Cops recover suicide note after deranged man drove car packed with explosives into crowd at Rochester concert, killing 2

· New York Post

A couple was killed and numerous other people injured just hours into the New Year when a deranged man driving a car filled with explosives barreled into a crowd leaving a rock concert in upstate New York, police said.

Law enforcement sources initially reported that the crash was being investigated as possible domestic terrorism but said Tuesday there was no terror link.

The fiery crash occurred at 12:50 a.m. outside the Kodak Center in Rochester, where roughly 1,000 people were filing out after a New Year’s Eve show by the rock band Moe.

Rochester officers were helping pedestrians cross the street when Michael Avery, a suspected bipolar man from Syracuse, sped his rented Ford Expedition toward the crowd and smashed into an Uber pulling out of a nearby parking lot, law enforcement sources said.

“The force of the collision caused the two vehicles to go through a group of pedestrians that were in the crosswalk and then into two other vehicles,” Police Chief David Smith said at a press conference.

Michael Avery, a suspect who police say was driving a car filled with explosives, barreled into a crowd leaving a rock concert in upstate New York, killing two people. Rochester PD
Rochester officers were helping pedestrians cross the street when Avery, a suspected bipolar man, sped his rented car toward the crowd and smashed into an Uber. GSLnews

The cars exploded into an intense blaze that took the fire department nearly an hour to extinguish.

A couple riding in the Uber were killed, while their driver was rushed to the hospital in non-life-threatening condition, sources and police said.

Three pedestrians were struck by the flying cars — one of whom was left clinging to life.

The cars exploded into an intense blaze that took the fire department nearly an hour to extinguish. GSLnews
The charred remains of a Ford Explorer filled with explosives outside a rock concert in Rochester. ABC7 NY

Avery was transported to the hospital with life-threatening injuries.

He died of his injuries around 8 p.m. Monday, law enforcement sources told The Post.

After the fire was extinguished, investigators found at least a dozen gasoline canisters scattered across the pavement and inside the Expedition, according to Smith.

Avery, believed to have been an “emotionally disturbed person,” had rented a hotel room in Rochester, where police conducted a search and recovered a suicide note and journal, according to law enforcement sources.

Investigators are reviewing the journal for any clues into the attack and have interviewed family members who said they believed the suspect had bipolar disorder, though he was never officially diagnosed, according to sources.

The relatives say Avery had never expressed any negative beliefs and that they are unaware of any reason he would want to cause harm to others, sources said.

Authorities are planning to conduct a search of a storage unit belonging to Avery in north Syracuse as well.

The homicidal driver rented the extra-large SUV before heading to the concert venue, law enforcement sources told ABC News.

“Obviously I would have been liking to stand at this podium to deliver ‘Happy New Year’ and smile and say good news. But unfortunately today we don’t have good news because we have several individuals whose families’ lives are changed because they will not be here to bring in 2024,” Mayor Malik Evans said.

Avery (above) was transported to the hospital where he later succumbed to life-threatening injuries. Rochester PD
Three pedestrians were struck by the flying cars — one of whom was left clinging to life. AP
After the fire was extinguished, investigators found at least a dozen gasoline canisters scattered across the pavement and inside the Expedition, according to reports. GSLnews

Members of Moe., the Buffalo-based rock band who had been playing a show at the music venue before the incident, said they were left in “profound shock and sadness.”

It was the second night in a row the band had played at the Kodak Center to ring in the New Year.

“On a night that was meant for celebration and togetherness, we are faced instead with a tragedy that defies understanding,” Moe. said in a statement.

“Take care of yourselves and each other, as we navigate this time together.”

Additional reporting by Amanda Woods