A white Army veteran traveled from Maryland to New York City to kill a black man to "make a statement" in the media capital of the world, New York Police Department officials said Wednesday. James Harris Jackson, 28, turned himself in at a Manhattan police station after he stabbed his victim on a sidewalk.

Jackson was carrying a handful of knives in his pocket when he arrived at the police station, Reuters reported. Shortly after coming across Timothy Caughman, who was searching through garbage on the street, he stabbed him in the chest and back, police said.

Jackson told police he left Baltimore Friday and traveled to New York City by bus "because it is the media capital of the world and he wanted to make a statement," Bill Aubrey, a deputy chief at the New York Police Department, told reporters. "It was revealed that the attack on Timothy Caughman was clearly racially motivated. It is believed that he was specifically intending to target male blacks."

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Jackson, who was deployed by the U.S. military to Afghanistan, faces murder charges. Video footage showed him fleeing after the stabbing while dressed in a black coat.

Caughman, 66, died at a local hospital where he was being treated for his injuries. On his Twitter page, he called himself a “can and bottle recycler” and “autograph collector.” He lived in transitional housing for people with HIV/AIDS, the New York Daily News reported. He went by the nickname "Hard Rock,"

The Southern Poverty Law Center has warned non-whites living in the U.S. about potential hate crimes. “The country saw a resurgence of white nationalism that imperils the racial progress we’ve made," said Mark Potok, senior fellow and editor of the report, in a recent statement about racial attacks in 2016.

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New York police have not linked Jackson to any group.

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