for the city's transit system to be free of violence.

Keechant Sewell, New York's police commissioner, said that Mr. James was arrested "without incident". "There was nowhere left for him to run," she said.

The suspect was the one who tipped off police to his location in lower Manhattan, according to the Associated Press and CNN. Police did not respond to questions about the person who called in the tip.

Mr. James will face multiple charges, including violating a federal law that outlaws "terrorist and other violent assaults" against mass transit networks, according to authorities. If convicted, he might spend the rest of his life in prison.

According to authorities, he had nine prior offenses and had ties to Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.

The search for Mr. James was made more difficult by the subway station's malfunctioning cameras. On Wednesday, officials were trying to figure out if one or more of the station's cameras were broken.

The alleged gunman managed to flee the scene, but a leased U-Haul van was later linked to the crime. The van's key, as well as a Glock 9mm handgun, three ammo magazines, a plastic container carrying gasoline, and a credit card with Mr. James' name on it, were discovered at the site, according to police.

According to an FBI document, Mr. James rented the U-Haul in Philadelphia on Monday and drove it to New York the next day. According to records, the Glock was legally purchased in Ohio "by a man called 'Frank Robert James.'"

According to court filings, Mr. James had posted black nationalist rhetoric and prejudiced rants online, as well as "made various statements regarding the New York City subway system," including about homeless persons on the subways and "other conspiracy theories," according to officials.

Mr. James is scheduled to appear in court for the first time on Thursday in New York.