Cops Seek Firebug Who Torched One NYPD Cruiser, and Set 2 Other Fires Downtown

From the streets around City Hall where three fires were set along with one in a Woodhaven, Queens, subway car, the pyromaniac spread dancing flames and potential death before fleeing into the streets.

| 24 Jan 2025 | 02:39

These are the armies of the night.

On one side, a lone arsonist, an incendiary, a firebug. By any name, the unidentified suspect is a man who, it appears, loves to set fires. His dress for the crime spree: a black puffer jacket with pink zipper trim; black hoodie, black baclava (aka “shiesty” mask); fingerless black gloves.

With only a of forehead and upper nose, his dark eyes, and black eyebrows visible, the suspect’s ethnicity is unknown but cops think he is most likely Hispanic or possibly Asian.

On the side of public safety, including the apprehension of firebugs, is the NYPD.

The facts of the crime spree, which began within the confines of the 1st Precinct are as follows:

In the early morning of Friday January 10, at approximately 2:20 a.m., an unidentified male set a marked police emergency vehicle ablaze while it was parked on the block of Broadway between Warren and Murray Streets.

Although police reports identify the address the vehicle was burned parked outside of 254 Broadway, Straus News has confirmed this is an error, because there is no such address.

Rather, it was a typo denoting one of the two large buildings that do occupy the block: 253 Broadway, at Murray St.

[It’s worth noting that the other building on the block, 258 Broadway, represents one of the endearing quirks on Manhattan geography. i.e. a block that includes both odd and even number buildings on the same, west side of the street, which has City Hall Park on its eastern side.]

Unsatisfied with dancing flames he’d already initiated, at around 2:35 a.m., the suspect reappeared outside 14 Murray Street, a currently vacant five-story commercial building standing mid-block between Broadway and Church St. and set another unoccupied vehicle ablaze.

What motivated this self-styled street Vulcan, the Roman god of fire, are unknown but they were not yet sated.

At approximately 2:55 a.m., the same flame-loving fiend stood near a garbage can outside the Brooklyn Bridge subway station opposite City Hall, lit a paper cup on fire and tossed it into a garbage can.

Lastly, the burning of Manhattan seemingly over, the suspect vanished—only to reappear at around 3:40 a.m. on a northbound J train at the Woodhaven Avenue station in Queens. Seeing a pile of garbage next to a sleeping passenger, the pyromaniac set the trash ablaze.

Thankfully, there were no reported injuries. [And as an interesting footnote, the J train was one of the four nighttime subway lines that received the first batch of extra two man police patrols on subway lines at night between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m.)

Unhappily, the perpetrator of this crime and prior crimes fled on foot from the Woodhaven Station to parts unknown.

This incident is being investigated by the NYPD’s Arson and Explosion Unit.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). The public can also submit their tips by logging onto the Crime Stoppers website at https://crimestoppers.nypdonline.org/, or on X @NYPDTips.