The Associated Press This photo, provided by the New York City Police Department, Monday, Jan.4, 2021, shows the hoax explosive device at a mall in the Queens borough of New York. A police spokesman said that an initial investigation showed there was no explosive device. "An investigation is underway into the hoax," NYPD Sergeant Edward Riley said in an emailed statement. (New York City Police Dept. via AP) NEW YORK — A self-described American nationalist suspected of leaving a hoax explosive device in a car at a New York City mall is facing criminal charges after turning himself in to police, authorities said Tuesday. Louis Shenker, 22, will be charged with placing a false bomb, criminal possession of stolen property and abandonment of a disabled animal in connection with the episode Monday at the Queens Place Mall in Elmhurst, said detective Denise Moroney, a police spokesperson. The mall was evacuated around 7:30 a.m. Monday after a device that was made to look like an explosive was found in a black Tesla parked on a ramp in a parking garage. A dog — a husky — was also found in the vehicle, which had a Nevada license plate and had been reported stolen in that state. Shenker surrendered to officers around 3 a.m. Tuesday in Brooklyn. The Queens district attorney’s office said that it was preparing paperwork on Shenker’s charges and that he was expected to be arraigned later Tuesday. Being led from a police station in handcuffs, Shenker claimed that the suspicious device was actually a rig to charge the Tesla’s dead battery. He mocked media coverage as “fake news” and derided reporters covering his arrest as “morons.” “It was a Tesla car being charged,” Shenker said. “… It was literally a car being charged because the battery died.” Shenker, who has described himself on social media as a “patriot” and a supporter of President Donald Trump, was previously arrested Dec. 30 on suspicion of torching a poster attached to a police barricade in Manhattan.