Gunman
Fatally Shoots Officer and 3 Others in Midtown Office Tower
The gunman,
armed with an assault rifle, walked into the lobby and killed a police officer
and two others. He killed another person on the 33rd floor before turning his
gun on himself.
July 29,
2025
Updated 3:15
a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/29/nyregion/officer-killing-midtown-shooting.html
A gunman
armed with an assault-style rifle walked into a Midtown Manhattan skyscraper on
Monday evening and began firing, killing a New York City police officer,
fatally shooting three other people and critically wounding a fifth before
killing himself, officials said.
Three of the
four people killed were shot in the building’s lobby as the gunman sprayed the
area with bullets, Jessica Tisch, the police commissioner, said at a news
conference. The fourth was killed on an upper floor after the gunman took the
elevator there, Ms. Tisch said. He then shot himself in the chest, she said.
Tenants of
the building where the shooting occurred, 345 Park Avenue, went into lockdown
mode as fear and anxiety coursed through their offices at what should have been
close to the end of another sweltering summer day.
Darin Laing,
who works in the building, said he had walked out with a colleague at about
6:30 p.m. to grab dinner nearby before heading back to work. Within seconds, he
heard about 20 gunshots in rapid succession.
“My
co-worker was like, ‘Did you hear that, did you hear that?’” he said, adding
that he had spun around to see what looked like smoke coming from inside the
building.
Then he
heard screams and saw men and women in business attire bursting through the
doors, swarming the block and sprinting in every direction, crying out as they
ran.
The slain
officer, who was in uniform and working at the building in a security role, was
identified as Didarul Islam, 36. An immigrant from Bangladesh, he had been with
the department for three and a half years, Mayor Eric Adams said at the news
conference. Officer Islam and his wife had two children and were expecting
their third, Ms. Tisch said.
“He made the
ultimate sacrifice, shot in cold blood wearing a uniform that stood for the
promise he made to this city,” she said. The names of the other victims were
not immediately released because their families had not yet been notified, Ms.
Tisch said.
The shooting
occurred less than eight months and only a 15-minute walk from the site of
another high-profile Midtown attack: the murder of a health insurance executive
who, the authorities say, was killed by a man angry over what he felt were the
health care system’s inequities.
Ms. Tisch
identified the man responsible for the rampage on Monday as Shane Devon Tamura,
27, of Las Vegas. His motive and reason for targeting the Park Avenue building
were being investigated, she said.
“We are
still unraveling what took place,” Mr. Adams said.
The
building, between East 51st and 52nd Streets, is owned by the Rudin Management
real estate firm, one of New York City’s largest property owners. It was in the
company’s 33rd-floor offices where Mr. Tamura killed his final victim and
himself, Ms. Tisch said.
Other
tenants of the building include the N.F.L., the investment giant Blackstone
Group and the accounting and financial advisory firm KPMG. On Monday, their
staffs and those of other tenants were trapped in their offices for nearly two
terror-filled hours.
Ms. Tisch,
saying the information was preliminary and subject to change, gave the
following account of the deadly events:
Mr. Tamura
left Nevada in a black BMW registered in his name and drove through Colorado on
Saturday. He made his way across Nebraska and Iowa on Sunday and was in New
Jersey as of around 4:30 p.m. Monday. He drove into Manhattan sometime after
that.
The city’s
911 call center began receiving calls of a shooting in progress at about 6:30
p.m. Shortly before that, surveillance video shows, Mr. Tamura had
double-parked his car on Park Avenue outside the building he would soon turn
into a shooting gallery.
He got out
of the car and walked toward the building’s entrance with an AR-15-style rifle
in his right hand. Once inside the lobby, he turned to the right and
immediately opened fire on Officer Islam.
Next, Mr.
Tamura shot a woman who was trying to hide behind a pillar, and then continued
on through the lobby “spraying it with gunfire,” Ms. Tisch said. He shot a
security guard who tried to take cover behind a security desk.
The guard
and the woman both died. Mr. Tamura shot another man, who, while hospitalized
in critical condition, later identified him as the assailant.
At that
point, Mr. Tamura called the elevator. When it arrived, a woman got off, and he
allowed her to walk past him unharmed. He then rode to the Rudin firm’s offices
on the 33rd floor, where he shot his final victim and then walked down a
hallway and took his own life.
A search of
his car yielded a rifle case, a loaded revolver, ammunition, a backpack and
medication that had been prescribed to him. Ms. Tisch said he had a gun license
in Nevada and that law enforcement officials there said he had a “documented
mental health history.”
The section
of Manhattan where the shooting occurred, Midtown East, is a vibrant business
district that is also home some of the city’s best-known landmarks, including
St. Patrick’s Cathedral and St. Bartholomew’s Church. Grand Central Terminal is
a short walk away.
With 345
Park Avenue locked down, hundreds of officers, joined by state and federal law
enforcement agents, flooded the area, scrutinizing the insides and trunks of
cars parked nearby as police drones and helicopters hovered overhead.
By about 7
p.m., people had begun to march out of the building in small groups with their
hands up, according to a witness, Ben Ryder Howe, a freelance journalist.
A short time
later, a larger group left the building, with some people running away as fast
as they could and others walking normally, seemingly oblivious to the violent
chaos unfolding in their midst. Many had their hands up, presumably to show
that they were not armed.
A Blackstone
employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of a company policy
against talking to reporters said he and others who work on the building’s 31st
floor had heard a loud bang from above at around the time of the shooting.
Some people
shrugged off the noise, the Blackstone employee said, while others rushed for
the exits. They soon received an email notifying them of a gunman in the
building. A follow-up email urged them to evacuate, he said, though by then
police officers were ushering people out a floor at a time by elevator.
Jorge
Jimenez, a livery cabdriver from Queens, was picking up a client at a
restaurant across the street when he saw office workers running with their
hands up. One woman was running while holding her high-heel shoes. He said a
police dog had searched his car.
“I thought
it was like something like terrorism from the commotion on people’s faces,” Mr.
Jimenez said.
Hours after
the shooting, streets were closed from East 55th Street to East 48th Street as
law enforcement officers continued to maintain a heavy presence and look for
clues that might help explain what was behind Mr. Tamura’s lethal spree.
Public
records indicate that he spent at least part of his youth in California. Mason
Thomas said he had played high school football with Mr. Tamura in Granada
Hills, a neighborhood in Los Angeles, but that they had fallen out of touch
years ago.
Mr. Thomas
said it was “mind-blowing” to see a former high school teammate in the news
under these circumstances.
“There was
nothing from the little I knew about him that would have indicated anything
like this,” Mr. Thomas said.
In the
Parkchester section of the Bronx, about 11 miles from where Officer Islam was
killed, fellow officers shuffled in and out of the two-story home he had bought
for his family and aging parents. A child wailed inside. The imam of a local
mosque consoled the family.
Marjanul
Karim, a close family friend, said Officer Islam had been a mentor to young men
in a Bangladeshi community that numbers more than 100,000 in the city.
When Officer
Islam joined the Police Department, Mr. Karim said his own mother had asked him
why he would pursue such a dangerous job.
“He told her
he wanted to leave behind a legacy for his family,” Mr. Karim said, “something
they could be proud of.”
Reporting
was contributed by Wesley Parnell, Bianca Pallaro, Maia Coleman, Michael
Wilson, Liam Stack, Joseph Goldstein, Amy Julia Harris, Francesca Regalado,
Chevaz Clarke, Santul Nerkar and Matthew Haag. Kirsten Noyes contributed
research.
Ed Shanahan
is a rewrite reporter and editor covering breaking news and general assignments
on the Metro desk.
Chelsia Rose
Marcius is a criminal justice reporter for The Times, covering the New York
Police Department.
Maria Cramer
is a Times reporter covering the New York Police Department and crime in the
city and surrounding areas.


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