The gunman who opened fire in New York City's Times Square over the weekend remains at-large as the New York Police Department's manhunt continues into its third day.

A 4-year-old Brooklyn, New York, girl was one of three people struck when bullets flew at the crossroads of the world around 5 p.m. Saturday, following a dispute between several men, police officials said. 

The New York Police Department (NYPD) released a video of the suspect soon after Saturday’s shooting, showing a man wearing dark-colored bottoms and a distinctly pattered, white, yellow and red shirt emblazoned with the number 9.

No arrests had been made as of Monday, but sources told Fox News their suspect is 31-year-old Farrakhan Muhammad.

During a press conference following Saturday's events, NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said police were in the area when the suspect fled and officers "immediately engaged" in trying to track him via video footage. 

"I have no doubt that that individual will be arrested in short time," he said Saturday. 

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After the shooting, the 4-year-old barely shed a tear as police rushed her to an ambulance and began treating her, according to the officer who carried her to safety.

"This little girl was so strong," New York Police Officer Alyssa Vogel told the New York Post. "She didn’t even cry once except when we were putting the tourniquet on. She screamed because it’s very painful."

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Wendy Magrinat, a 23-year-old from Rhode Island, was also shot in the leg, and a 43-year-old New Jersey woman suffered a gunshot wound to the foot, according to officials and the Post. All three victims are expected to survive.

NYPD officials shared video footage showing Vogel cradling the wounded child as she runs toward a waiting ambulance, with the little girl’s mother following behind them.

WARNING: THE FOLLOWING CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES

"As a mom, I think my motherly instincts just went to, you know, I need to help her," she told ABC’s "Good Morning America" on Monday.

Vogel, who reportedly has a 6-month-old son at home, said she was concerned with calming the nerves of the little girl’s mother as they rushed her to the hospital. 

"I kept telling her to breathe and that her daughter was going to be OK," Vogel told the Post. "I kept trying to calm her down because she was obviously very scared."

Once they arrived at the local hospital, "I actually got out of the ambulance with her and ran her to the pediatrics unit, where the doctors took over," Vogel told the Post.