Russian tourist arrested for scaling iconic Brooklyn Bridge in New York

The Brooklyn Bridge is viewed from a park in DUMBO - an acronym for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass - on August 19, 2014 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. A Russian tourist was arrested, police said on Monday, after scaling the
The Brooklyn Bridge is viewed from a park in DUMBO - an acronym for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass - on August 19, 2014 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. A Russian tourist was arrested, police said on Monday, after scaling the bridge to take pictures with his cellphone. -- PHOTO: AFP
Russian tourist Yaroslav Kolchin appears for his arraignment in Brooklyn Crimminal Court in New York, August 25, 2014. Kolchin, 24, was arrested on Sunday after climbing to the top of the Brooklyn Bridge, where he snapped photos with his phone before answering police demands to come down. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW YORK (AFP) - A Russian tourist has been arrested after scaling New York's iconic Brooklyn Bridge to take pictures with his cellphone, police said Monday.

Yaroslav Kolchin, sporting a backpack, shorts and a baseball cap, was spotted climbing to the top of one of the towers supporting the mighty structure shortly after midday on Sunday.

Once there, the 24-year-old walked around and took photos with his iPhone before safely descending back down a cable support beam as a police aviation unit hovered nearby.

He was subsequently taken into custody, with charges against him including criminal trespassing and reckless endangerment.

Police said Kolchin did not cause any damage or attempt to remove anything from the bridge, adding that no injuries were reported.

The incident marks the second time in weeks that security at the Brooklyn Bridge has been breached.

Earlier this month, two German artists - Mischa Leinkauf and Matthias Wermke - claimed responsibility for a pair of big white flags that appeared atop the bridge in place of the US stars and stripes one night in July.

The sudden appearance of the flags in a city highly sensitive to security risks sparked a probe in which police ruled out any terrorist link but stepped up security around the city's key bridges.

The prank was aimed at honouring "the beauty of public space" and celebrating the span designed by a German-born engineer who died in 1869 on July 22 - the day the flags appeared, they told The New York Times.

The Berlin-based duo staged the stunt between 3am and 5am, lugging the hand-sewn flags in backpacks.

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