
Chilling moment gunman stalks Bangkok food market during shooting rampage that left six dead
The deadly incident occurred at a popular fresh food market in Thailand 's capital at around 1pm local time on Monday, police said.
Local media is currently reporting that the shooting took place at the Or Tor Kor market in Bangkok's Chatuchak district, a popular destination for tourists.
The perpetrator, who is reportedly a 61-year-old man named by police as Nai Noi, took his own life following the attack.
In haunting footage taken at the scene, Noi was seen wearing a black T-shirt and cream shorts while wearing a camouflage-patterned backpack on his front.
The man, holding a handgun in his right hard, was seen storming towards the popular market.
Separate footage, taken from inside the market, showed terrified shoppers screaming and running away as Noi fired off several shots.
After carrying out the attack, he reportedly shot himself on a nearby bench.
Separate footage, taken from inside the market, showed terrified shoppers screaming and running away as Noi fired off several shots.
The incident took place near a collection point for aid for victims of the Thailand-Cambodia border clashes.
Local cops have now revealed, following interviews with the perpetrator's wife, that the man had a long-standing grudge against a security guard at the market.
The feud, which had been ongoing since 2019, began after Noi found his the tyres on the car owned by his wife, who worked at the market, slashed.
Noi, who police said was a heavy drinker, believed the guard was the one who slashed his wife's tyres. He is said to have reported the incident to local officials, though nothing came of this.
His wife reportedly told police that he was a violent man who sometimes abused her.
Pol. Lt. Gen. Sayam told local media: 'The perpetrator is Thai. There was no other motive. It was a personal conflict between him and the security guard of Or Tor Kor. It was not related to the sabotage incident.
'Before the incident, he was still talking to his wife on the phone. There was no contract for the incident. At the time of the incident, his wife was selling things. When she heard the gunshot, she ran away.
'I later found out that the perpetrator who shot and killed the person was his husband. The gun belonged to the perpetrator, a 9 mm. pistol.
'From the investigation, there was one round stuck in the chamber. There was no history of drug use, but he was a heavy drinker.'
Five of the people killed by the gunman were security guards at the market, while one was a bystander, police said.
Tourism is a key economic driver in Thailand, Southeast Asia's second largest economy, where growth has been sluggish and such incidents can potentially dampen sentiment.
Guns are easily obtained in Thailand due to lax gun control enforcement, making mass shootings common.
In October 2023, a 14-year-old suspect used a modified handgun to kill two people and injure five others at a luxury mall in central Bangkok.
A year earlier, a former police officer killed 36 people, including 22 children, in a gun-and-knife attack at a nursery in eastern Thailand.

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Daily Mail
11 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Blackstone staff barricade themselves against gunman in New York
This is the moment terrified Blackstone staff desperately scrambled to build make-shift barricades as their Manhattan offices were attacked by a vicious gunman who killed four people during his rampage. Workers in officewear stacked piles of sofas, computers and chairs on top of each other as Nevada man Shane Tamura tore through the 345 Park Avenue skyscraper on Monday night with an M4-style rifle, killing several people. The pile of furniture was stacked as high as the ceiling of the 32nd floor of the building, which is also home to the National Football League and auditor KPMG. The area hosts several five-star business hotels, as well as the United Nations' headquarters. According to local media, panicking workers even started pulling wood desks apart to add more bulk to the barrier. Tamura, the gunman, was seen carrying an M4 assault rifle killed four people, including a police officer, when he opened fire in broad daylight in the heart of New York City, before taking his own life. In terrifying security camera photos, the gunman could be seen striding into the midtown Manhattan office building wearing a sport coat and button-down shirt while openly carrying the large rifle by his side. Tamura (pictured) was a former high school football player with a history of mental health issues, the gunman had traveled across the country in the days leading up to the shooting, according to NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch. It was also revealed that the gunman had recently been fired as a security guard at a casino in Las Vegas. Tamura had a silencer on his rifle when he opened fire inside the lobby at around 6.30pm, according to CNN. The firearm also had a scope and strap. NYPD officer Didarul Islam, 36, who had been on the force for three years, was working private security at the time on his day off. He was shot and killed in the lobby of the building. The man went to the elevator bank and shot a security guard who was taking cover behind a security desk and also another man in the lobby, Tisch said. The man took the elevator to the 33rd floor to a real estate management company and one person was shot and killed on that floor. The man then walked down a hallway and shot himself, she said. Tamura, 27, was found with a letter on his body indicating he had grievances with the NFL and its handling of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) after the rampage at 345 Park Avenue. In the note he railed against the NFL and pleaded for his brain to be studied. 'Terry Long football gave me CTE and it caused me to drink a gallon of antifreeze,' Tamura wrote, according to CNN. 'You can't go against the NFL, they'll squash you.' The shooter was referring to former Pittsburgh Steeler Terry Long, who committed [self-murder] by drinking antifreeze in 2006 after suffering from CTE. 'Study my brain please I'm sorry Tell Rick I'm sorry for everything,' the note read. Authorities say Tamura travelled all the way from his home in Las Vegas in his black BMW, passing through Colorado on July 26 and making his way through New Jersey to Manhattan. He was then caught on chilling surveillance footage wearing a sport coat and button-down shirt while carrying a large assault rifle into the building, which houses the headquarters for the NFL. The gunman then opened fire inside the lobby just before 6.30pm. Tamura had been a star football player in high school, obsessed with the game and once on a path that suggested a future defined by discipline and teamwork. During his senior year, he even earned six Player of the Game awards and registered 126 carries for 616 rushing yards and five touchdowns in nine appearances. But in more recent years, Tamura had a 'documented mental health history,' NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch revealed at a news conference. Yet Tamura earned a private investigator's license and was able to obtain a concealed carry permit to carry firearms, both legally granted through the Las Vegas Sheriff's Department. He had the license on him when he marched into the building and opened fire. Officer Didarul Islam (pictured), a 36-year-old father-of-two who was working private security at the time, was then shot in the back and killed and an unidentified security guard who took cover behind a desk was also targeted. From there, police say Tamura took the elevator up to the 33rd floor and the offices of Rudin Management, which operates the building, and shot and killed a third victim before taking his own life. The National Football League headquarters are on the fifth floor of the building, which law enforcement officials say Tamura did not travel to. However, an employee of the league was 'seriously injured,' according to a memo to staff written by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and obtained by CNN. He said the unidentified employee was rushed to the hospital, where other league employees are comforting his family. All of the other employees are believed to be safe and accounted for, Goodell said, as he vowed to boost security at the league's headquarters 'in the days and weeks to come.' In the meantime, police in New York City and in Nevada are continuing to comb Tamura's social media presence and are rifling through his Las Vegas home to collect evidence pointing to a motive. They have already found a rifle case with rounds, a loaded revolver, ammunition and magazines, as well as a backpack and medication prescribed to him inside his vehicle. It is now believed Tamura was the sole shooter in the broad daylight attack, as police say there is no evidence he had an accomplice. Still, officers are continuing to work to determine whether anyone may have helped plan or facilitate his movements across state lines or into the high-security office tower, which was put on lockdown as heavily-armed police officers swarmed the floors. Photos from the scene showed scores of people in business attire frantically leaving with their hands up, as others inside the building barricaded the doors with furniture to prevent Tamura from entering. The shooting also led to a chaotic scene in Midtown Manhattan, with nearby worker Anna Smith, who had just stepped out to grab dinner, describing the 'crowd panic' that wafted over the area. 'People just started running,' she said. 'We had no idea what was going on.' Another witness told The New York Post that 'it sounded like a barrage of shots …Like an automatic weapon. Like a high-capacity weapon.' Another person told the paper that a 'guy came in with an assault rifle and started shooting.' A shocking image showed the victim splayed out on the floor of the office building after he suffered the self-inflicted gunshot wound. His bloodied weapon, which was equipped with a silencer, was found nearby. Meanwhile, the city's emergency management system issued alerts about road closures, subway disruptions, and traffic delays around Grand Central Terminal and St. Patrick's Cathedral - both just blocks from the shooting scene. As night fell, many turned their attention to the loss of Officer Islam, who was working in private security for Rudin Management Company Monday night, according to The New York Post. He regularly works in the Bronx's 47th precinct 'He was doing what he does best, as all members of the police department carry out he was saving lives,' New York City Mayor Eric Adams said at an evening news conference. 'He was protecting New Yorkers. He's an immigrant from Bangladesh, and he loved this city, and everyone we spoke with stated he was a person of faith and a person that believed in God and believed in living out the life of a godly person.' NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch also said that Islam 'died as he lived: a hero.' 'He was doing the job that we asked him to do. He put himself in harm's way, he made the ultimate sacrifice — shot in cold blood, wearing a uniform that stood for the promise that he made to the city,' Tisch added. 'I want to extend my profound sympathies to all of the victims and their families and to the brave NYPD cops who today lost a brother,' she concluded. Patrick Hendry, the president of the Police Benevolent Association, called the loss 'devastating.' 'He was a hardworking police officer who was proud we know from hearing from his family to put on that uniform and shield of a New York City police officer, Hendry said. 'Every day, he went out and did his job, and he went out every single day to provide for his family, whether it was overtime or whatever he had to do to provide for this family.' In a statement, the New York Police Department also called Islam 'the very best of our department. 'He was protecting New Yorkers from danger when his life was tragically cut short today,' the department said. 'We join in prayer during this time of incomprehensible pain. We will forever honor his legacy.' Officials have not released any further information about the others killed and injured in the massacre on Monday. But New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said the state mourns 'four New Yorkers, including one of New York's Finest, taken in a senseless act of violence. Our hearts are with their loved ones and everyone affected by this tragedy, and we honor the first responders who bravely ran toward danger.' Mayor Adams added that the city is reeling as 'four innocent families are mourning.' He said that in addition to Officer Islam, the 'city also mourns the three other innocent lives lost this evening and is praying for another innocent victim fighting for his life in critical condition. 'It's unthinkable these people were taken from us so randomly and senselessly. They and their loved ones are in our hearts.' Similarly, New York Attorney General Letitia James (pictured) added that she is 'praying for our law enforcement and the New Yorkers impacted in the shooting situation this evening in Manhattan.' There have been 254 mass shootings in the United States this year including Monday's incident in New York, according to the Gun Violence Archive - which defines a mass shooting as four or more people shot.


The Guardian
41 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Tributes paid to police officer after gunman kills four in shooting at Manhattan skyscraper
Update: Date: 2025-07-29T10:24:24.000Z Title: a gunman killed four people at a Manhattan skyscraper that houses the headquarters of the NFL and the offices of several major financial firms before turning the gun on himself Content: Didarul Islam, NYPD officer, killed after gunman shot people at building housing NFL headquarters and financial firms before shooting himself Tom Ambrose Tue 29 Jul 2025 11.24 BST First published on Tue 29 Jul 2025 10.29 BST From 10.29am BST 10:29 Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog. My name is Tom Ambrose and I will be bringing you all the latest news over the next few hours. We start with the news that , New York officials have said. An NYPD officer identified as Didarul Islam, an immigrant from Bangladesh and a father of two whose wife is pregnant, was among those killed. He was working off-hours as a security guard at the time, New York mayor Eric Adams told reporters, describing him as a 'true blue hero'. Authorities offered few details about the three other victims killed by the suspect – two men and a woman. A third male was gravely wounded by the gunfire and was 'fighting for his life' in a nearby hospital, the mayor said. Jessica Tisch, the New York City police commissioner, confirmed that 'the lone shooter has been neutralized'. New York police also said the shooter acted alone and was dead. Tisch said the gunman, identified as Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old Las Vegas resident with a history of mental illness, had driven cross-country to New York in recent days. The shooting spree in the evening rush hour began in the lobby of the Park Avenue tower in Midtown Manhattan. Tisch said that surveillance videos showed the gunman exiting a double-parked Black BMW between 51st and 52nd street on Park Avenue. Read our full report here: In other developments this morning: Ghislaine Maxwell asked the supreme court to overturn her conviction for taking part in and facilitating Jeffrey Epstein's sex crimes, arguing that a non-prosecution agreement with the late sex offender struck by federal prosecutors in Florida in 2008 should have barred any of his co-conspirators from prosecution as well. Donald Trump said that he did indeed bar Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago club for 'inappropriate' behavior. But the president explained that what was inappropriate was not, as his aides have suggested, doing something lewd or illegal, but hiring away staff from the club. An Israeli settler who was sanctioned by Joe Biden as a violent extremist, but removed from the sanctions list by Trump, was arrested in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Monday after the fatal shooting of a Palestinian activist. The Palestinian man who was killed was denied entry to the United States last month when he arrived in San Francisco for a series of planned talks sponsored by faith groups, including a progressive Jewish synagogue. The US justice department filed a misconduct complaint against a federal judge who has clashed with the administration over deportations to a notorious prison in El Salvador over private comments first reported by a far-right publication. Updated at 11.01am BST 11.24am BST 11:24 North Korea said on Tuesday the United States must accept that reality has changed since the countries' summit meetings in the past, and no future dialogue would end its nuclear program, state media KCNA reported. Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un who is believed to speak for her brother, said she conceded that the personal relationship between Kim and US president Donald Trump 'is not bad.' But if Washington intended to use a personal relationship as a way to end the North's nuclear weapons program, the effort would only be the subject of 'mockery,' Kim Yo Jong said in a statement carried by KCNA. 'If the US fails to accept the changed reality and persists in the failed past, the DPRK-US meeting will remain as a 'hope' of the US side,' she said, referring to North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. North Korea's capabilities as a nuclear weapons state and the geopolitical environment have radically changed since Kim and Trump held talks three times during the US president's first term, she said. 'Any attempt to deny the position of the DPRK as a nuclear weapons state ... will be thoroughly rejected,' she said. 11.17am BST 11:17 Top US and Chinese economic officials arrived on Tuesday at the venue where they are conducting their latest bilateral round of trade negotiations, this time held in Stockholm, after previous rounds in London and Geneva. 11.09am BST 11:09 Japan's top trade negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, said on Tuesday the trade agreement with the US guaranteed Japan would always get the lowest tariff rate on chips and pharmaceuticals out of all the pacts negotiated by Washington. 'If a third country agrees with the United States on lower rates on chips and pharmaceuticals, the same rates would be applied to Japan,' he told a news conference. 10.59am BST 10:59 Donald Trump has arrived at the opening ceremony for his new golf course in Aberdeenshire, arriving to the tune of bagpipes at the event at his course in Menie. He thanked his son Eric, who he said had 'worked so hard' on creating the New Course at the resort. The president also thanked John Swinney, who was among the assembled audience. Eric Trump had earlier said he and the Trump International team had created an 'amazing masterpiece' at the New Course. 10.52am BST 10:52 Diana Ramirez-Simon US House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries expressed his concern over the 'horrific shooting', and said he was 'praying hard' for the NYPD officer. 'May God watch over our city during this challenging moment,' Jeffries wrote in a post. A large police presence converged on the area around the tower, according to Reuters journalists near the scene. 'I just saw a lot of commotion and cops and people screaming,' said Russ McGee, a 31-year-old sports bettor who was working out in a gym adjacent to the skyscraper, told Reuters in an interview near the scene. The office building at 345 Park Avenue occupies an entire city block and houses the corporate offices for the National Football League and the headquarters of investment firm Blackstone. It also holds offices for JP Morgan Chase. According to an ESPN reporter, Jeff Darlington, an NFL security alert was sent to employees: 'Do not exit the building. Secure your location and hide until law enforcement clears your floor. Please switch phones to silent.' This shooting is the 254th mass shooting in the US this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit that tracks gun-related violence, who defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people, excluding the shooter, are killed or injured by firearms. 10.43am BST 10:43 President Donald Trump has met with the Scottish first minister John Swinney at his Aberdeenshire golf club. The president is opening a second course at his Menie Estate property on Tuesday and it is understood the first minister met with Trump shortly before the ceremony. The leaders spoke for around 15 minutes, before posing together for pictures in front of a US flag and the saltire of Scotland ahead of the opening of a second course at the president's golf club in Aberdeenshire. Swinney has previously said he would push the president on an exemption to tariffs for Scotch whisky and raise the situation in Gaza, which also came up in the meeting between Trump and prime minister Keir Starmer on Monday. Meanwhile, Trump was spotted on the driving range of his golf club during a delay in the opening ceremony for a new course. Trump could be seen hitting shots from the driving range just yards where the first tee of the new course, where he is expected to be the first to tee off. 10.35am BST 10:35 President Donald Trump is opening a new golf course bearing his name in Scotland on Tuesday, capping a five-day foreign trip designed around promoting his family's luxury properties and playing golf. Trump and his sons, Eric and Donald Jr, are cutting the ceremonial ribbon and playing the first-ever round at the new Trump course in the village of Balmedie, on the northern coast of Scotland, AP reported. The overseas jaunt let Trump escape Washington's sweaty summer humidity and the still-raging scandal over the case of Jeffrey Epstein. It was mostly built around golf – and walking the new course before it officially begins offering rounds to the public on 13 August, adding to a lengthy list of ways Trump has used the White House to promote his brand. Billing itself the 'Greatest 36 Holes in Golf,' the Trump International Golf Links, Scotland, was designed by Eric Trump. The course is hosting a PGA Seniors Championship event later this week, after Trump leaves. Signs promoting the event had already been erected all over the course before he arrived on Tuesday, and, on the highway leading in, temporary metal signs guided drivers on to the correct road. Golfers hitting the course at dawn as part of that event had to put their clubs through metal detectors erected as part of the security sweeps ahead of Trump's arrival. Several dozen people, some dressed for golf, including wearing golf shoes, had filled the sand trap near the tee box to watch the ribbon-cutting ceremony shortly before it was scheduled to start. Another group of people were watching from the other side in tall grass growing on sand dunes flanking the first hole. Updated at 10.40am BST 10.29am BST 10:29 Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog. My name is Tom Ambrose and I will be bringing you all the latest news over the next few hours. We start with the news that , New York officials have said. An NYPD officer identified as Didarul Islam, an immigrant from Bangladesh and a father of two whose wife is pregnant, was among those killed. He was working off-hours as a security guard at the time, New York mayor Eric Adams told reporters, describing him as a 'true blue hero'. Authorities offered few details about the three other victims killed by the suspect – two men and a woman. A third male was gravely wounded by the gunfire and was 'fighting for his life' in a nearby hospital, the mayor said. Jessica Tisch, the New York City police commissioner, confirmed that 'the lone shooter has been neutralized'. New York police also said the shooter acted alone and was dead. Tisch said the gunman, identified as Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old Las Vegas resident with a history of mental illness, had driven cross-country to New York in recent days. The shooting spree in the evening rush hour began in the lobby of the Park Avenue tower in Midtown Manhattan. Tisch said that surveillance videos showed the gunman exiting a double-parked Black BMW between 51st and 52nd street on Park Avenue. Read our full report here: In other developments this morning: Ghislaine Maxwell asked the supreme court to overturn her conviction for taking part in and facilitating Jeffrey Epstein's sex crimes, arguing that a non-prosecution agreement with the late sex offender struck by federal prosecutors in Florida in 2008 should have barred any of his co-conspirators from prosecution as well. Donald Trump said that he did indeed bar Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago club for 'inappropriate' behavior. But the president explained that what was inappropriate was not, as his aides have suggested, doing something lewd or illegal, but hiring away staff from the club. An Israeli settler who was sanctioned by Joe Biden as a violent extremist, but removed from the sanctions list by Trump, was arrested in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Monday after the fatal shooting of a Palestinian activist. The Palestinian man who was killed was denied entry to the United States last month when he arrived in San Francisco for a series of planned talks sponsored by faith groups, including a progressive Jewish synagogue. The US justice department filed a misconduct complaint against a federal judge who has clashed with the administration over deportations to a notorious prison in El Salvador over private comments first reported by a far-right publication. Updated at 11.01am BST


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Issuing prison officers with Tasers won't make them safer
If you have read anything on the prison system over the past few years, you will have noticed a few common themes: overcrowding, understaffing, reoffending, crumbling infrastructure, and abject conditions. Our prisons are increasingly places of despair – full of drugs, drones, self-harm, violence and deaths. The recent annual report of the Chief Inspector of Prisons lay testament to the extent of the crisis gripping the prison system. And the government knows this. Its own research sets out that people living in overcrowded cells were 19 per cent more likely to be involved in assault incidents – and 67 out of the 121 adult male prisons in this country are overcrowded. In the context of rising violence across the prison estate, what is the government's solution? To recruit and train more prison officers? To address overcrowding by reducing capacity in particularly troubled jails and across the system? To invest in infrastructure? To increase education and training budgets to give prisoners access to the means to turn their lives around? No. While we wait for bolder action to fix the broken prison system, the government's response is to trumpet the fact that Tasers will now be used behind bars. The introduction of Tasers has been linked to horrific incidents involving attacks on staff at Frankland and Belmarsh – although it is far from clear that access to these weapons would have prevented either incident taking place. Staff in adult male prisons already have access to batons and PAVA spray, which we know undermine positive relationships between staff and those in their care. The escalating use of force brings with it a multitude of concerns. Inspection reports have consistently revealed inappropriate use of force, including against people threatening to self-harm; problems with lack of staff training; inadequate use of body-worn cameras; and disproportionate use of force against people from Black, Black/British, and Muslim backgrounds. While Tasers are being piloted in a limited manner – just the 'operational response and resilience unit' will be authorised to use them – the fear must be that this is the thin edge of the wedge. Indeed, speaking to journalists about Tasers, the secretary of state for justice, Shabana Mahmood, remarked: 'This is very much the beginning'. It seems that the rollout of further weapons in prisons has been foretold. And that would track; two months ago, the secretary of state approved of the use of PAVA spray – an otherwise illegal chemical incapacitant – in prisons holding children, despite evidence that it won't reduce violence and will be disproportionately used against Black and minority ethnic children, Muslim children and children with disabilities. Last week, the Howard League issued legal proceedings to challenge this decision. Almost every week, I visit prisons across the country and speak to people being held in and working in dreadful conditions. Many of this country's jails are filthy, overrun simultaneously with drones and rats. People eat – and go to the toilet – in cramped cells with poor ventilation. There are more than 22,000 people sharing a cell intended for a single person. Facilities have become dilapidated as the maintenance backlog has grown. Restricted regimes, often due to staff shortages, mean that people have little to do but stay locked in their cells. I speak to prison governors doing their very best to keep the people in their care safe, though they are often uncomfortable with the job they are doing, feeling powerless to attract the resources they need to run a better jail. They all want fewer people in their prison, higher staff confidence and capability, and more time to spend with prisoners to help turn their lives around. But there is no money for any of that. And so, prisoners are held in ghastly conditions, and when this leads to unrest and violence, the government is sanctioning yet more use of force against them. There is no question that the government is facing a crisis in its prisons. But this will not be solved with easy, reactionary policies. What is needed is political courage to explain the problems honestly to the public – as Keir Starmer started to do last July – and long-term investment in evidence-based policy that addresses the roots of the overcrowding and reoffending in our prison system. Violence will not be stemmed by more violence. The government must look at its own evidence and acknowledge that, rather than adding to the pressure in our overstretched jails, the best response to rising levels of violence is to reduce the prison population and offer productive and positive regimes for people in custody. We will be waiting until September for legislation to deliver changes proposed in David Gauke's sentencing review, which will hopefully ease some of this pressure. But otherwise, the government's plan seems to be to build more prisons, and weaponise them at pace. Which feels a long way from the promise of the prime minister's first press conference last July.