A New York straphanger who lost a duel with a swordsman on a Manhattan subway Thursday morning had been accused of planting fake bombs on another commuter train back in 2019, igniting a terror scare, according to authorities.
Larry Griffin, 29, had a violent morning at the Chambers Street subway station after an argument with another man left him bloodied around 9:20 a.m., according to investigators.
Griffin told police the argument broke out on a northbound A train, when the suspect allegedly “menaced him with a sheathed sword.”
When the suspect got off, Griffin followed him and took out his phone to call 911, according to authorities. Then the other man allegedly whacked him in the head with the sword’s wooden sheath, which broke off and was recovered at the scene.
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“The suspect fled topside to parts unknown,” a police spokesperson said Thursday, and he remains at large. Griffin was treated at New York Downtown Hospital.
Griffin, in 2019, was accused of planting rice cookers at the Fulton Street subway station, near the World Trade Center, in 2019. Police found a third cooker a couple miles away on a sidewalk in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood. He was still on parole for that at the time of Thursday’s attack, according to the New York Post.
The incident prompted a minor panic until police determined they were inert devices.
At the time, his cousin told reporters in their West Virginia hometown that he suffered from mental health issues.
“Little Larry’s a good person. He’s got issues, but he don’t ever mean no harm or anything,” Tara Brumfield told WSAZ-TV. “Sometimes I don’t understand why he don’t use his smart for good, but the things that he does sometimes I question.”
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Rice cookers can resemble pressure cookers – which have in the past been used to make bombs, including those used in the Boston Marathon attack in 2013 and another that rocked Chelsea in 2016, injuring 30 people.
Griffin’s criminal history also predates his time in the Big Apple – with West Virginia authorities revealing after his bomb scare arrest that he had prior charges including possession of a controlled substance involving weapons and use of obscene material to seduce a minor.
The subway sword attack comes as Mayor Eric Adams has insisted the media is to blame for the “perception” of surging public transportation crimes.
However, police statistics show transit crime was up 41.1% year to date as of Oct. 16, the most recent data set available. Robberies have spiked 34.2% in that time, and felony assaults rose by 14.5%.
Adams’ office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday evening.
Fox News’ Nicole Darrah contributed to this report.