NYC gunman was targeting NFL but took wrong elevator: Mayor Adams

Graphic Warning: This story contains graphic topics that may be disturbing. Discretion is advised.

(NewsNation) — The man who fatally shot four people in a high-rise office building in Manhattan before turning the gun on himself was targeting the headquarters of the National Football League, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said Tuesday.

Investigators believe 27-year-old Shane Tamura mistakenly took the wrong elevator, leading him to Rudin Management instead, Adams told NewsNation local affiliate WPIX.

Tamura reportedly had a three-page suicide note inside his pocket, which claimed he had a brain injury from a contact sport and blamed the NFL. Tamura, who played high school football, reportedly wanted his brain studied after his death. An official motive has not yet been released.

2 New York shooting victims identified

On Tuesday, investment management company Blackstone confirmed executive Wesley LePatner was killed in the shooting. LePatner’s colleagues described her as “brilliant, passionate, warm, generous, and deeply respected within our firm.”

Didarul Islam, 36, was a veteran of the New York Police Department for more than three years. He left behind a wife — who is eight months pregnant — and two young sons, according to New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.

“My heart is with his loved ones, his NYPD family and every victim of this tragedy,” she said in a statement.

An NFL employee was among those shot at a Manhattan office building Monday, the league’s commissioner said in a letter to employees obtained by NewsNation.

“One of our employees was seriously injured in this attack. He is currently in the hospital and in stable condition. NFL staff are at the hospital and we are supporting his family,” the letter reads.

“We believe that all of our employees are otherwise safe and accounted for,” it continued.

  • New York Police Department officers stand next to ambulance
  • New York Police Department officer stands outside building
  • New York State Police troopers gather on 52nd Street outside a Manhattan office building
  • pedestrians duck under police tape while walking in NYC
  • Police walk on the corner of Lexington Avenue and 53rd Street, in New York
  • New York Police Department officers arrive on the corner of Lexington Avenue and 53rd Street
  • NYPD cars parked in Manhattan

Manhattan office building shooting: What happened

Tamura was seen on surveillance footage getting out of a black BMW and carrying an M4 rifle. He then walked into 345 Park Avenue — a 44-story building housing financial firms, the NFL and more — and immediately shot an NYPD officer, police said.

He then reportedly shot a woman trying to hide behind a pillar in the lobby, a guard behind the security desk and another man.

Officials said Tamura allowed a different woman to walk out of an elevator and into the lobby without injuring her. He then went up to the 33rd floor, Rudin Management’s office, and fired multiple rounds as he walked through the room, killing another person on that floor, officials said.

He then went down a hallway and shot himself in the chest, the NYPD said.

Tamura drove from Nevada to New York to commit the crime, the Associated Press reported.

“New York has some of the strongest gun laws in the nation. We banned assault weapons. We strengthened our Red Flag Law. We closed dangerous loopholes,” Hochul said. “But our laws only go so far when an AR-15 can be obtained in a state with weak gun laws and brought into New York to commit mass murder. 

NewsNation’s Patrick Djordjevic and Brittney Donovan contributed to this report.

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‘You were wrong, Mr. President!’ CNN warns Trump his big push has become ‘political loser’



President Donald Trump has continued to lean into his use of the military to crack down on crime in Democrat-run cities — once a politically-strong issue for him — but new data reviewed by CNN Monday shows Americans’ are quickly souring on the moves.

Trump’s latest pledge to deploy federal troops to the city of Portland, Oregon comes after his federal takeover of Washington, D.C., which itself came after Trump deployed the National Guard to Los Angeles, California. New polling, however, shows that the continued use of the military may now be doing more harm than good for Trump’s favorability.

“If Donald Trump thinks that potentially sending in the National Guard into cities like Portland is a winning political issue, the polling says you are wrong Mr. President!” said CNN’s Harry Enten.

According to the new polling data shared by Enten, Trump’s use of federal troops is now well underwater, with 58% of voters opposed. Among independent voters, that opposition rises to 64%.

“We've heard this song before, and what happened the last time that Trump sent National Guard [members] into a national city?” Enten continued.

“Well, look at the change in Trump's net approval: overall, it dropped four points! How about immigration? It dropped by seven points! We have a history of Trump sending the National Guard into a western city and what happened was there were clear political ramifications for the president of the United States, and they were not good ramifications.”

The souring of American voters on Trump’s antics also extended to Immigration Customs and Enforcement, the nation’s chief immigration agency. Enten shared data that showed net approval of ICE during Trump’s first term was at 0 points, but now, has reached a net negative 14.

“Down it goes because of their actions during the second Trump term. In fact, the Pew Research Center polled 16 different agencies; ICE's net popularity rating was 15th out of 16th, it was close to being the least popular of them all,” Enten said.

“Bottom line is the president may think this is a politically winning issue for him, but the numbers tell a very different story. It's, in fact, a political loser.”

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