Brooklyn subway shooting: exploring New York’s ‘steep decline in law and order’

Last week, a gunman set off smoke bombs and opened fire on a rush-hour train in the city

Artwork by a subway station
Artwork by a subway station in New York City on 13 April, one day after people were injured during a rush-hour shooting
(Image credit: Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images)

As a child in New York City, riding the subway to school every day, I used to worry about what would happen if a passenger turned violent, said Albert Fox Cahn in The Daily Beast. Last week, that “nightmare” played out in horrifying fashion when a gunman set off smoke bombs and opened fire on a rush-hour train in Brooklyn, injuring 23 people and “sending a shudder of terror into the hearts of millions of New Yorkers”. Frank James, a 62-year-old with a history of crime, mental illness and interest in racial conspiracy theories, was later arrested.

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