An eerie silence fell over most of the blocks in the immediate area, interrupted only by conversations among the dozens of officers who stood from 42nd Street up to at least 47th Street.
Most of the initial scenes of confusion and fear that had spread on social media in the minutes after the shooting had dissipated. Times Square was expected to reopen to the public later on Saturday night.
The shooting came amid a rise in gun violence in New York City that has been sustained since early in the pandemic.
At least 463 people have been shot in the city this year, according to police data, up from 239 over the same period in 2019 and 259 in 2020. The city was largely shut down, with fewer pedestrians on the street, at the start of the pandemic last year.
The shooting was a rarity for the immediate area around Times Square. Much of the gun violence has been concentrated elsewhere.
As the city nears a full reopening, some officials have worried that gun violence could make it more difficult to attract visitors.
“It worries you when it happens at somewhere as public as Times Square,” Rosario Duran, 26, said on Saturday.