A winter afternoon at Brown University turned into horror on December 13, 2025, when gunfire erupted inside the Barus & Holley engineering building. Students who had arrived thinking about projects and exams suddenly found themselves running, hiding, and barricading doors as chaos spread through hallways. Emergency calls poured in while others fled in confusion, unsure where the danger was coming from.
Police and emergency crews arrived within minutes, issuing a campus-wide lockdown as information raced across phones and social media. By the time officials secured the building, the tragedy was clear: two students were dead and nine others injured, several critically. The gunman escaped on foot, triggering a massive manhunt that stretched beyond campus and deepened the fear gripping students and parents.
In the days that followed, Brown shifted from shock to mourning. Vigils filled the Main Green with candlelight, professors paused coursework, and counselors expanded support as the community struggled to process the loss. Flowers, letters, and photographs appeared outside the engineering building—quiet memorials to young lives cut short.
Attention has now turned to unanswered questions: campus safety protocols, mental-health support, and the search for the person responsible. Investigators from local police, state authorities, and the FBI continue pursuing leads, including a possible link to another academic-community shooting in Massachusetts. As students return to classes, the campus carries the weight of grief and resilience, determined to heal after a day that changed Brown University forever.