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Brown University shooter found dead in New Hampshire: reports

Flint McColgan and Todd Prussman, Boston Herald on

Published in News & Features

The suspected shooter who killed two Brown University students on Saturday has been found dead in a New Hampshire storage facility, according to multiple reports.

Reports from the Associated Press and Fox News do not identify their source for the information. A press conference on the case is set to begin within minutes.

Earlier story

Providence Police and other authorities, including the U.S. Marshals, are searching on a street off Route 28 in Salem, New Hampshire, as the investigation into Saturday’s Brown University shooting developed into a multistate manhunt with possible connections to the slaying of an MIT professor in his Brookline home.

The new investigative details have pushed back a press conference Thursday on the Brown University case originally scheduled for 4 p.m. that had still not begun by press time. A little after 9 p.m. an official gave a 20-minute warning that the press conference would start.

MIT connection?

Investigators are looking into a possible connection between the Brown University shooting and the murder of an MIT professor in Brookline.

That’s a detail first reported by WPRI — a Providence-based news outlet that says “senior law enforcement officials” confirmed they are examining the possibility of the two crimes, which both took place at or near elite New England universities about 50 miles from each other, being tied. Multiple others are reporting the same possible link.

A law enforcement source also tells the Herald both fatal shootings “are connected,” and an arrest will come “soon.”

This is a new development, because on Tuesday, FBI Boston Special Agent in Charge Ted Docks told reporters that investigators were not aware of a link.

“At this time, there seems to be no connection as it relates to that particular incident,” Docks said at a press conference. He added that the bureau was in contact with the Massachusetts State Police and that any evidence of their connection would be shared.

New Hampshire

The Herald is on the scene on the small Hampshire Road off of Route 28 in Salem, New Hampshire, just north of the Massachusetts border.

Providence Police and other authorities are also on the scene, between a self-storage facility and an auto-repair shop, as the search continues for the shooting suspect. The road is shut down to traffic and police are turning away residents who live in the closed-off zone.

Police were wearing Providence Police Department jackets, which indicates the connection to the Brown University shooting. Massachusetts license plates could be seen on multiple unmarked law enforcement vehicles. U.S. Marshals and FBI evidence response team members were also present. Agents could be seen donning gloves and carrying buckets just before 9:10 p.m.

 

Law enforcement from multiple agencies continued to come to Salem through the evening, with a dozen or more police vehicles seen heading to Hampshire Road at 8:50 p.m.

Police in Methuen, Massachusetts, which shares a border with Salem, NH, confirmed the presence of law enforcement in the area, including from its own department, but said “there is no information indicating an imminent risk to the public or residents of Methuen.

“However, we encourage everyone to remain vigilant and exercise heightened caution,” the department added in a statement. “In particular, if you observe any individuals on foot who appear out of place, unfamiliar to the area, or behaving in a manner that seems unusual or suspicious, please report it.”

Methuen PD Chief Scott McNamara’s statement did not explicitly connect the activity to the Brown University or MIT professor killings from earlier in the weekend, but said that the activity “is connected to an ongoing effort to locate a suspect in an active investigation into a recent death.”

The shootings

Two were killed and nine others were wounded in the Saturday shooting at Brown University in Providence. The shooting occurred around 4 p.m. inside the Barus & Holley engineering building, where, according to the school’s academic calendar, finals were taking place.

Authorities have since identified the two deceased victims as Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov and Ella Cook. Authorities have not identified the people wounded.

Then on Monday, MIT professor Nuno Loureiro was shot multiple times inside his Gibbs Street home in Brookline, a Boston suburb about 50 miles north of Providence. The professor of nuclear science and engineering directed the Plasma Science and Fusion Center at MIT since last year and has taught at the school since January 2016, according to his LinkedIn page.

Authorities are searching for suspects in both cases.

Authorities in Providence released video and still images from those videos of the shooting suspect, who can be seen wearing a dark jacket, mask and hat as he walked around campus hours before the shooting. Authorities ask for the public’s help, with the FBI setting up a dedicated tip webpage at FBI.gov/brownuniversityshooting. Tipsters can contact the FBI by phone at 1-800-CALL-FBI or the Providence Police Department at 401-272-3121.

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(Joe Dwinell contributed to this story.)

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