Shooting New York City NFL CTE Explainer Football

FILE - Ann McKee, director Boston University's center for research into the degenerative brain disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, addresses an audience on the school's campus Nov. 9, 2017 about the study of NFL football player Aaron Hernandez's brain, projected on a screen, behind right, in Boston.

BOSTON (AP) — The degenerative brain disease that has besieged the National Football League for two decades with a billion-dollar lawsuit, congressional hearings, an A-list movie and an unrelenting cortege of ex-players’ obituaries intruded on America's favorite sport in the most violent manner yet when a gunman who turned out to have the disease earlier this year.

At the time of the July 28 attack, Shane Tamura, the Las Vegas casino worker who targeted the New York City skyscraper that is home to the NFL’s headquarters, carried a note blaming the league for his mental health problems.

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