The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

New York City subway scare suspect taken into police custody

- By Michael R. Sisak and Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK>> A man suspected of placing two devices that looked like pressure cookers in a New York City subway station on Friday, causing an evacuation and snarling the morning commute, has been apprehende­d, police said.

Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea tweeted Saturday morning that a man seen in surveillan­ce video holding one of the objects was taken into custody. Police identified the objects as rice cookers and determined they were not explosives.

Police say the man was located around 12:45 a.m. Saturday in the Bronx and taken to a hospital for treatment and observatio­n. Police did not specify what, if any, injuries or condition he was being treated for.

A West Virginia sheriff’s department identified the man as Larry Kenton Griffin II, of Bruno, West Virginia and said he had a criminal history in the state.

The Logan County Sheriff’s Department said it has arrested Griffin, 26, at least three times in the past eight years, including a 2017 arrest on charges alleging he sent obscene material to a minor.

Griffin’s cousin Tara Brumfield told a Huntington, West Virginia, television station that he is a good person who has been dealing with mental health issues.

Offering a possible explanatio­n for his involvemen­t with the rice cookers, she said Griffin has a habit of picking up items in one place and putting them down in another.

“Whether it’s tools or a fishing pole or something like that like he’ll pick up one thing and leave it there and then pick up another and then leave it there and I’ve watched him do stuff like that a bunch of times,” she told the station, WSAZTV.

It wasn’t immediatel­y known if Griffin had a lawyer representi­ng him in the New York case. No charges have been announced.

New York City police said security cameras captured a man pulling the cookers out of a shopping cart and placing them in the Fulton Street subway station near the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan.

A third cooker of the same make, year and model was found about 2 miles away (3 kilometers) on a sidewalk in the Chelsea neighborho­od, prompting another police investigat­ion.

Police stressed at a news conference on Friday that it wasn’t clear if the man was trying to frighten people or merely throwing the objects away.

“I would stop very short of calling him a suspect,” said John Miller, the New York Police Department’s top counterter­ror official.

“It is possible that somebody put out a bunch of items in the trash today and this guy picked them up and then discarded them, or it’s possible that this was an intentiona­l act.”

 ?? NYPD VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo released by NYPD shows a person of interest wanted for questionin­g in regard to the suspicious items placed inside the Fulton Street subway station in Lower Manhattan on Friday in New York.
NYPD VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo released by NYPD shows a person of interest wanted for questionin­g in regard to the suspicious items placed inside the Fulton Street subway station in Lower Manhattan on Friday in New York.

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