(NEW YORK) -- Frank James will spend the rest of his life in prison after receiving 10 life sentences Thursday in Brooklyn federal court, one sentence for each victim of the April 2022 shooting aboard a subway car at rush hour.
"I alone am responsible for that attack," James said in court. "They in no way deserved to have what happened to them."
James opened fire on a Manhattan-bound N train in Brooklyn on the morning of April 12, 2022, injuring 10 people.
Prosecutors had asked for life in prison. The sentencing hearing at Brooklyn federal court began at noon and there were victim impact statements given from the injured passengers.
At a news conference following the hearing, Breon Peace, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said, "Today, justice has been served."
"During the morning rush hour on April 12, 2022, Frank James unleashed a premeditated attack on unsuspecting New Yorkers he trapped in a subway car, firing 32 shots and seriously wounding 10 people," Peace said. "For those acts, Frank James was sentenced to 10 concurrent sentences of life in prison and an additional 10-year consecutive sentence."
At the sentencing hearing, prosecutors revealed new information about James' movements and activities as he briefly eluded police after the shooting.
At some point after the shooting, James purchased a burner phone which he used to follow the coverage of his attack while hiding from law enforcement, according to prosecutors. James watched 31 videos of news reports about his subway shooting, prosecutors said.
He also watched a James Bond chase scene from the movie "No Time to Die" 10 times after the attack, according to prosecutors.
James turned himself in by calling the New York Police Department's Crime Stoppers hotline on April 13, 2022, the day after the mass shooting.
He pleaded guilty to all 11 counts of a superseding indictment, which included 10 counts of committing a terrorist attack or other violence against a mass transportation vehicle -- one count for each gunshot victim -- and one count of discharging a firearm in furtherance of his violent attack.
Following Thursday's hearing, James' attorneys told a judge that they intend to appeal the sentence.
"Today's life sentence delivered the necessary penalty for Frank James, who callously carried out a mass shooting on a crowded subway car, attempting to kill innocent people, and spilling much blood. He wounded 10 victims in his calculated attack and terrorized many more," said Peace said.
During the post-hearing news conference, Peace called the New York City transportation system the "daily life blood" of the city New Yorkers depend on for safe transportation.
"Frank James attempted to take that sense of safety away and inject fear and chaos into the heart of the city," Peace said.