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Shooter in New York tower blamed NFL for brain injury, mayor says

Shooter in New York tower blamed NFL for brain injury, mayor says

Straits Times4 days ago
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A man holding a rifle walks into an office building at 345 Park Avenue shortly before a shooting that killed several people, in the Midtown Manhattan district of New York City, U.S. July 28, 2025, in a still image taken from surveillance video. Surveillance Camera/Handout via REUTERS
NEW YORK - The man who killed four people with a semi-automatic rifle while rampaging through a Midtown Manhattan office tower carried a note with him that appeared to blame the National Football League for his degenerative brain disease, New York Mayor Eric Adams said on Tuesday.
Police have identified the shooter as Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old Las Vegas resident with a history of mental illness. Tamura killed two security officers and two office workers from firms in the building before ending the Monday evening massacre by shooting himself in the chest on the 33rd floor of the Park Avenue office tower. It was the deadliest mass shooting in New York City in a quarter of a century.
The NFL has its headquarters in the skyscraper alongside major financial firms, but Tamura apparently entered the wrong elevator bank and ended up in the offices of Rudin Management, a real estate company that owns the building, where he killed one Rudin employee, the mayor said.
"The note alluded to that he felt he had CTE, a known brain injury for those who participate in contact sports," Adams told CBS News. "He appeared to have blamed the NFL for his injury."
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy is a serious brain disease with no known treatment that can be caused by repeated bangs to the head while playing contact sports. It has been linked to aggression and dementia.
The NFL has paid more than $1 billion to settle concussion-related lawsuits with thousands of retired players after the deaths of several high-profile players in the top professional American football league.
Tamura was never an NFL player, but online records show he played football at his California high school and was a varsity player at a Los Angeles charter school until graduating in 2016, according to school sports databases. The note found in his wallet said his football career was cut short by his brain injury and that the NFL had not done enough to address CTE in the sport, Bloomberg News reported.
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A former coach, Walter Roby, told Fox News that Tamura was a "quiet, hard worker" and one of his "top offensive players" during the year he spent on the team at Granada Hills Charter School.
FEAR AND SHOCK
The private equity firm Blackstone, which also has its headquarters in the tower, said Wesley LePatner, a senior executive who oversaw some of Blackstone's real estate operations, was among those Tamura killed. Several other Blackstone employees were injured and taken to hospital.
The skyscraper was closed to workers on Tuesday, as were some of its neighboring buildings, although much of Park Avenue hummed as usual.
"I've been at Blackstone's offices a number of times before so it's just a really scary event," said Zoe Fields, a 32-year-old associate director for a Boston investment firm who was in New York for meetings on Tuesday at a nearby Park Avenue tower.
The shooting follows last year's murder of a UnitedHealth executive outside a hotel about three blocks away from Monday's rampage. Prosecutors say the man charged with that murder targeted his victim as a symbol of corporate greed.
According to the police account, as soon as Tamura entered the lobby he turned to his right and fatally shot a New York Police Department officer, Didarul Islam, 36, who came from Bangladesh and had been on the force three years. Islam was part of the building's security detail, police said.
Islam has two young sons, according to his cousin Mizanul Haque in his hometown in Bangladesh's Sylhet region. Hours before the killing, Islam had "laughed and chatted like always" with his cousin on the WhatsApp messaging app.
"When I heard the news, it felt like the sky had fallen on me," Haque told Reuters.
Tamura then shot a security guard stationed at a desk in the lobby. The guard was identified by his labor union 32BJ SEIU in a statement as Aland Etienne. He was "a dedicated security officer who took his job duties extremely seriously."
Tamura also killed LePatner before taking the elevator and getting out at the Rudin offices.
U.S. President Donald Trump said his "heart is with the families of the four people who were killed, including the NYPD Officer, who made the ultimate sacrifice."
An NFL employee was also injured and was in stable condition at a hospital, according to a memo sent by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to league staff.
Goodell wrote that an "increased security presence" was planned for the league's offices "in the days and weeks to come." A spokesperson for the NFL did not respond to queries about the shooter's reported motives.
HISTORY OF MENTAL ILLNESS
Tamura appeared to have driven to New York City from Las Vegas over three days and to have acted alone, New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told reporters on Monday night.
Security video circulated by police showed a man walking into the tower, wearing a blazer and carrying what police identified as an M4 Carbine, a large semi-automatic rifle popular with civilian U.S. gun enthusiasts modeled on a fully automatic rifle used by the U.S. military. In Nevada, unlike New York, no permit is needed to buy a rifle or carry it openly in public.
A widely circulated photo showed the permit issued to Tamura by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department allowing him to legally carry a concealed gun. He had recently worked as a security guard at a Las Vegas casino, Fox 11 news channel in Los Angeles reported.
On two occasions, in 2022 and 2024, records show law enforcement officials detained him for up to 72 hours under a "mental health crisis hold," which requires the detainee to be evaluated at a hospital, ABC News reported.
A loaded revolver was later recovered from the black BMW vehicle Tamura had left double-parked outside the office tower, along with a backpack and prescription medications, Tisch said. REUTERS
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Concealed in waistbands, pockets and more: Young partygoers continue to vape in clubs in Singapore, Singapore News
Concealed in waistbands, pockets and more: Young partygoers continue to vape in clubs in Singapore, Singapore News

AsiaOne

time6 minutes ago

  • AsiaOne

Concealed in waistbands, pockets and more: Young partygoers continue to vape in clubs in Singapore, Singapore News

SINGAPORE — It was a Friday, and a snaking queue of young people had formed outside Drip Singapore in Orchard Road. At the entrance, a prominent sign made it clear — no vaping is allowed on the premises. After paying the cover charge, which can cost up to $30 each, partygoers were allowed in. Despite bag checks, The Straits Times saw patrons sneaking puffs on the dance floor and sending out plumes of smoke with distinctive aromas. They had managed to conceal their e-vaporisers, which have been banned in Singapore since 2018. ST visited Drip Singapore, which is located in Concorde Shopping Mall, on July 16 and 18. Despite the larger crowd on a Friday at Singapore's largest underground club, patrons did not appear to be bothered by the vaping activity around them. ST saw a man in his 20s using his phone to take photographs of partygoers as he casually puffed on his vape. Caleb (not his real name) said some partygoers take it outside, where they vape at designated smoking areas. '[The bouncers] don't really look into our bags. 'They usually poke a stick in or shine a torchlight inside our bags to make sure we are not bringing drinks in, and they just wave us through,' said Caleb, who clubs regularly at Drip Singapore and Zouk. But some e-vaporisers are small enough to be hidden, and they can also be made to look like everyday items. In Malaysia, the authorities have seized vapes made to look like a tube of glue or a stationery highlighter. A spokesperson for the building management at Concorde Hotel and Shopping Mall told ST that it strictly adheres to the Government's rules on vaping and smoking. The same scene played out at Zouk, a club in Clarke Quay, despite clear signs at the entrance warning against smoking and vaping. Three people were spotted vaping outside the club on July 18. It appeared little had changed when ST returned on Aug 1 to the establishment, one of Singapore's longest-running clubs, and saw patrons vaping inside. After taking a puff, two women stashed their vapes away in their waistbands, while others slipped their devices into their pockets. There was also a vape on the floor inside the club. ST saw a Zouk staff member confiscate a vape from a male patron after he was caught taking a puff inside the club. This was despite the Government announcing on July 20 more enforcement action and harsher penalties under the Misuse of Drugs Act for vapes laced with etomidate, a powerful anaesthetic. David Long, senior director of operations at Zouk, told ST that all customers are screened for prohibited items before they enter the venue. 'These inspections are performed by our trained security personnel, who are authorised to refuse entry if vaping devices or prohibited products are found,' he said, adding that clubgoers found to be carrying vapes will be removed from the venue. 'Cases involving repeat offenders are progressively escalated, including formal banishment from the outlet, if and when necessary.' When asked about clubgoers who were spotted vaping inside the club, Long said: 'There is a limitation to how invasive searches can be, (but) if someone inside is vaping, it gets addressed right away, and that means asking the customer to get rid of the vape before coming back.' A spokesperson for CQ @ Clarke Quay told ST that security personnel conduct regular patrols across common areas to deter errant smoking and vaping. 'We are working closely with the authorities to monitor the situation and maintain a safe environment for all visitors,' said the spokesperson. ST also witnessed young people vaping in the Prinsep Street area on July 18, where a string of smaller bars and clubs are located. When ST returned to the same area on Aug 1, there were a handful of people vaping outside the bars. The owner of Club FML — a bar along Prinsep Street — who wanted to be known only as Sam, told ST that vapes are prohibited inside his bar. Said the 35-year-old: 'We check every single customer before they enter, and my staff patrol the premises to ensure no one vapes inside.' Regular clubgoer S. Subhraaj claimed that vaping is rampant in clubs. He said the young find it more convenient than smoking. 'You don't have to go outside to vape, whereas for cigarettes, you have to go out [of the club] to smoke. 'It is popular because people want that nicotine kick to accompany the alcohol, and instead of walking all the way out, they can just do it on the spot,' said the 29-year-old content creator. But it is not only about the nicotine fix. Subhraaj, who has been warning about the dangers of Kpods on his TikTok channel, said he has seen people using Kpods inside Thai discos in Singapore. Kpods are vapes usually mixed with etomidate, an anaesthetic agent used in clinical practice to induce sedation. The drug is controlled under the Poisons Act. 'On one occasion, I saw a man standing outside a Thai disco trembling, like he had lost control of his body,' said Subhraaj. [[nid:720909]] He was moved to campaign on TikTok against Kpod use after his close friend Sheryl Soh died in September 2024. He claimed that Soh, 23, was a Kpod user. In the same month, 19-year-old Shermaine Tay was found dead at the foot of a Housing Board block in Tanjong Pagar, where she lived. Her father, Delfard Tay, told ST he believes her death is linked to her Kpod use. Patrick (not his real name), who works at a local club, said he has seen clubgoers who appeared to be in a daze while vaping. 'It is scary because it shows how accessible it is,' he said. 'I have seen my clients' friends shaking, and slurring their words and moving very slowly.' The authorities have raided clubs to combat the vaping scourge. On May 15, the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) visited a nightclub in Coleman Street and uncovered an alleged vape distribution network led by its manager. During the operation, five people were found to be in possession of vapes and their components. Zouk's Long said he has not encountered any clubgoers using Kpods within its premises. Drip Singapore did not respond to ST's queries despite repeated attempts to contact its management. A spokesperson for HSA told ST that it is in discussion with the Singapore Nightlife Business Association on anti-vape initiatives, such as promoting awareness of the vaping ban and reporting vaping incidents across nightlife venues. More details will be given at a later time, added the authority. Several deaths On July 20, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung revealed that a third of more than 100 vapes seized during enforcement operations and tested at random were found to contain etomidate. He also confirmed that several deaths here have been linked to etomidate abuse. [[nid:720786]] Meanwhile, the Ministry of Health is working with the Ministry of Home Affairs to list etomidate as a Class C drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act in a few weeks' time. This means that abusers and traffickers of Kpods may be treated in the same way as those who abuse or traffic drugs like nimetazepam, also known as Erimin-5, with mandatory rehabilitation and jail time for repeat offenders. HSA has also extended the operating hours of its vaping reporting hotline, and launched a new online platform for the reporting of vaping activities. On July 30, Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam announced that the ministry will second its officers to HSA to assist with enforcement efforts, including the supervision, treatment and rehabilitation of etomidate abusers. Members of the public can report vaping offences to the Tobacco Regulation Branch by calling 6684-2036 or 6684-2037 from 9am to 9pm daily, or online at Under current laws, possessing, using or buying vapes carries a maximum fine of $2,000. Anyone who distributes, imports or sells vapes and their components can be jailed for up to six months and fined up to $10,000. Those found in possession of or using pods containing etomidate can be jailed for up to two years and fined up to $10,000. If you need help to quit vaping, you can join the Health Promotion Board's I Quit programme by calling the QuitLine on 1800-438-2000. National helpline: 1771 (24 hours) / 6669-1771 (via WhatsApp) Samaritans of Singapore: 1-767 (24 hours) / 9151-1767 (24 hours CareText via WhatsApp) Singapore Association for Mental Health: 1800-283-7019 Silver Ribbon Singapore: 6386-1928 Chat, Centre of Excellence for Youth Mental Health: 6493-6500/1 Women's Helpline (Aware): 1800-777-5555 (weekdays, 10am to 6pm) The Seniors Helpline: 1800-555-5555 (weekdays, 9am to 5pm) Touchline (Counselling): 1800-377-2252 Touch Care Line (for caregivers): 6804-6555 Counselling and Care Centre: 6536-6366 We Care Community Services: 3165-8017 Shan You Counselling Centre: 6741-9293 Clarity Singapore: 6757-7990 (for those aged 13 to 25) (for those aged 12 to 25) ALSO READ: Tan Kiat How 'heartened' as vape disposal bin in Bedok half-filled in just 4 days This article was first published in The Straits Times . Permission required for reproduction.

A funeral shines a light on the Bangladeshis thriving in the NYPD
A funeral shines a light on the Bangladeshis thriving in the NYPD

Straits Times

time36 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

A funeral shines a light on the Bangladeshis thriving in the NYPD

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The killing of Mr Islam has ripped through the New York Police Department with ferocity. NEW YORK - Inside a three-story Bronx mosque, dozens of New York City Police Department officers sat cross-legged on the floor. They were silent during a somber occasion: the funeral of one of their colleagues who had been killed in uniform just days before. The slain officer, Mr Didarul Islam, was shot on the night of July 28 after a gunman entered a Park Avenue office building in Manhattan and sprayed bullets across the lobby and then a floor upstairs, killing four people. The killing of Mr Islam, who was awarded a posthumous promotion, has ripped through the Police Department with ferocity. But the death had a particular resonance for the department's fast-growing community of Bangladeshi American officers. Mr Islam immigrated from Bangladesh about 16 years ago. In the past decade, the number of Bangladeshi Americans who have flocked to the Police Department's ranks has exploded, marking the latest chapter in the long story of immigrant groups that have found a home – and a foothold in America – in the nation's largest police department. 'Being police officers, it's a way to help the New Yorkers, to help the community,' Sergeant Ershadur Siddique, president of the Bangladeshi American Police Association, said in an interview. 'It's to show that we are part of America, we are part of New York City, and being a police officer in New York City – it's known in the world that we're the best in the world – so it brings pride,' he said. The association, one of many fraternal organisations within the department, now includes nearly 1,000 of the roughly 34,000 uniformed members of the force. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore LTA, Singapore bus operators reviewing Malaysia's request to start services from JB at 4am Singapore Despite bag checks and warnings, young partygoers continue to vape in clubs in Singapore Singapore Ong Beng Seng to plead guilty on Aug 4, more than 2 years after trip to Qatar with Iswaran Singapore NDP 2025: Veteran Red Lion says each leap 'feels like 5km run' Business Decoupling to save on tax? You may lose right to property if ties go awry Singapore Lessons learnt from Singapore's love-hate relationship with e-scooters Opinion At UN's Wipo, Singaporean Daren Tang strives to create an equal music for haves and have-nots Asia Mass grave with over 100 skeletons in Sri Lanka brings up old wounds Among them are an inspector and four captains, as well as 1,500 civilians who work for the department, making it the second-fastest-growing fraternal organisation, according to a spokesperson for the organisation. Many Bangladeshi Americans have also found work as traffic enforcement agents, a job that Mr Islam often encouraged residents in his Bronx neighbourhood to consider, according to a neighbour. The Police Department has long served as a harbour for immigrants in New York who are seeking good pay, security and benefits. Irish Americans for years made up such a large portion of the department's total personnel, including numerous police commissioners, that they came to stand for the face of the force. But the department, once known for being overwhelmingly white, has steadily diversified over the decades. Nearly 12 per cent of its uniformed officers are Asian, a figure closely mirroring the percentage of the city's total population, according to the US census and Police Department data. About 33 per cent of uniformed officers are Hispanic, and 17 per cent are Black. Among civilian Police Department employees, 17 per cent are Asian and 45 per cent are Black. The force's immigrant and minority fraternal groups have also grown in number. Today they include the New York Dominican Officers Organisation, the fastest-growing group, and the Pakistani American Law Enforcement Society, among numerous others. The Bangladeshi American Police Association was founded in 2015 with a mission of fostering upward mobility within the department, recruiting new officers and building connections with New York City's Bangladeshi American community, which has nearly tripled to more than 100,000 New Yorkers in the past decade. Those who are employed by the Police Department founded their fraternal association in part to combat Islamophobia that ran rampant in the United States in the wake of 9/11, according to one of its founders, Mr Shamsul Haque. It was started to 'dispel the misconception that you are Muslim and there is somehow a connection to terrorism,' Mr Haque said on July 30 during a news conference with Mr Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee for mayor. That mission remained especially resonant on July 28. In the hours after the shooting, there was a torrent of misinformation online declaring the massacre an act of Islamic terrorism and blaming Mr Mamdani, who is Muslim, as was the slain officer. For many of the association's members, the officer's killing has been felt deeply and doubly – the loss of a fellow service member joined with the loss of a compatriot. 'I speak as someone who feels like a family member grieving,' Mr Haque said on July 30 during the news conference. 'More than a fellow officer, he was one of us, and losing him feels like losing a brother.' For many in the Bangladeshi American community, Mr Islam's death has also elicited warring emotions, with officers and civilians saying they feel suspended between pride for his heroism and overwhelming pain at his loss. 'He died in the line of defense. That's a very honorable death,' said Mr Hossain Mohd, an engineer who is Bangladeshi and came to watch the transfer of Islam's body from the medical examiner's office to the Parkchester Jame Masjid on July 29. 'He did something for the country. That's something to be proud of.' Officer Mohammad Salam, who grew up with the detective in the same neighborhood in Bangladesh and worked with him years later at the 47th Precinct, was also at the mosque. After the transfer of Mr Islam's body, he stood outside its doors in a sea of loved ones and fellow officers and recalled his fallen friend with emotion. 'I'm really proud of him. He was a great kid,' Mr Salam said. Mr Islam, he said, had embodied the best of the Bangladeshi community in the force. 'They try to help the community; they try to improve their lifestyle,' he said, adding: 'They also make their family proud.' NYTIMES

South Korean's death after 3 consecutive company drinking sessions ruled work-related
South Korean's death after 3 consecutive company drinking sessions ruled work-related

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

South Korean's death after 3 consecutive company drinking sessions ruled work-related

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox SEOUL – A South Korean court has ruled that the death of a worker following three consecutive company-related drinking sessions constitutes a work-related death, local media reported on Aug 3. The Seoul Administrative Court recently ruled in favor of the bereaved family of a worker who died from acute alcohol intoxication after attending consecutive company gatherings. The family had filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn the Korea Workers' Compensation and Welfare Service's decision to deny survivor benefits and funeral expenses. The worker, who was in charge of sales management, was found dead in his car in the parking lot of his home at dawn on July 2, 2022. An autopsy determined the cause of death was acute alcohol intoxication from consuming a large amount of alcohol over a short period. It was confirmed that he drank on three consecutive nights from June 29 to July 1 at company events. On June 29, he attended a dinner with a client. The following day, he joined a gathering organized by a senior executive to promote camaraderie among employees. On July 1, he attended a dinner welcoming two newly hired foreign workers assigned to an overseas office. That night's expenses were more than 1 million won (S$926), exceeding typical company spending, and the participants split the cost. The key legal issue was whether the final gathering constituted a work-related event. The workers' compensation agency argued that it was not an official company event and that the sharing of costs by the participants indicated it was a private occasion. However, the court ruled otherwise, citing the nature of the relationship between the worker and the foreign hires, which required close cooperation. The court also noted that the worker was scheduled for a six-month overseas assignment and needed support from the newcomers. 'The drinking session likely had a strong work-related context, as it was held with the foreign workers to welcome his upcoming assignment abroad,' the ruling stated. 'It would have been difficult for him to refuse drinks under the circumstances, and the cost of 1 million won was excessive for a purely personal gathering.' THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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