Los Angeles Times

After UCLA shooting, the search for answers

Gunman is believed to have killed in Minnesota too

- By Kate Mather, Richard Winton, Teresa Watanabe and Matt Hamilton

The gunman was dead. Beside him, two semiautoma­tic pistols, extra magazines and a backpack.

Mainak Sarkar, a former doctoral student, had killed himself after storming through a UCLA building and fatally shooting a highly regarded professor inside a small fourth-floor office.

But the note Sarkar left behind kept authoritie­s on edge. It listed a home address in St. Paul, Minn., nearly 2,000 miles away. There was also a request. Could someone check on his cat?

That led authoritie­s to search the 38-year-old’s home, where they discovered a “kill list” with three names: William Klug, the professor fatally shot Wednesday; another UCLA professor, who is safe; and a woman who lived in a nearby suburb.

The woman was found early Thursday inside her gray Brooklyn Park home, dead from a gunshot wound. Public records listed the resident as Ashley Hasti, a 31year-old University of Min-

nesota medical student whom Sarkar married in 2011.

Detectives are piecing together Sarkar’s movements in the Midwest and what led up to the murder-suicide that sent thousands of UCLA students racing for cover and holing up in classrooms.

They believe that Sarkar killed the woman, then drove to Los Angeles in his gray 2003 Nissan Sentra. The car, which has not been found, may contain evidence and other clues to help them establish a motive, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck told The Times on Thursday.

So far there is nothing to suggest Sarkar committed other crimes during his trip, Beck said, but detectives are working with authoritie­s in various states “to see if there is a trail.”

Sarkar used a 9-mm pistol purchased legally in Minnesota to kill Klug, according to a source familiar with the investigat­ion. Authoritie­s are attempting to determine whether the weapon used in Los Angeles was connected to the Brooklyn Park shooting.

Sarkar intended to kill two UCLA faculty members, but was able to locate only Klug, Beck said. It was not immediatel­y clear if Sarkar looked for the other professor, who was not named. That professor wasn’t on campus at the time of the shooting.

Both instructor­s were aware that Sarkar had issues with them. “But I don’t think that is cause for somebody to believe that they were going to be a homicide target,” the chief said.

It was not initially known whether either of the professors had expressed concerns about Sarkar to anyone at UCLA.

Beck said detectives were also trying to contact other people in Sarkar’s life to make sure there were no additional victims.

Klug, a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineerin­g, and Sarkar appeared to have had a friendly relationsh­ip that at some point turned sour. In his doctoral dissertati­on, submitted in 2013, Sarkar expressed gratitude to the professor for his help and support.

“Thank you for being my mentor,” he wrote. A 2014 doctoral commenceme­nt booklet listed Klug as Sarkar’s advisor.

But in recent months, Sarkar lashed out at the professor in online postings. On March 10, Sarkar called Klug a “very sick person” who could not be trusted.

“I urge every new student coming to UCLA to stay away from this guy,” he wrote on his blog. “He made me really sick. Your enemy is your enemy. But your friend can do a lot more harm. Be careful about whom you trust.” He posted Klug’s photo.

According to police, Sarkar had accused Klug of stealing his computer code and giving it to someone else. A source familiar with the relationsh­ip called the accusation “absolutely psychotic” and said that Klug had bent over backward to help Sarkar finish his dissertati­on and graduate.

Sarkar had struggled with severe mental problems, including depression and an inability to study, which compromise­d his work at UCLA, the source said.

Alex Levine, a UCLA biology and chemistry professor, said Klug, 39, felt strongly about his vocation and was intent on making a real impact on developmen­ts in human health.

“There’s absolutely nothing that Bill did that would have any bearing on this,” Levine said of the shooting.

Beck said detectives discussed the theft allegation with UCLA officials and found it to be without merit. “This was a making of his own imaginatio­n,” he said of Sarkar.

Sarkar received an aerospace engineerin­g degree in 2000 from the Indian Institutes of Technology at Kharagpur in eastern India. Over the years, IIT has built a storied reputation, with its graduates becoming top executives at major corporatio­ns.

According to the Department of Homeland Security, Sarkar arrived in the U.S. in 2001 on a foreign student visa to pursue graduate studies. He subsequent­ly obtained three additional student visas before becoming a permanent resident in May 2014.

By then, Sarkar had attended Stanford from 2003 until 2005, earning a master’s of science in aeronautic­al and astronauti­cal engineerin­g. He had a stint as a research assistant at the University of Texas and worked as a software developer.

According to his LinkedIn profile, Sarkar became a teaching assistant at UCLA in 2008. Residents of the cream-and-aqua apartment complex in the Sawtelle neighborho­od where Sarkar lived recalled that the mechanical engineerin­g student kept to himself.

Eugenio Martinez, 30, said Sarkar appeared to enjoy people-watching.

“I just remembered he was very observant of everyone,” Martinez said. “He never spoke, at least not to me. He seemed normal and tranquil.”

Sarkar graduated from UCLA in 2014. He eventually settled in Minnesota and worked remotely as an engineerin­g analyst for Ohiobased rubber company Endurica.

“I appreciate the quality of his work and his careful approach to new problems,” the company’s president wrote on Sarkar’s LinkedIn page.

So far, little is known about Sarkar’s life in Minnesota. Sources close to the investigat­ion said Sarkar’s relationsh­ip with Hasti had ended at some point. On Thursday, police and crime lab crews swarmed the Brooklyn Park home they once shared.

At Sarkar’s residence in St. Paul, authoritie­s recovered ammunition and a box for one of the two pistols found at UCLA. The cat was found safe.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CHARLES KAWCZYNSKI, a doctoral candidate in mechanical engineerin­g, stands outside smashed doors in the UCLA building where Mainak Sarkar gunned down professor William Klug before killing himself.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CHARLES KAWCZYNSKI, a doctoral candidate in mechanical engineerin­g, stands outside smashed doors in the UCLA building where Mainak Sarkar gunned down professor William Klug before killing himself.
 ?? UCLA ?? WILLIAM KLUG, 39, was intent on making a real impact on developmen­ts in human health, a colleague said.
UCLA WILLIAM KLUG, 39, was intent on making a real impact on developmen­ts in human health, a colleague said.
 ?? KTLA ?? MAINAK SARKAR, 38, had accused Klug of stealing his computer code and giving it to someone else.
KTLA MAINAK SARKAR, 38, had accused Klug of stealing his computer code and giving it to someone else.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? NINA ALAVI, left, and Mai Que Vo, right, ask fellow students to write notes of support to be placed on the sculpture on Bruin Walk.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times NINA ALAVI, left, and Mai Que Vo, right, ask fellow students to write notes of support to be placed on the sculpture on Bruin Walk.
 ??  ??
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? AT A NEWS CONFERENCE, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck asks for the public’s help in finding the 2003 Nissan Sentra that belonged to gunman Mainak Sarkar.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times AT A NEWS CONFERENCE, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck asks for the public’s help in finding the 2003 Nissan Sentra that belonged to gunman Mainak Sarkar.

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