A grim revelation has emerged in the investigation of last week’s campus shooting. The man responsible for a deadly attack at Brown University had been dead for days before police found him. New autopsy results confirm critical details about the end of a weeklong multistate manhunt.
The shooter, Claudio Neves Valente, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. This finding comes from an official autopsy report. The report was detailed by authorities in New Hampshire.
Valente’s body was discovered inside a storage unit in Salem. Police found him on Thursday, December 18. He was located with a satchel and two firearms.
The medical examination provided a crucial timeline. It determined Valente died on Tuesday, December 16. His body had been in the storage facility for approximately two days.
According to Reuters, the manner of death was officially ruled a suicide. The investigation combined autopsy findings with available investigative information. This closed the intense search for the suspect.
Valente was wanted for a shooting at Brown University in Rhode Island. That attack occurred on Saturday, December 13. He killed two students and wounded nine others.
Connection to Victims and Campus History
Authorities have outlined Valente’s past connection to Brown University. He was a former PhD student in physics there. He attended the university over two decades ago.
School records show he entered a graduate program in 2000. Valente took a leave of absence in the spring of 2001. He officially left the university in 2003.
University officials confirmed he had no current ties to the school. His physics classes would have been held in the Barus & Holley building. This is the same building where the December shooting took place.
After the campus attack, Valente traveled to Brookline, Massachusetts. There, he killed MIT professor Nuno Loureiro. The professor was shot at his own home.
Investigators established a prior link between the two men. Both Valente and Professor Loureiro attended the same institute in Portugal. They were there during the same period in the late 1990s.
The violence spanned two states and shocked academic communities. The search involved multiple police agencies. It ended with the discovery in New Hampshire.
Investigation Provides Closure
The autopsy results provide definitive answers to investigators and the public. They confirm the shooter was not at large after December 16. This timeline brings a measure of closure to a tragic series of events.
Families of the victims have been notified of these developments. The focus now turns to supporting the injured and the grieving university communities. The legal investigation continues to review all evidence.
The Brown University shooter autopsy has concluded a painful chapter. It confirms the suspect’s fate and ends a widespread search. The findings allow communities to continue healing from the senseless violence.
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