
Shane Tamura, a shooter who fatally shot four people in the office tower in Manhattan, originally intended to attack the National Football League office, the authorities reported on Tuesday, as stated by the Associated Press.
After taking the wrong elevator, he accidentally ended up in the wrong place. Investigators also discovered a handwritten remark in their wallet, in which the report accused the NFL for his fighting in mental health.
What did the note say?
Tamura – a security worker in Las Vegas – it was found that he had carried a handwritten remark in his wallet that claimed that he was suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
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In a three -sided note discovered on his body Tamura accused NFL of priority to the safety player to hide the risks associated with brain injury. He referred to a degenerative brain disease associated with repeated head trauma and shocks that were common in contact sports such as football, and, etc.
Tamur’s note repeatedly said that it was sorry and asked to be studied on CTE. According to the AP report, he referred to the former NFL player Terry Long, who was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE, which was diagnosed with CTE.
The attacker with the NFL attacker appeared when the police were working to join their background and motivation, and how the loved ones began to mourn the dead. It is not clear whether Tamura showed CTE symptoms that can only be diagnosed by exploring the brain after death.
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NFL Long denied the connection between football and CTE, but acknowledged the connection in 2016 testimony before Congress, and retired players paid more than $ 1.4 billion to handle shock -related demands.
Shooting became a skyscraper at Avenue Park, one of the most respected streets in the country, only blocks from the Grand Central Terminal and Rockefeller Center. It is less than 15 minutes of walking from where the CEO of UnitedHealthcare Brian Thompson was shot last December by a man claiming that prosecutors are angry for what he saw as a corporate greed.
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Tamura, 27 years, sprayed on Monday before killing himself, the authorities said on Monday in office 33. Among the dead were a police officer, guardian and two people who worked in companies in the building. The NFL employee was seriously injured, but survived.
Tamura, who played ten years ago at high school in California, but never played in the NFL, had a history of mental illness, the police said without details.
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