
An Evening at the Office, and Four Lives Ended by Gunfire
Armed with an AR-15-style rifle, the man sprayed the lobby with bullets, first shooting the police officer, Didarul Islam, 36.
Behind a pillar, he found Wesley LePatner, 43, a senior executive at Blackstone and mentor to young women, and shot her.
As he made his way to the elevator, he fired at the security guard, Aland Etienne, 46, as the guard took cover behind a front desk.
Up on the 33rd floor, he began shooting as soon as the doors opened, killing Julia Hyman, 27, an associate at Rudin Management, the real estate firm that owns the building.
Then he turned his gun on himself.
Police identified the assailant as Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old man who had driven to the city from his home in Las Vegas. A note found in Mr. Tamura's wallet claimed that he was suffering from a degenerative brain disease — C.T.E., chronic traumatic encephalopathy — that he blamed on his past as a high school football player, though the disease can only be diagnosed post-mortem. The note also accused the National Football League, which has offices in the Park Avenue tower, of covering up the dangers of C.T.E.
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