Manhattan, mass shooting
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Rep. Nicole Malliotakis spoke with Fox News Digital after the deadly shooting that left multiple people including a police officer dead.
Shane Tamura, who killed four people at a Manhattan office building, was trying to target the NFL headquarters but took the wrong elevator, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said.
Shane Tamura, suspected of shooting four people in New York City on Tuesday, claimed in a note that he had CTE.The note found in his pocket referenced the NFL, and asked for his brain to be studied.CTE is associated with being repeatedly hit in the head.
A subway power outage halted service on several lines Tuesday morning in New York City. The MTA said the subway signal system lost power at around 9 a.m. at the West 4th Street-Washington Square station in Lower Manhattan. The A, B, C, D, E, F and M lines were all impacted. Some trains were not running and others were bypassing Manhattan stops.
CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, is a brain disease linked to repeated hits to the head, often seen in military veterans and athletes including football players, hockey players and boxers. CTE can’t be diagnosed in a living person with certainty, but doctors may suspect it based on symptoms and history of head trauma.
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"We cannot properly express the grief we feel upon the sudden and tragic loss of Wesley," the LePatner family told Fortune, adding she was a "driven and extraordinarily talented professional and colleague.
Un hombre armado que mató a cuatro personas en un edificio de oficinas en Manhattan antes de suicidarse afirmó en una nota tener
The residence of Shane Tamura, identified as the gunman in the fatal shooting at a Manhattan office building in New York City and who was killed by a self-inflicted gunshot wound is seen on Monday, July 28, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nev. (AP Photo/Ty O’Neil)