Gunman kills 4, including police officer, in shooting at New York City
office tower
[July 29, 2025]
By PHILIP MARCELO and ERIC TUCKER
NEW YORK (AP) — A man stalked through a Manhattan office tower firing a
rifle Monday, killing four people, including a New York City police
officer, and wounding a fifth before taking his own life, officials
said.
The shooting took place at a skyscraper that is home to the headquarters
of both the NFL and Blackstone, one of the world's largest investment
firms, as well as other tenants.
The gunman, identified by authorities as Shane Tamura of Las Vegas, had
a ‘documented mental health history,’ according to Police Commissioner
Jessica Tisch, but his motive was still unknown.
“We are working to understand why he targeted this particular location,”
Tisch said.
The rampage happened at the end of the workday in the same part of
Manhattan where the chief executive of UnitedHealthcare was gunned down
outside a hotel late last year.
Surveillance video showed the man exiting a double-parked BMW just
before 6:30 p.m. carrying an M4 rifle, then marching across a public
plaza into the building. Then, he started firing, Tisch said, killing a
police officer working a corporate security detail and then hitting a
woman who tried to take cover as he sprayed the lobby with gunfire.
The man then made his way to the elevator bank and shot a guard at a
security desk and shot another man in the lobby, the commissioner said.
The man took the elevator to the 33rd floor offices of the company that
owned the building, Rudin Management, and shot and killed one person on
that floor. The man then shot himself, the commissioner said. The
building, 345 Park Avenue, also holds offices of the financial services
firm KPMG.

Slain officer was an immigrant
The officer killed was Didarul Islam, 36, an immigrant from Bangladesh
who had served as a police officer in New York City for 3 1/2 years,
Tisch said at a news conference.
“He was doing the job that we asked him to do. He put himself in harm’s
way. He made the ultimate sacrifice,” Tisch said. “He died as he lived.
A hero.”
One man was seriously wounded and remains in critical condition, Mayor
Eric Adams said. Four others got minor injuries attempting to flee.
Adams said officials are still “unraveling” what took place.
Officers found a rifle case, a revolver, magazines and ammunition in
Tamura's car, Tisch said. They also found medication that belonged to
Tamura, she said.
She said an initial investigation shows his vehicle traveled across the
country, passing through Colorado on July 26, then Nebraska and Iowa on
July 27. The car was in Columbia, New Jersey, as recently as 4:24 p.m.
Monday. He drove into New York City shortly thereafter, she said.
Rudin is one of the largest privately owned real estate companies in New
York City. The company dates back to 1925 and is still managed by
members of the Rudin family.
Tisch said there were no indications so far that Tamura had prior
connections to the real estate industry or to the city.
No one answered the door at the address listed for Tamura in Las Vegas.
Islam, the slain officer, leaves behind two young boys, and his wife is
pregnant with their third child, Tisch said.
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A New York police officer stands watch on 52nd Street outside a
Manhattan office building where at least two people were shot,
including a police officer, Monday, July 28, 2025, in New York. (AP
Photo/Angelina Katsanis)

Witnesses heard ‘rapid fire’
Local TV footage showed lines of people evacuating the office building
with their hands above their heads in the hours after the killings.
Nekeisha Lewis was eating dinner with friends on the plaza when she
heard gunfire.
“It felt like it was a quick two shots and then it was rapid fire,” she
told The Associated Press.
Windows shattered and a man ran from the building saying, “Help, help.
I’m shot.” Lewis said.
Jessica Chen told ABC News she was watching a presentation with dozens
of other people on the second floor when she “heard multiple shots go
off in quick succession from the first floor.”
She and others ran into a conference room and barricaded tables against
the door.
“We were honestly really, really scared,” she said, adding that she
texted her parents to tell them that she loves them.
Some finance workers at an office building down the block were picking
up dinner at a corner eatery when they heard a loud noise and saw people
running.
“It was like a crowd panic,” said Anna Smith, who joined the workers
pouring back into the finance office building. They remained there for
about two hours before being told they could leave.
Tisch says she believes two officers were working in different parts of
the building as part of a program where companies can hire NYPD officers
to provide security.
The building where the shooting happened is in a busy area of midtown,
located a short walk north from Grand Central Terminal and about a block
east of St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
Through late July, New York City is on pace this year to possibly have
its fewest homicides and fewest people hurt by gunfire in decades. But
the city's corporate community has been on edge since last December,
when UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was killed outside a hotel
hosting a conference.

The man charged in that killing, Luigi Mangione, is awaiting trial.
Prosecutors accuse him of killing Thompson because he was angry at
perceived corporate greed, particularly in the health insurance
business. He has pleaded not guilty.
___
Tucker reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Mike Balsamo,
Ruth Brown and Jennifer Peltz in New York, Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu,
Hallie Golden in Seattle and Ty O'Neil and Rio Yamat in Las Vegas
contributed.
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