New York City’s Museum of Modern Art was evacuated Saturday after a man who was denied entry stabbed two members of the staff multiple times, police said.
The two female employees were in stable condition after being rushed to a nearby hospital, NYPD ’s Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence and Counterterrorism John Miller said at a press briefing.
“We are told they are both going to be OK,” he added.
The suspect, 60-year-old Gary Cabana, remained wanted for assault Sunday morning.
He was previously known to museum and police officials because of past problems. His membership had been revoked because of two recent incidents of “disorderly conduct,” Miller said.
The letter revoking his membership was sent out Friday, said Miller. It’s not clear if he knew when he arrived at the museum that it had been revoked.
The stabbing occurred around 4:15 p.m. when the man approached the reception desk at the midtown Manhattan museum and said he wanted to view a film there.
When he was denied entry, he jumped over the desk and stabbed the two MOMA employees “multiple times, including in the back, the collar bone and the back of the neck,” Miller said.
“The incident is still unfolding,” said Miller, who noted that a search for the suspect was launched immediately.
Police released surveillance video of the assault. That video, seen below, contains graphic footage.
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