Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

How attacks on Brown, MIT professor unfolded

Los Angeles Times

|

December 21, 2025

Investigators are working to trace the steps of Claudio Neves Valente.

- BY LEAH WILLINGHAM

How attacks on Brown, MIT professor unfolded

OFFICERS in Salem, N.H., search Thursday for the Brown University shooter.

(REBA SALDANHA Associated Press)

Just before Thanksgiving, Claudio Neves Valente checked into a Boston hotel and traveled to Brown University in Rhode Island, where he had studied physics 25 years earlier.

The drive to Providence was short, and in the days that followed, the 48-year-old Portuguese national returned to the campus again and again. On most trips, he drifted around Brown and the surrounding neighborhoods in a gray Nissan rental car with Florida plates. A custodian noticed him inside an engineering building while most students were home on the holiday break and spotted him again three days later, according to authorities.

Investigators say that on Dec. 13, Neves Valente returned to Brown once more, this time with a 9-millimeter handgun, and he opened fire in a lecture hall in an attack that killed two students and injured nine others. He got away in the ensuing chaos, and two days later showed up at the home of a Massachusetts professor who was a classmate of his in Portugal in the 1990s, and fatally shot him too, investigators said.

In their frantic search for the Brown attacker, authorities released video in the hopes that someone might recognize him. But his face was always hidden behind a mask, with a black beanie covering his head.

"I wish the video could speak, and then I'd have the answers I need," a frustrated Providence police chief, Col. Oscar Perez, told reporters at one of the week's news briefings.

Investigators are still trying to figure out much of what Neves Valente was doing in New England in the weeks before the shooting, but they know he repeatedly visited the Ivy League school's Providence campus. He was spotted on surveillance video at a Boston rental car agency as early as Nov. 17.

Los Angeles Times'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Real-life hostage tale doesn't delve deep

‘Wire,’ from Et]

time to read

4 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Iconic blimp is worth the ride

Re \"Inflated? Absolutely. Overhyped? Not a chance,\" Dec. 29

time to read

1 min

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Ole Miss, Miami to battle in game like no other

Fiesta Bowl to feature teams whose viability, deservedness fueled controversy in circles.

time to read

2 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Another severe flu season already is upon us

U.S. infections are still surging in a repeat of last winter’s epidemic, and health officials say the situation is likely to get worse

time to read

3 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

A striking pivot to 'outward imperialism'

[Trump, from A1]Court has only facilitated Trump's expansion of unitary executive power.

time to read

4 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Musk’s AI floods X with sexualized images, study finds

Elon Musk’s X has become a top site for images of people who have been non-consensually undressed by artificial intelligence, according to a third-party analysis, with thousands of instances each hour throughout a day earlier this week.

time to read

4 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Greg Kwedar and Clint Bentley discuss making 'Train Dreams' and their inspirational trip to the Idaho panhandle

WITH DIRECTOR CLINT BENTLEY ON THE road promoting “Train Dreams” and his co-writer Greg Kwedar on set shooting his next film, the pair decided to pass reflections on writing the script back and forth.

time to read

3 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

EPA to reluctantly restrict a chemical in drinking water

The Environmental Protection Agency on Monday said it would propose a drinking water limit for perchlorate, a harmful chemical in rockets and other explosives, but also said that doing so wouldn't significantly benefit public health and that it was acting only because a court ordered it.

time to read

3 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times

Getting back in rhythm of life

Musicians affected by last year's fires found some relief from the MusiCares charity.

time to read

6 mins

January 08, 2026

Los Angeles Times

Hybrids won't move the needle

Re \"Hybrid sales surge in a recalibrated market,\" Dec. 30

time to read

1 min

January 08, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size