PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Law enforcement authorities have detained an individual connected to a mass shooting that erupted at Brown University’s campus on Saturday, leaving two students dead and nine others injured. The violent incident, which unfolded during final examinations, triggered an extensive lockdown and manhunt before authorities announced a breakthrough in the early hours of Sunday.
Providence Mayor Brett Smiley confirmed the detention of a person of interest during a press conference, subsequently lifting the shelter-in-place order that had paralyzed the Ivy League institution. “I want to offer my profound thanks to all the hardworking men and women in law enforcement who worked through the night to be able to get us to this point,” Smiley stated.
According to police reports, the shooting occurred in Barus and Holley Engineering Hall, where examinations were underway. Surveillance footage captured the suspect, seen from behind, walking briskly along a deserted street after opening fire inside a first-floor classroom. Police Colonel Oscar Perez indicated that authorities are “not at this point” seeking additional suspects in connection with the attack.
Of the nine wounded victims, all confirmed to be students, one remains in critical condition, seven are stabilized, and one has been discharged from medical care. The university has postponed all final examinations scheduled for Sunday.
Eyewitness accounts describe scenes of terror and confusion. Katie Sun, a student who was studying nearby, reported hearing gunfire from classroom areas. “It was honestly quite terrifying. The shots seemed like they were coming from where the classrooms are,” she told the Brown Daily Herald, recounting how she fled without her belongings.
Lydell Dyer, another student working in the campus gym, described sheltering with 154 others in darkness. “We had to go gather everybody, bring them up to the top floor, turn off the lights, and put down the blinds,” he told CNN.
The shooting represents the latest in America’s ongoing crisis of gun violence, with more than 300 mass shootings recorded nationwide this year according to the Gun Violence Archive. Mayor Smiley emphasized the tragic abnormality of such events: “This should not be normal. This should not be the case that every community needs to prepare for something like this to happen.”
University President Christina Paxson confirmed the tragic loss of two students in a letter to the community, expressing profound grief over the “devastating gun violence” that struck the campus of approximately 11,000 students.
The university’s emergency alert system activated at 4:22 PM local time, instructing students to “lock doors, silence phones and stay hidden until further notice.” First responders discovered clothing and blood on sidewalks near the engineering building, according to local news reports.
President Donald Trump has been briefed on the shooting, which he described as a “terrible thing,” while offering prayers for the victims. The incident revives painful memories of previous campus shootings, including the deadliest such event at Virginia Tech in 2007 that claimed 32 lives.
