Two men have been stabbed inside a Manhattan subway station just hours after the Brooklyn mass shooting - despite New York officials vowing to send more police officers to make the city’s embattled transit hubs safer.
The two victims, aged 19 and 20, were attacked at around 1am on Wednesday morning as they waited on the southbound number 2 train platform at 135 Street subway station in Harlem, according to the NYPD.
Police said the pair got into an altercation with another man and he attacked them.
The 19-year-old was stabbed in the neck and the 20-year-old was stabbed in the torso.
They took themselves to hospital where they are said to be in a serious but stable condition.
The suspect was arrested near the scene of the incident and a knife believed to have been used in the attack was recovered.
It is not clear if the suspect is connected to the victims.
The shocking incident comes less than 24 hours after 10 people were shot in a terrifying attack on a subway in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, during rush hour on Tuesday.
Police said that suspected gunman Frank Robert James put on a gas mask and hurled a gas canister inside a subway carriage as the train carried commuters on an N train headed in the direction of Manhattan.
As the carriage filled with smoke between 25 Street and 36 Street, the suspect opened fire with a handgun on passengers.
Ten people were shot before terrified New Yorkers clamoured out of the train at 36 Street and ran to safety.
Around 19 others were treated in hospital for various other injuries.
Mr James, a 61-year-old Black man with ties to New York City, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Wisconsin and Ohio, remains on the run more than 24 hours on from the horror attack.
He was tracked down after police found the keys to a U-Haul van in a bag of fireworks and gun magazines left at the scene. The van was allegedly rented by Mr James.
Since then, disturbing YouTube videos have come to light showing the suspect ranting about several topics including New York City Mayor Eric Adams, gun violence and mass shootings.
He was initially described as a person of interest before being named as a suspect on Wednesday morning.
Following the attack - and with the suspect still on the run - Mr Adams announced that the number of police officers patrolling the city’s subway system were being doubled.
The mayor’s own security was also stepped up over the suspect’s video tirades.
New York City’s subway system has been rocked by a spate of violent attacks in recent months.
In January, Michelle Alyssa Go was killed after being pushed in front of a subway train at Time Square station by a homeless man.
The following month, a 57-year-old woman was kicked down the stairs and repeatedly struck in the head with a hammer before being robbed at the Queens Plaza subway station in Long Island City.