Los Angeles Police
officers search the UCLA campus near the scene of a fatal shooting at
the University of California, Los Angeles, Wednesday, June 1, 2016, in
Los Angeles. Los Angeles police chief says shooting was murder-suicide.
(AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
LOS ANGELES—A murder-suicide brought a massive police
response and widespread fear of an active shooter among tens of
thousands of people at UCLA. Now fear has shifted to sadness as many
lament the death of a professor who worked on computer models of the
human heart who was also a doting father who coached his young son’s
baseball team.
William S. Klug, a professor of mechanical engineering, was gunned
down in an engineering building office Wednesday, according to a law
enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation but not
authorized to publicly discuss it.
The shooter in the murder-suicide has not yet been identified, and
finding his motive in killing Klug will be foremost in the investigation
as it continues Thursday.
Classes at the University of California, Los Angeles campus will
resume Thursday for most of the school, and on Monday for the
engineering department, whose students and faculty were coming to grips
with his loss.
“Bill was an absolutely wonderful man, just the nicest guy you would
ever want to meet,” said a collaborator, UCLA Professor Alan Garfinkel.
“Devoted family man, superb mentor and teacher to so many students. He
was my close colleague and friend. Our research together was to build a
computer model of the heart, a 50 million variable ‘virtual heart’ that
could be used to test drugs.”
Peter Gianusso, who headed the El Segundo Little League where Klug
coached, said he “exemplified what Little League was all about:
character, courage and loyalty.”
“He had a special relationship with his son through baseball, was a
great coach, spent countless hours on the field with the boys and girls
of El Segundo Little League,” Gianusso said.
The initial reports from the scene set off widespread fears of an
attempted mass shooting on campus, bringing a response of hundreds of
heavily armed officers who swarmed the campus.
Groups of officers stormed into buildings that had been locked down and cleared hallways as police helicopters hovered overhead.
Advised by university text alerts to turn out the lights and lock the
doors where they were, many students let friends and family know they
were safe in social media posts. Some described frantic evacuation
scenes, while others wrote that their doors weren’t locking and posted
photos of photocopiers and foosball tables they used as barricades.
After about two hours, city Police Chief Charlie Beck said it was a
murder-suicide and declared the threat over. Two men were dead, and
authorities found a gun and what might be a suicide note, he said.
It was the week before final exams at UCLA, whose 43,000 students
make it the largest campus in the University of California system.
Those locked down inside classrooms described a nervous calm. Some
said they had to rig the doors closed with whatever was at hand because
they would not lock.
Umar Rehman, 21, was in a math sciences classroom adjacent to
Engineering IV, the building where the shooting took place. The
buildings are connected by walkway bridges near the center of the
419-acre campus.
“We kept our eye on the door. We knew that somebody eventually could come,” he said, acknowledging the terror he felt.
The door would not lock and those in the room devised a plan to hold
it closed using a belt and crowbar, and demand ID from anyone who tried
to get in.
Scott Waugh, an executive vice chancellor and provost, said the
university would look into concerns about doors that would not lock.
One student who spent hours sheltering in a building did the same
thing almost exactly two years ago when he was locked down in a dorm at
UC Santa Barbara during a shooting rampage in the surrounding
neighborhood that left six students dead and wounded 13 people.
Jeremy Peschard, 21, said it was “scary” and “eerily similar” but
also that having been through the feeling of crisis before left him
almost numb.
“I just felt a little bit less shocked, a little bit less taken aback
by the reality of an active shooter on a college campus,” he told The
Associated Press in an email. “Because I feel like this is the day and
age we’re living in, that college campus shootings have genuinely become
a normalized threat, almost like a natural disaster, except this type
of destruction isn’t natural. It’s just really sad.”
UCLA’s commencement ceremonies and end-of-year events will now
include mourning Klug, who was a devout Christian and a regular figure
in organizing campus spiritual life.
In 2012, according to the campus website, he moderated a forum that
his family and friends might find useful now. Its title: “Does God
Care?: Seeking the Meaning of Life in the Midst of Suffering and Death.”
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Associated Press writers Christopher Weber, Robert Jablon and Justin
Pritchard in Los Angeles, Alina Hartounian in Phoenix and Amy Taxin in
Tustin, California, contributed to this report.
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