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Gunman who blamed NFL for hiding brain injury dangers had CTE, medical examiner confirms

Gunman who blamed NFL for hiding brain injury dangers had CTE, medical examiner confirms
There are still remnants left over from Monday evening shooting outside of the office building where it happened here in New York City. You can see the flags there lowered to half staff. There's broken glass and *** growing memorial for the 4 people killed by the 27-year-old assailant. Police say Shane Devon Tamura carried out the attack after driving to New York City from Las Vegas. Authorities are working to determine *** motive, but New York City Mayor Eric Adams says *** suicide note was found in Tamura's pocket expressing grievances with the NFL and saying he suffered from CTE, *** disease linked to head trauma. In the note, he asked for his brain to be studied. The NFL has an office in the building where this mass shooting happened. Mayor Adams says those offices were the target of Tour's attack, but he got on the wrong elevator. From our preliminary investigation. He took the wrong elevator bank up to uh the NFL headquarters. Instead it took him to rootin management, and that is where he carried out uh additional shootings and took the lives of additional employees. The shooting, the deadliest in New York City in 25 years, took the lives of 4 people, including an off-duty NYPD officer, to to rule Islam. *** 36-year-old immigrant from Bangladesh who was on the police force. 3.5 years, Islam was in uniform while working security at the building. Police say he had two young sons and his wife is 8 months pregnant with their 3rd. Wesley Lapotner and executive at investment firm Blackstone, was also killed. In *** staff memo, the NFL shared an employee was seriously injured. Police say. used an assault style weapon in the attack, fatally shooting himself before he could be apprehended by the police. New York Governor Kathy Hochle is calling for *** nationwide ban on assault weapons in light of this attack. We're also learning that there's going to be *** memorial here to honor those lives that were lost in Midtown Manhattan. I'm Lee Waldman.
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Updated: 3:10 PM CDT Sep 26, 2025
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Gunman who blamed NFL for hiding brain injury dangers had CTE, medical examiner confirms
AP logo
Updated: 3:10 PM CDT Sep 26, 2025
Editorial Standards
The former high school football player who killed four people inside a Manhattan office tower that houses the headquarters of the NFL, and who blamed the league for hiding the dangers of brain injuries, was suffering from the degenerative brain disease CTE, New York's medical examiner said Friday.Shane Tamura, 27, had "unambiguous diagnostic evidence" of low-stage chronic traumatic encephalopathy, commonly known as CTE, according to the New York City medical examiner.Tamura, a Las Vegas casino worker, shot himself in the chest after spraying bullets into the Manhattan office building on July 28, killing four people, including a police officer, a security guard and two people who worked at companies in the building.He had traveled across the country intending to target the NFL office, officials said, but took the wrong elevator.Among the dead were a police officer, a security guard and two people who worked at companies in the building. An NFL employee was badly wounded but survived.In a three-page note found in his wallet, Tamura said he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy — diagnosable only after death — and implored those who found him: "Study my brain."Among his grievances against the NFL was a claim that the league put its profits ahead of player safety by concealing the harm CTE, and football, can cause."There is no justification for the horrific and senseless acts that took place," an NFL spokesperson said in response to the findings. "As the medical examiner notes 'the science around this condition continues to evolve, and the physical and mental manifestations of CTE remain under study.'"The disease affects regions of the brain involved with regulating behavior and emotions. It has been linked to concussions and other head trauma associated with contact sports, with evidence of the disease found in both professional and high school athletes.After more than a decade of denial, the NFL conceded the link between football and CTE in 2016 testimony before Congress, and has so far paid more than $1.4 billion to retired players to settle concussion-related claims.Tamura played high school football in California a decade ago but never played in the NFL.Police have said Tamura had a history of mental illness. In September 2023, he was arrested on a misdemeanor trespassing charge after allegedly being told to leave a suburban Las Vegas casino and becoming agitated at being asked for his ID. Prosecutors later dismissed the case.

The former high school football player who killed four people inside a Manhattan office tower that houses the headquarters of the NFL, and who blamed the league for hiding the dangers of brain injuries, was suffering from the degenerative brain disease CTE, New York's medical examiner said Friday.

Shane Tamura, 27, had "unambiguous diagnostic evidence" of low-stage chronic traumatic encephalopathy, commonly known as CTE, according to the New York City medical examiner.

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Tamura, a Las Vegas casino worker, shot himself in the chest after spraying bullets into the Manhattan office building on July 28, killing four people, including a police officer, a security guard and two people who worked at companies in the building.

He had traveled across the country intending to target the NFL office, officials said, but took the wrong elevator.

Among the dead were a police officer, a security guard and two people who worked at companies in the building. An NFL employee was badly wounded but survived.

In a three-page note found in his wallet, Tamura said he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy — diagnosable only after death — and implored those who found him: "Study my brain."

Among his grievances against the NFL was a claim that the league put its profits ahead of player safety by concealing the harm CTE, and football, can cause.

"There is no justification for the horrific and senseless acts that took place," an NFL spokesperson said in response to the findings. "As the medical examiner notes 'the science around this condition continues to evolve, and the physical and mental manifestations of CTE remain under study.'"

The disease affects regions of the brain involved with regulating behavior and emotions. It has been linked to concussions and other head trauma associated with contact sports, with evidence of the disease found in both professional and high school athletes.

After more than a decade of denial, the NFL conceded the link between football and CTE in 2016 testimony before Congress, and has so far paid more than $1.4 billion to retired players to settle concussion-related claims.

Tamura played high school football in California a decade ago but never played in the NFL.

Police have said Tamura had a history of mental illness. In September 2023, he was arrested on a misdemeanor trespassing charge after allegedly being told to leave a suburban Las Vegas casino and becoming agitated at being asked for his ID. Prosecutors later dismissed the case.

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