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Gunman Tamura Kills Four in NYC Office Building, Targeting NFL Over Brain Injuries

Gunman Tamura killed four, injured one in a New York City office building, targeting NFL over brain injury claims, armed with an M4 rifle.

Overview

A summary of the key points of this story verified across multiple sources.

  • A gunman identified as Tamura carried out a deadly shooting in a New York City office building, resulting in four fatalities and one NFL employee injured during the attack.
  • Tamura specifically targeted the NFL headquarters, blaming the organization for brain injuries, including his own traumatic head injury and the seriousness of CTE, as his motive.
  • Armed with an M4 rifle, the shooter attempted to reach the NFL offices but mistakenly used the wrong elevator, ending up on a different floor within the building.
  • The victims included an executive, an employee of Rudin Management, and a security guard, highlighting the indiscriminate nature of the attack within the office building.
  • Law enforcement confirmed Tamura had a documented history of mental health problems, providing crucial context to the tragic and violent incident and his motivations.
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Analysis

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Center-leaning sources cover the story neutrally, focusing on factual reporting from official sources and providing comprehensive context. They explain the complex medical condition of CTE, which the shooter referenced, through expert commentary, and humanize the victims by detailing their lives and contributions. The reporting avoids loaded language and presents various facets of the tragedy.

"Investigators are piecing together more details about how a former high school football player who blamed the game for his mental health problems carried out a deadly attack on an office building that is home to the NFL."

ABC NewsABC News
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Article

"Investigators are piecing together more details about how a former high school football player who blamed the game for his mental health problems carried out a deadly attack on an office building that is home to the NFL."

Associated PressAssociated Press
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Article

"The man who stormed a Manhattan office tower with a gun, killing four people before killing himself, worked in the surveillance department of a Las Vegas casino, part of an industry built on watching for threats before they unfold."

Associated PressAssociated Press
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Article

"The gunman accused of walking into a Park Avenue skyscraper in Manhattan and killing four people suspected he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE — a degenerative brain disease often associated with football players."

NPRNPR
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Article

"The degenerative brain disease that has besieged the National Football League for two decades with a billion-dollar lawsuit, congressional hearings, an A-list movie and an unrelenting cortege of ex-players’ obituaries has now intruded on America’s favorite sport in the most violent manner yet."

Associated PressAssociated Press
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Article

"CTE has become more talked about in recent years as more cases of the disease are found in former NFL players."

CBS NewsCBS News
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Article

"The gunman, who used a high-powered rifle to open fire in the Midtown Manhattan skyscraper, later died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, police said."

CBS NewsCBS News
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Article

"The Rudin family and everyone at our company are devastated by yesterday’s senseless tragedy."

NBC NewsNBC News
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Article

"The gunman who killed four people at a Manhattan office building before killing himself claimed in a note to have a brain disease linked to contact sports and was trying to target the National Football League’s headquarters but took the wrong elevator."

Chicago Sun-TimesChicago Sun-Times
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FAQ

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Shane Devon Tamura was a 27-year-old from Las Vegas who carried out the shooting. He blamed the NFL for his own traumatic brain injury and for chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), motivating his attack targeting the NFL offices.

Tamura entered the building with an M4 rifle, attempted to reach NFL offices but took the wrong elevator to the Rudin Management floor, where he shot and killed several victims before dying of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Four people were killed, including an NYPD officer, an executive, a Rudin Management employee, and a security guard. One NFL employee was injured during the attack.

Yes, law enforcement confirmed that Tamura had a documented history of mental health problems, which is relevant to understanding the incident and his motives.

Investigators recovered a note from Tamura in which he blamed the NFL for his traumatic head injury and mentioned CTE, a brain disease associated with contact sports.

History

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  • 1M
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    3 articles
  • 1M
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    8 articles