The city’s Mayor Eric Adams says a gunman killed four people, when he left a skyscraper in a skyscraper in New York’s heart on Monday evening, left a note, which blamed the National Football League (NFL) for a brain injury, called the city’s Mayor Eric Edms.
The attacker, 27 -year -old Shane Tamura of Las Vegas, shot himself after setting fire to a building, where the US Football League is headquartered, but went to a separate part of the building after taking the wrong lift.
The gunman was carrying a note in which he convicted CTE, a brain disease was surrounded by head trauma, for his mental illness, Adams said.
Tamura played football as a teenager, but did not play at NFL, the former team partner told us to the media.
New York City Police Officer Didarul Islam, 36 – who was working as a security guard in the building – was among those killed.
One of the victims was a finance giant Blackstone employee, nominated by his company as Vesley Lepater.
Two male citizens were also killed. An NFL employee was also “seriously injured” in the attack, the league commissioner Roger Goodll wrote in a message to the employees.
When asked about a possible purpose, Adams told CBS: “[He] There was a note on it. The note said he felt that he had a CTE, who is a known brain injury for those who participate in the contact game.
“He convicted NFL for his injury.”
Tamura was a football player during his time at the high school in California, the former-partner told NBC News earlier.
The gunman has been operated across the US from Las Vegas to New York, and an attack-style rifle has been used during the attack.
After setting fire to the lobby, Tamura is believed to have entered a lift on the 33rd floor of the skyscraper and continued to open the fire.
Mayor Adams said an initial investigation suggests that the gunman accidentally went to Rudin management office, who owns the building.
Tamura later rolled his gun on himself.
The incident stopped Midtown Manhattan and parts of public transport. At the scene, a BBC journalist took the score of police vehicles and at least one person to a blood -soaked chest on a stretcher.
Bystanders said that the gunshots and the police told those in the area in which BBC, including journalists, to give shelter in nearby buildings.
The police worked on the floor-by-floor to clean the building, an attempt that took hours.
A woman, Nekisha Lewis said that she was having dinner with friends at the plaza when she listened to the bullets. “It felt like you were almost in a warzone,” he told NBC News.
Ms. Lewis said that she saw an injured man running out of the building, and is described as “the most scary situation I ever lived”.