Recap: Suspect in Brown, MIT professor shootings found dead in NH

“We got him," Ted Docks, special agent in charge of FBI Boston, said at a press conference Thursday night.

by · 5 NBCDFW

What to Know

  • A shooter dressed in black killed two people and wounded nine others in a classroom at Brown University on Saturday during final exams.
  • Law enforcement sources confirmed Thursday that authorities were investigating a possible link to the Brown shooting and the killing of an MIT professor in Brookline, Massachusetts, on Monday.
  • Federal officials said Thursday night that they could confirm the death of "the Brown University and MIT professor shooter," adding "there's no longer a threat to the public" in a news statement.

Law enforcement sources from Massachusetts and New Hampshire tell NBC10 Boston the suspect in the Brown University shooting has been found dead.

Authorities announced the death of 48-year-old Claudio Manuel Neves Valente from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound at a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire. They also said he is believed to be responsible for the deadly shooting of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor in Brookline.

Brown students Ella Cook and MukhammadAziz Umurzokov were killed in the shooting Saturday, which injured nine other people. Two days later, on Monday, MIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro was shot at his Brookline home.

U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Leah Foley said Neves Valente and Loureiro are believed to have known each other.

"Investigators identified the vehicle that he had rented in Boston and then drove to Rhode Island," Foley said. "The vehicle was seen outside of Brown, and there was security footage that showed a person who resembled him."

She added that financial investigations linked Neves Valente to the car and hotels he stayed at.

"There was security footage that captured him within a half-mile of the professor's residence in Brookline," Foley said. "And there is video footage of him entering an apartment building in the location of the professor's apartment, and then later that evening, he is seen about an hour later entering the storage unit wearing the same clothes that he had been seen wearing right after the murder."

FBI Special Agent in Charge Ted Docks said that Neves Valente is believed to have attended the same Portuguese university in Lisbon as Loureiro.

Brown University President Christina Paxson added that Neves Valente was enrolled in physics classes at the school between 2000 and 2001, and that he would have attended classes in the Barus & Holley building, where the shooting took place.