But on Thursday afternoon, he was transported from the Midtown North Precinct to Bellevue Hospital Center for a psychiatric evaluation, the police said, and it remained unclear when he would appear in court.
It was the second church-related arrest this week for Mr. Lamparello. On Monday night, he was arrested inside Newark’s Sacred Heart Cathedral after he refused to leave the sanctuary. He told officers the church was a house of God and should be open at all hours before throwing himself on the floor and vowing to stay.
“Said, ‘If you want me to leave, you’ll have to take me out in handcuffs,’” Armando B. Fontoura, the Essex County sheriff, said. He described Mr. Lamparello as “very respectful,” if obstinate.
Mr. Lamparello was taken to a police station that evening and charged with resisting arrest, defiant trespassing and interfering with the administration of law.
He was evaluated by emergency medical technicians, who found nothing wrong with him, Sheriff Fontoura said. His mother escorted him that night from the precinct to his parents’ home in Hasbrouck Heights, N.J., he said.
It remains unclear what may have driven Mr. Lamparello to go to St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Wednesday. Police officials would not say what, if any, motive he disclosed to officers.
“There doesn’t appear to be any connection to a terror group,” said John Miller, the Police Department’s deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism.