2025 Brown University shooting
| 2025 Brown University shooting | |
|---|---|
Memorial outside Brown's Engineering Research Center | |
| Location | 41°49′35″N 71°23′52″W / 41.8265°N 71.3979°W Brown University Providence, Rhode Island, U.S. 42°20′53″N 71°07′23″W / 42.3481°N 71.1230°W Brookline, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Date | December 13, 2025 – December 15, 2025 4:00 pm – 8:30 pm (EST) |
Attack type | Mass shooting, spree shooting, university shooting, murder-suicide (suspected) |
| Weapons | Two 9mm Glock handguns[1][2][3] |
| Deaths | 4 (including the perpetrator and Nuno Loureiro in Brookline, Massachusetts) |
| Injured | 9 |
| Perpetrator | Cláudio Manuel Neves Valente |
| Motive | |
On December 13, 2025, a spree shooting began at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, U.S., during the second day of final examination week for the fall semester.[7] Cláudio Manuel Neves Valente, a Portuguese national and former student of the university, entered the School of Engineering and killed two students and wounded nine other students[8] as they attended a review session in preparation for final exams. Valente fled the scene before police arrived.[9]
Two days later on December 15, Valente shot Nuno Loureiro, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology physics professor and former classmate of his, multiple times at Loureiro's home in Brookline, Massachusetts, where he later died from his injuries; authorities determined that one of the two guns later found on Valente's body was the gun used in the Brown University shooting, and the other was used in Loureiro's killing.[10]
Valente was the subject of a five-day manhunt by the FBI and local police. Police released images and videos of the perpetrator, who wore a mask. Valente was found dead inside a storage unit in New Hampshire on December 18. Police speculated the situation was a murder-suicide.[11]
After Valente's body was discovered, President Donald Trump ordered Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to suspend the Diversity Immigrant Visa program, through which the shooter had attained permanent residency in 2017.[12] As the program was created by an act of Congress, the legality of the order was not clear.[12][13]
Background
Brown University is an Ivy League university in the College Hill neighborhood of Providence, Rhode Island, where it owns more than 230 buildings. In 2023, it enrolled about 11,500 undergraduate, graduate, and medical students.[14][15][16]
The shooting occured as part of a larger pattern of school shootings in the United States.[17]
Brown University shooting
Shortly after 4 p.m. EST on December 13, 2025, Cláudio Manuel Neves Valente shot 11 people in the Brown University School of Engineering's Barus and Holley Building, which also houses the university's physics department.[18][14][19]
Most of the shooting was inside the first-floor, 186-seat[20] Room 166,[20] where a 21-year-old teaching assistant was leading an optional review session for a final exam in economics.[21][22][23][24] It was the second day of the school's final examination week for the fall 2025 semester.[25] The building was unlocked.[7] It is unknown how Valente entered the building, but authorities said he moved through a part of the building that had limited surveillance cameras and exited on the Hope Street side.[26][27][28]
The teaching assistant said in an interview that the masked gunman came just as the class was ending and fired "40 rounds." The two students who were killed either had been sitting on the left side of the classroom or were walking up the room's aisle as Valente entered.[29]
At 4:22 p.m., the university's Public Safety and Emergency Management issued the first alert message to the campus community about "an active shooter near Barus & Holley Engineering."[30][31]
At 4:50 p.m., the university sent an alert message erroneously saying that a suspect was in custody; it sent a correction 20 minutes later.[18] At 5:27 p.m., the university sent an alert message about reported gunfire near Governor Street; it retracted the message at 6:10 p.m., calling the report "unfounded."[32][33]
Victims
Two people were killed, and nine were wounded in the Brown University shooting. All were Brown students.[8]
The two who were killed were Ella Cook, a parishioner at the Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham, Alabama and vice president of Brown's College Republicans,[34] and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, an Uzbek American and recent graduate of Midlothian High School in Chesterfield County, Virginia.[35][36][37][38]
All nine of the wounded people were transported to the university-affiliated Rhode Island Hospital for gun-related injuries.[20][39] One of the victims had a shrapnel injury and was discharged from the hospital after a few hours.[8][40] Two more were discharged on December 16 and 17.[41][42] The other six remained hospitalized as of December 18 but by then were in stable condition.[43]
Murder of Nuno Loureiro
On December 15, at around 8:30 p.m.[44] MIT physics professor Nuno Loureiro was shot in the foyer of the apartment building where he lived in Brookline, Massachusetts. He was taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston with gunshot wounds, where he was pronounced dead the morning of December 16.[45][46][47][48]
Loureiro had been the director of the MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center from 2024 until his death.[49] Authorities linked a rental car to both shootings and determined one of the guns found on Valente's body was used in Loureiro's killing.[50][51] Loureiro and Valente attended the same university in Portugal.[52]
Investigation
Over 400 police officers responded to the incident,[32] along with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).[53] Rhode Island governor Dan McKee also ordered the Rhode Island State Police to support policing efforts in the days that followed.[54]
In the hours immediately following the shooting, authorities found shell casings[20] and believed the shooter used a handgun.[55] Shortly after a 10 p.m. press conference, the Providence Police Department released security footage of the suspect,[14] which two days later remained the "clearest picture we have of the individual we believe to be responsible," according to Providence mayor Smiley.[56] Authorities asked nearby residents for any relevant video footage from smart doorbells.[57]
Overnight, it snowed, which hampered the collection of physical evidence such as fingerprints.[58][59]
The morning after the shooting, acting on information from Providence Police, the FBI raided a hotel in Rhode Island and detained a man.[60] FBI agents also raided a home in another state, where the local police department confirmed that the FBI was investigating the shooting. The FBI declined to comment on the raid,[61] and the detained man was released the same day. Rhode Island attorney general Peter Neronha stated that "there is no basis to consider him a person of interest."[62][63] The ballistics evidence from the crime did not match the gun in the man's possession.[64]
On December 15, Providence Police released images and three more videos of the suspect.[65][66] One video shows the suspect wearing a black beanie, a mask, a green jacket, and black gloves.[67] Providence police chief Col. Oscar Perez said the shooter had used a 9mm firearm.[68] The FBI offered a $50,000 reward for information related to the perpetrator.[54]
On December 17, Providence Police released a street map of where the suspect was confirmed to have been on the day of the shooting.[69] That same day, authorities also revealed that they had found DNA and fingerprint evidence on shell casings at the crime scene.[70] Police also received a tip regarding a post on Reddit about a suspicious vehicle near the area at the time, which "blew this case wide open," according to Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha.[71][72]
The Reddit post had information on a tip to look for a grey Nissan vehicle that had Florida license plates. The person who made the Reddit post saw the Nissan in Providence, Rhode Island.[72]
On December 18, law enforcement sources said the shooting may be connected to the December 15 fatal shooting of MIT professor Nuno Loureiro at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts, two days after the Brown shooting. On December 18, with an arrest warrant in the Brown case,[73][74][75] police went to a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire, and found 48-year-old Portuguese national Cláudio Manuel Neves Valente dead inside. Two guns were found on his body. Perez said Valente had killed himself.[11] The autopsy found that he had been dead for two days.[76]
Perpetrator
Cláudio Manuel Neves Valente (January 22, 1977 – December 16, 2025) was born in Torres Novas, Portugal. He studied at the same university as Loureiro, the Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon, in the late 1990s.[77][78] After graduating first in his class from the school ahead of Loureiro,[79] he enrolled in the physics PhD program at Brown University in the fall of 2000. He took a leave of absence in April 2001 and formally withdrew from the doctoral program in July 2003. Valente lived in Providence during his time at Brown.[80] Former classmates at the Instituto described him as a "brilliant" but arrogant student.[81] According to Scott Watson, a physics professor at Syracuse University and a close friend and former classmate at Brown, Valente "was often unhappy and even angry, complaining that classes were too easy and that the food on Brown's campus was subpar" during the time they were both doctoral students.[79]
After leaving Brown, Valente returned to Portugal, working as an IT specialist for SAPO.[82] He later won the Diversity Immigrant Visa lottery, obtaining U.S. permanent residency in April 2017. He had no criminal record. His last known address was in the working-class neighborhood of Ives Estates, Florida.[83][84] Beginning on November 28, 2025, he was observed on the Brown campus by multiple people who found his behavior suspicious.[85]
Reactions
Brown University
Brown University provost Francis J. Doyle III announced that classes and exams for the rest of the fall term were canceled.[86] Other universities and academic institutions, including Columbia University, Cornell University, and the American Mathematical Society, issued statements condemning the shooting and offering sympathy and support for the Brown community.[87][88][89]
Brown police chief Rodney Chatman was temporarily replaced by former Providence police chief Hugh Clements after the shooting. Chatman was previously criticized for his handling of threats and incidents, was given a vote of no confidence by the police union, and The Brown Daily Herald published allegations his department tolerated harassment based on gender and sexual orientation.[90]
Other schools
Durham Academy in Durham, North Carolina, released a statement: "Our school community is rallying around Kendall [Turner], her classmates, and her loved ones, and we will continue to offer our full support in the days ahead."[91] Turner was, at that time, in critical condition after being shot. She had recently graduated from Durham Academy.[92][93]
Politicians
On the afternoon of the shooting, United States president Donald Trump said, "Things can happen. So to the nine injured – get well fast; and to the families of those two that are no longer with us, I pay my deepest regards and respects from the United States of America."[94]
After the shooter's body was discovered on December 18, Trump suspended the Diversity Immigrant Visa program, which awarded up to 50,000 US visas per year via lottery, ostensibly because the shooter had attained permanent residency through the program.[12]
Massachusetts governor Maura Healey expressed her support for the victims of the shooting.[95]
Both senators from Alabama, Katie Britt and Tommy Tuberville, released statements mourning the death of Ella Cook.[34][96] Tuberville also alleged that Ella Cook was an intended target because she was a Republican.[96]
Organizations
The day after the shooting, December 14, 2025, was the 13th anniversary of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. The anti-gun violence nonprofit Sandy Hook Promise released a statement which in part read:
Our hearts are with Brown University as this tragic story unfolds. We cannot allow this to keep happening. We must #EndGunViolence.[91][97]
Media
Some in the media, such as Juliette Kayyem in The Atlantic and Lucy Feldman in TIME, contextualized the shooting within a pattern of gun violence in American schools.[98][99] Also writing for The Atlantic, Xochitl Gonzalez, who is a trustee and alumna of Brown University, considered the perceived deadlocks within American gun politics and whether such shootings in the United States are inevitable, given its political climate.[100] In addition, Brown professors Philip Chan and Amy Nunn argued for a "redefining" of gun violence in USA Today, writing that "there is a desperate need for greater community and school-based efforts to destigmatize and promote mental health services and nonviolent concepts."[101]
Others in the media also commented on the extended time it took to find the perpetrator of the shooting. For instance, in The Washington Post, Jim Geraghty considered the role of surveillance cameras in public safety given their simultaneous prevalence and lack of full coverage on the Brown University campus.[102] Brandon del Pozo, who is a professor at Brown's Warren Alpert Medical School, argued in The Atlantic that various factors, including in part "the odds and a little intelligent preparation on the part of the assailant", led to the delay, which del Pozo argued could not be blamed on law enforcement.[103]
Misinformation and conspiracy theories
Right-wing figures on social media repeatedly stated, without evidence, that a Palestinian Brown University student was the shooter.[104][105] These included anonymous accounts,[106] as well as venture capitalist Shaun Maguire;[107] billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman;[106] far-right activist and Trump loyalist Laura Loomer;[107] right-wing podcaster Tim Pool;[106] and senior Justice Department official Harmeet Dhillon.[108] One of Valente's victims, MIT professor Nuno Loureiro, was also wrongly identified by Maguire as Jewish and a supporter of Israel.[105][107] Additionally, Loomer baselessly alleged that the shooter had shouted "Allahu Akbar" before firing upon the lecture hall.[105] Republican officials, including Alabama senator Tommy Tuberville, claimed without evidence that the killing of Ella Cook was motivated by her being the vice president of the Brown University College Republicans.[108] Brown University deleted the wrongly accused student's profile pages from its website to protect them from harassment and doxxing attempts.[107] In a statement published on December 19, the student described the days after being doxxed as "an unimaginable nightmare."[108] Legal representatives for the student stated that racism against Palestinians was at the core of the accusations.[106]
Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse criticized these conspiracy theories during a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting, telling people who believed in these theories to "please just knock it off."[109] After Valente's responsibility for the shootings was publicly clarified, Rhode Island police claimed that speculation on the internet was not helpful and complicated the investigation.[106]
See also
- List of mass shootings in the United States in 2025
- List of school shootings in the United States (2000–present)
- 2025 Bondi Beach shooting, another infamous shooting that happened one day later. Both had criticisms for perceived failures in the law enforcement response to the shooting.
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Even the gun the police say he used to open fire in a Brown University classroom on Saturday was one of the world's most common types, a 9-millimeter handgun
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- ^ Allen, Bailey (December 14, 2025). "'We knew it could happen anywhere': Providence mayor speaks on Brown shooting, Sandy Hook". The Providence Journal. Archived from the original on December 14, 2025. Retrieved December 14, 2025.
- ^ Kayyem, Juliette (December 14, 2025). "Why the Brown Shooting Felt Different". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on December 17, 2025. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
- ^ Feldman, Lucy (December 17, 2025). "Brown University Will Always Be Home". TIME. Archived from the original on December 19, 2025. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
- ^ Gonzalez, Xochitl (December 14, 2025). "America Is Failing Its Children". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on December 19, 2025. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
- ^ Chan, Philip; Nunn, Amy (December 19, 2025). "Expect more shootings like Brown until we redefine gun violence | Opinion". USA TODAY. Archived from the original on December 19, 2025. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
- ^ Geraghty, Jim (December 15, 2025). "Opinion | An infuriating wrinkle in the Brown University shooting". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on December 16, 2025. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
- ^ del Pozo, Brandon (December 18, 2025). "Why the Brown University Shooter Is Still at Large". The Atlantic. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
- ^ Davies, Emily (December 19, 2025). "Trump allies amplified unfounded online theories in wake of Brown shooting". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 20, 2025.
- ^ a b c Basu, Zachary (December 20, 2025). "Influencers play detective — and unleash chaos". Axios. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e MacCarthy, Bill (December 19, 2025). "Student baselessly blamed for Brown University shooting online". AFP. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
- ^ a b c d Stokel-Walker, Chris (December 19, 2025). "Sequoia's Shaun Maguire accused an innocent Palestinian of being the Brown shooter. Then he doubled down". Fast Company. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
- ^ a b c "Trump allies amplified unfounded online theories in wake of Brown shooting". The Washington Post. December 19, 2025. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
- ^ Noori Farzan, Antonia (December 17, 2025). "'Just shut up': Whitehouse frustrated over Brown 'conspiracy theories'". The Providence Journal. Retrieved December 20, 2025.
External links
- Media related to 2025 Brown University shooting at Wikimedia Commons