
Manhattan Gunman Appeared to Target N.F.L. in Deadly Shooting
New York City's mayor, Eric Adams, said today that the gunman, whom investigators identified as Shane Tamura, was targeting the N.F.L. headquarters when he stormed the building with an AR-15-style rifle. He killed three people — a police officer, a security guard and a financial executive — in the lobby, but he was unable to reach the N.F.L. offices because he entered the wrong elevator, Adams said.
Instead, Tamura traveled to the building's 33rd floor, where he killed a fourth person, an associate at the company that owns the office building, before fatally shooting himself in the chest. It was the deadliest mass shooting in New York City in 25 years.
The authorities spent today assembling a detailed picture of the gunman's life in recent years and of the cross-country drive that he took from his home in Las Vegas before the shooting. Law enforcement officials there had documented his mental health history.
In his note, the gunman asked that his brain be examined for signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., which can only be definitively diagnosed after death. Some people found to have C.T.E., including former N.F.L. players, are known to have experienced symptoms including impulsive behavior, depression and suicidal thoughts.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
14 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
A man blaring a train alarm torments L.A. neighborhood. Then he was arrested
A quiet Van Nuys neighborhood of manicured lawns, palm trees and single-family homes has been embroiled in a noisy squabble over a train horn that one homeowner has affixed to a tree and used to set off drawn-out blares at irregular intervals. While the window-rattling blasts over the last two months have drawn complaints and calls to police, they have also garnered concern from Peach Avenue neighbors over the well-being of the homeowner. The latest chapter in the train horn saga took place Wednesday when Los Angeles police arrested Gary Boyadzhyan, 50, an unemployed car technician, who set off the horn after previously promising to keep it silent. In an interview with The Times, he described the drama as a 'cry for help' and alluded to being 'wronged' by someone, without elaborating. 'He's a nice guy who is just going through something,' a neighbor said about Boyadzhyan, echoing the sentiment of most neighbors. Boyadzhyan attached his setup, similar to a big-rig or train horn, to a palm tree in his backyard. The horn hangs over his one-story home. Since June, Boyadzhyan has set off the horn in long belches in the late afternoon or at night, according to neighbors on Peach Avenue, an otherwise quiet residential area. On Wednesday morning, Los Angeles Police Department officers visited him. 'I didn't know where it was coming from all this time,' neighbor Clara Espinoza said about the horn as she walked by Boyadzhyan's home. She watched as three officers marched up to his door. 'Oh, it's Gary's house,' Espinoza said with a note of surprise. She's lived in the neighborhood for 24 years and couldn't pinpoint the source the horn blasts. She had planned to call police and noted that the frequency of the horn had increased in the last few weeks. 'He's a nice enough man and I say hello to him whenever I walk by,' she said. 'You know this is in the Book of Revelations. The horns. Well, trumpets. But it's like the same thing. It's alarming.' The officers knocked on his door for several minutes. 'We just want to talk,' one of the officers said as a Times reporter watched from the sidewalk. Boyadzhyan appeared at his door in shorts and a T-shirt. He spoke to the officers for several minutes. After the conversation, Officer Chase Lambert said the call to the residence was over a neighborly dispute. He and other officers declined to elaborate on the dispute. 'We are aware,' Lambert said motioning to the property and the horn. 'There are things that are being worked on to alleviate the horn issue.' Boyadzhyan answered his door and spoke to a Times reporter about his visit with the LAPD. 'I have an issue with LAPD Van Nuys,' he said, referring to the Police Department's local bureau. 'I also have a legal case that's ... it's over a person who wronged me and it cost me everything. It cost me my job. Everything.' He did not elaborate about the situation and why he is setting off his horn and other alarms from his property. He added that he's an out-of-work car technician and that the whole situation with the horn is a 'cry for help.' 'If they were concerned, they could have come over to talk with me,' he said about his neighbors. 'Instead, I have strangers knocking here, police, reporters.' When asked whether he planned to keep the horn off, he said, 'I didn't have any plans to turn it on right now.' A few hours later, the horn sounded again, according to his neighbors. LAPD officers arrived at the home, handcuffed Boyadzhyan while he was standing on his front lawn and led him to a police vehicle. The LAPD said he was arrested on suspicion of interfering with a peace officer and disturbing the peace, which are both misdemeanors. Boyadzhyan was booked into a county jail shortly after 9 p.m. and released on his own recognizance about 5:30 a.m. Thursday, according to jail records. He did not respond to requests for comment. News station ABC7 first reported about the train horn on Peach Avenue. Espinoza, who lives around the corner from Boyadzhyan, said the horn was loud enough to rattle her windows. Another neighbor, who declined to give their name out of privacy concerns, said Boyadzhyan would set off the horn for 20 to 40 intervals at a time. While they acknowledged that the horn was annoying, they're more worried about Boyadzhyan's well-being. Boyadzhyan is often seen walking around his property late at night, sometimes using power tools to garden or working on vehicles in his driveway, according to neighbors. Before his arrest, a spokesperson for City Councilmember Imelda Padilla's office said it had not received any complaints about the horn. 'Our office will be coordinating with appropriate authorities to address these concerns and bring order back to the neighbors on Peach [Avenue] and ensure the individual is offered help,' Padilla said in a statement. 'This neighborhood deserves peace and quiet in its homes, and the current situation is unacceptable.'


The Hill
15 hours ago
- The Hill
Envelopes with white powder found in NY federal ICE facility
Envelopes with white powder were discovered Thursday in New York City in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility, according to the Big Apple's Mayor Eric Adams. 'New Yorkers, I have been preliminarily briefed on the matter unfolding at 26 Federal Plaza where envelopes containing white powder were discovered,' Adams said in a Thursday post on social media platform X. 'I want to also reassure you that there are no known injuries at this time.' Adams said that while officials are awaiting test results from 'our federal partners,' New York City Fire Department hazmat teams are on the ground to 'ensure the safety of everyone inside and outside of the building.' The New York City Fire Department (NYCFD) told The Hill that a call was received around 3:55 p.m. local time regarding a white powder reported on the ninth floor. The building was evacuated and there were no reported injuries, according to NYCFD. 'Hazmat assigned, operations ongoing,' the department added. New York City Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Kaz Daughtry said on X that local and federal officials are investigating the incident. 'I have personally briefed @nycmayor Adams and The Deputy Mayor for Administration Camille Joseph Varlack in regard to the circumstances. The investigation is ongoing. Expect increased presence and temporary closures,' Daughtry said in a post on X. 'Please avoid the area and follow official channels for verified updates.' The Hill has reached out to ICE's New York Field Office for comment. The conditions of the ICE facility, in downtown Manhattan, have sparked alarms from civil rights groups and protests took place in front of the building last week. On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ordered ICE to improve conditions of the facility for the migrants held there, with civil rights organizations arguing the individuals are not provided sufficient access to counsel and medication, along with dealing with extreme temperatures. The Justice Department acknowledged migrants were only being given two meals per day and not provided with their medication or sleeping mats. But the federal government challenged other accusations, with the Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin saying the Tuesday ruling will be appealed and claims of poor conditions are 'categorically false.' 'There seems to be quite a gap between the ICE standards, indeed, and what's really happening,' Kaplan said on Tuesday. The federal judge ordered ICE to deliver several items to migrants held there, upon request, including bedding mats, more blankets, clean clothing, feminine hygiene products and access to medicine.


CBS News
16 hours ago
- CBS News
Federal building housing DHS and ICE in NYC evacuated following report of suspicious powder
The building at 26 Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan was evacuated on Thursday afternoon following reports of a suspicious white powder. The FDNY said a call came in just before 4 p.m. saying the powder was reported found on the ninth floor. A hazmat unit was dispatched to the scene to investigate. The building at 26 Federal Plaza is home to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the city's U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office, among other agencies. Mayor Eric Adams addressed the situation on social media. "New Yorkers, I have been preliminarily briefed on the matter unfolding at 26 Federal Plaza where envelopes containing white powder were discovered. I want to also reassure you that there are no known injuries at this time," Adams wrote. "While we await test results from our federal partners, @FDNY Hazmat teams are on the ground to ensure the safety of everyone inside and outside of the building." Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Kaz Daughtry said the investigation is ongoing and for the public to "please avoid the area and follow official channels for verified updates." The building at 26 Federal Plaza has been the scene of numerous detainments by ICE agents following routine immigration hearings. It has also been the site of several protests, alleging immigrants are being held in deplorable conditions. DHS maintains the building is not a detention center and says allegations of overcrowding or poor conditions are "categorically false." "It is a processing center where illegal aliens are briefly processed to be transferred to an ICE detention facility," DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a recent statement to CBS News New York. "All detainees are provided with proper meals, medical treatment, and have opportunities to communicate with their family members and lawyers. As we arrest and remove criminal illegal aliens and public safety threats from the U.S., ICE has worked diligently to obtain greater necessary detention space while avoiding overcrowding." A federal judge on Tuesday said he would block the Trump administration from using the building to hold immigrants facing deportation unless it reduces the number of detainees and improves conditions at the site, including by providing sleeping mats and hygiene products. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan issued the temporary restraining order after holding a hearing earlier Tuesday. A government lawyer conceded in court that those detained by ICE at the facility did not have access to certain services, including sleeping mats, in-person legal visits, medication and more than two meals per day. Please stay with CBS News New York for more on this developing story.