Sports

New York City Gunman Who Killed Four Was Targeting NFL Headquarters

A gunman wrote four people in New York City a memorandum before killing himself allegedly suffering from brain disease linked to sports communication, and he was trying to target the National football League offices in Manhattan.

The mayor of New York City Eric Adams told reporters that investigators believed that the Las Vegas Shin Tamura Casino worker was trying to reach Manhattan offices in the US Football Association after the shooting of many people in the building of the building on Monday, but he took the wrong elevator bank.

In a handwritten note of three pages in the shooter wallet, Tamura-which played football in high school in California-claimed that it suffers from chronic painful brain disorders (CTE). He also wrote that the National Football Association had covered the risk of sports for the brains of the players for profit.

According to the New York City Police Department, Tamura wrote several times noting that he was sorry. He also asked to study his brain after his death of CTE marks while referring to the former US Football Association attack, Terry Long, who was diagnosed with CTE before suicide in 2005.

Jessica Tish, New York City Police Commissioner, said Tamura traveled all over the country and to New York City before the shooting. Observer videos showed that Tamura graduated from the BMW early Monday evening and walking via 345 Park Avenue Square while carrying a gun before entering the building.

Once he entered, Tamura opened fire on the hallway, killing the police officer outside the service, Didarol Islam, and hit another woman who tried to cover. Then he made his way to the elevator bank, and shot a guard and another man along the way.

Eric Adams said in an interview.

Tamura took the elevator to the thirty -third floor offices from Rudin Management, the company that owns the building, where he opened fire and killed one person before taking his life.

In a statement, US Football Association Commissioner Roger Godel described the shooting as “an indescribable violence act.” He also expressed his gratitude to the law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting. Godll added that the league will increase the security in the offices building and around it.

“Each of you is an important member of the American Football Association family,” Jodel wrote. “We will go beyond this together.”


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2025-07-29 19:31:00

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