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A WITNESS has described the moment she saw a bloodied victim sprint out of a New York City skyscraper and scream for help after he was shot by gunman Shane Tamura.
Four people were killed by the 27-year-old who drove from his home in Las Vegas, Nevada, and barged into the building with a rifle on Monday.
He arrived at the offices in Midtown Manhattan that headquartered elite businesses like Blackstone and the NFL at around 6 pm and killed a New York City police officer as soon as he entered.
The deranged shooter opened fire on more innocent office workers in the lobby and elevator bay before heading to the 33rd floor, where he ultimately turned the gun on himself.
What we know about the Manhattan shooting…
- On Monday evening, Shane Tamura, 27, barged into a New York City skyscraper and fatally shot four people before turning the gun on himself
- Victims of the horror shooting include a police officer expecting his third child and an investment company executive
- Mayor Eric Adams said that an apparent suicide note left by Tamura indicates he was targeting the NFL, which is headquartered in the building
- In the letter, Tamura claimed he was battling a brain condition that was caused by playing football
- An NFL employee was critically injured by Tamura but is expected to survive
- Mysteries continue to shroud the attack, including why Tamura spared a woman he passed in the elevator
Mayor Eric Adams said that an apparent suicide note found beside Tamura’s body indicates that he was trying to target the NFL, which he blamed for health issues.
Tamura claimed that he suffered from a brain condition that was caused by playing football, and accused the league of hiding the dangers of the sport for profit.
While the shooter ditched his BMW on the street and walked into the building, bystander Nekeisha Lewis was eating dinner just outside in the plaza area.
Lewis said that she and her friends heard shots and then watched in horror as a wall of glass on the first floor shattered, she told NBC News.
“I realized, ‘Oh my God this is a shootout,'” she said.
“It felt like I was in a warzone.”
The witness said she then saw a worker “frantically” sprint out of the building as he screamed a plea to the public outside.
“Help, help, I’ve been shot!” the man yelled, according to Lewis.
Lewis noticed that the man appeared to have a wound on his front and back and said that she and her partner helped to get his backpack off before they all ran to safety.
She called the victim “brave” and said that she hopes he made it home after the chaotic attack.
“It’s been […] the most scary situation I’ve ever been in,” she said.
“I’ve cried at least three times since.”
BRAVE EMPLOYEE
A brave NFL employee working in the league’s finance department helped warn of the shooting even after being struck in the back by a bullet, according to New York Times reporter Dianna Russini.
Craig Clementi was believed to have been hit with a bullet that ricocheted while he was calling other NFL workers and telling them to evacuate, a high-ranking source in the league said.
The selfless worker, who had just welcomed a baby, stayed on the phone even when he was loaded into an ambulance to ensure that his staff was safe.
League commissioner Roger Goodell said that one NFL employee was hurt in the shooting, but it’s unclear whether he was talking about Clementi.
VICTIMS NAMED
One of the victims has been named as Didarul Islam – a 36-year-old New York cop who was working a second job as a security guard and expecting his third child when he was killed.
Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner also died in the horrific gunfire. She was a mom of two who was on multiple charity boards for New York City establishments.
The third victim was identified as 27-year-old property management associate Julia Hyman, who was on the 33rd floor, where her employer Rudin was located, when Tamura took the wrong elevator.
And the fourth victim was named security guard Aland Etienne. He was one of the safeguards standing at the elevator when LePatner barged in.
Etienne was mourned as a “New York hero” by 32BJ SEIU labor union President Manny Pastreich.
Timeline of NYC shooting
A gunman stormed 345 Park Avenue in Midtown, Manhattan, on Monday night killing four before turning the gun on himself.
Cops are now investigating why the suspect Shane Tamura carried out the brutal attack and have released a preliminary timeline and are tracing back through his movements.
July 26 – Tamura drives through Colorado in his black BMW
July 27 – Tamura drives through Nebraska and Iowa. He also doesn’t show up for work as a security guard at a Las Vegas casino
July 28, 6.28pm – Reports of the shooting are first made to NYPD. Tamura had moments earlier double parked his car and walked across a plaza into 345 Park Avenue
Once inside, Tamura shoots off-duty officer Didarul Islam working as security dead
He guns down a woman cowering behind a pillar as he sprays the lobby with bullets
Tamura walks towards the elevators where he shoots dead a security guard crouching at his desk
Gunman spares woman’s life after she walks out of elevator in front of him
He travels up to the 33rd floor to Rudin Properties’ office and fires as he walks the floor killing one
Tamura shoots himself in his chest ending his life and ending the rampage
7.52pm – NYC Police Commissioner Tisch posted on X: “the scene has been contained and the lone shooter has been neutralized.”
CTE CLAIMS
In a rambling handwritten note found near Tamura, the gunman blamed the NFL for his alleged health issues.
He claimed that he was suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), which has been found in some pro football players after they died by suicide.
The shooter begged, “study by brain please” in the three-page letter and even apologized for his sick actions.
He also referenced Terry Long – an NFL player who was suffering from the condition when he died after drinking a full gallon of antifreeze.
“Terry Long football gave me CTE and it caused me to drink a gallon of antifreeze,” read the disturbed writings.
Tamura played football in high school in Southern California and was remembered as a star player.
Former classmate Caleb Clarke described the suspect as an energetic and bubbly person who showed a lot of promise on the field.
“The only thing I can really think of is there was a point where it looked like the sky was the limit, and then it wasn’t anymore,” he told NBC News.