The third bombing happened on Columbus Day in the Times Square subway station. Thirty-three people were injured, but a teenager on the scene was able to make a detailed description to “a Transit Authority artist” after seeing a man kneeling near where the bomb was planted and two sketches were produced and released to the public.
But the sketch didn’t win over the NYPD, for whatever reason.
“We are not going to send the whole force out looking for this one man when, for all we know now, it may be a woman who set the bomb,” one police official said.
Following the third attack, the Times reported on just what sort of penalties the perpetrators would face if caught:
“Attempted murder, endangering life by the malicious placing of an explosive in or near a building, violation of the Sullivan Law (carrying concealed weapons), felonious assault, and damaging a building by explosion. All are felonies, carrying penalties of from seven to twenty-five years.”
After three bombings, police were certain though, that they were all the work of the same perpetrator. All three bombs were fuse devices, meaning whoever set the bombs was near the scene shortly before the explosions. However, all three incidents also had reports of two young men fleeing the scene shortly before the bombs went off.