The Mercury News Weekend

Subway attack suspect is jailed without bail

- By Tom Hays, Bobby Caina Calvan and Jennifer Peltz

>> The man charged with opening fire in a Brooklyn subway car full of people was jailed without bail Thursday as prosecutor­s told a judge he terrified all of New York City.

Brought into a Brooklyn federal court without handcuffs, a subdued Frank James,

62, softly answered standard questions about whether he understood the charges and the purpose of the brief hearing. His lawyer later asked the public not to prejudge him.

James was arrested in Manhattan after calling a police tip line to say where he was Wednesday, a day after the nightmaris­h rushhour attack left 10 people with gunshot wounds and countless others fearing for their safety on the nation's busiest subway system.

Authoritie­s say he unleashed smoke bombs and dozens of bullets in a train full of morning commuters. He's charged with a federal terrorism offense that applies to attacks on mass transit systems — authoritie­s say there's currently no evidence linking him to terror organizati­ons and are still trying to derive a motive.

“The defendant terrifying­ly opened fire on passengers on a crowded subway train, interrupti­ng their morning commute in a way the city hasn't seen in more than 20 years,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Sara K. Winik said, apparently referring to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

“The defendant's attack was premeditat­ed, was carefully planned and it caused terror among the victims and our entire city,” she said.

While James was in court, Hourari Benkada was in a hospital bed with a bullet wound in his leg.

Benkada said he was just feet away from the gunman on the train and has struggled to sleep since. Tuesday's horrific scene keeps replaying in his mind.

“I'm still shocked about it,” Benkada said in a video interview Thursday, grimacing in pain as he recalled the attack.

He had headphones on, music blaring, as smoke began filling the subway car. He initially thought it was a small fire. But the smoke “kept escalating to black, black smoke like 9/11,” he said, “and the whole train was pitch-black.”

Then there were gunshots, screams and a scramble for safety. Benkada said he tried to shield a pregnant woman from getting hit during the mayhem, and as people pushed forward, a gunshot tore into his knee.

The shooting victims, who range in age from 16 to 60, are all expected to survive.

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