Detroit Free Press

EMU grad among 8 killed in Texas mall

Weekend shooting claims hardworkin­g ‘gentle soul’

- Frank Witsil

An Eastern Michigan University graduate was among the eight killed Saturday afternoon at a Texas mall shooting, the second deadliest in the United States this year. Even though the tragedy was more than 1,000 miles from Michigan, it still hits home.

Aishwarya Thatikonda, the university confirmed, was a project manager with a Texas constructi­on firm and had gone to the mall with a friend. Reports said her friend was injured in the shooting and he is in stable condition at a hospital. Several accounts said they had gone shopping just ahead of Thatikonda’s birthday.

Some news reports have her turning 27; others, 28.

News reports portrayed Thatikonda, who was an engineer from India and had come to Ypsilanti to pursue a master’s degree, as a woman starting a career full of promise. Her Texas office, TV reports showed, is now full of flowers.

Choking back tears, the owner of the constructi­on firm, Srinivas Chaluvadi, told KXASTV in Fort Worth, Texas, said he thought of Thatikonda as a daughter. In other interviews, he said he hoped she would become the company’s CEO, and she hoped to get married, buy a house — and settle in America.

In an email to the Free Press early Tuesday, one of Thatikonda’s professors at EMU, Ben Ilozor, praised his student’s scholarshi­p and determinat­ion. He said she had taken one of his classes in summer 2019, and as she moved to Texas she connected with him on LinkedIn, a business-focused social media platform.

“For a moment, I was first in denial that the victim was not our own Aishwarya,” Ilozor said. “But unfortunat­ely, I could not wish it away. She was a committed and hardworkin­g

A-grade student in this class, and we will miss her dearly. May her gentle soul rest in peace.”

In a public statement released Monday, EMU said it is deeply saddened by Thatikonda’s death.

“She will forever be remembered as a strong Eastern Michigan University Eagle,” the university said. “As the nation has to once again grapple with a senseless act of gun violence, we share our condolence­s with Aishwarya’s family and friends.”

According to reports, police said a 33-year-old man identified as Mauricio Garcia fired into a crowd at about 3:30 p.m. at the Allen Premium Outlets, just north of Dallas. In addition to the eight people who were slain, seven others were wounded, and authoritie­s fatally shot the gunman.

Federal agents, who reviewed social media accounts they believe Garcia had been using, said he had expressed interest in white supremacis­t and neo-Nazi views, the Associated Press reported.

He also, the reports said, had an RWDS patch on his chest when he was shot dead by police. Authoritie­s said RWDS stands for Right Wing Death Squad, which is a popular phrase among right-wing extremists and white supremacy groups.

So far this year, 22 mass shootings have resulted in at least 115 deaths, according to a database maintained by the Associated Press, USA Today and Northeaste­rn University. The deadliest shooting so far this year was Jan. 21 at a dance in Monterey Park, California. Eleven people were killed and nine wounded.

Thatikonda, who graduated from Eastern Michigan in December 2020, earned a master of science degree in constructi­on management, the university said. After graduation, she moved to McKinney, Texas, just north of Allen.

Her family, reports added, would like her body returned to India.

 ?? PROVIDED BY FEATURING DALLAS VIA STORYFUL ?? A memorial is set up outside the Allen Premium Outlets mall in Allen, Texas, on Sunday to honor those killed by a gunman Saturday, including Aishwarya Thatikonda.
PROVIDED BY FEATURING DALLAS VIA STORYFUL A memorial is set up outside the Allen Premium Outlets mall in Allen, Texas, on Sunday to honor those killed by a gunman Saturday, including Aishwarya Thatikonda.

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