Los Angeles Times

No panic after sound of gunshots

UCLA professor draws praise for taking quick action following the fatal shooting of a colleague.

- By Teresa Watanabe

UCLA professor Ajit Mal was in his UCLA office Wednesday getting ready to teach his 10 a.m. engineerin­g class when he heard an odd sound. Pop! Pop!

He came out of his fourth-floor office in the Engineerin­g 4 building, as did his colleague, Christophe­r Lynch. They looked at each other.

“What was that?” Mal asked.

“That’s gunshot,” Lynch replied.

Just down the hall in his west-facing office, their colleague, William Klug, had been shot dead by Mainak Sarkar, a former doctoral student who had accused the professor of stealing his computer code and giving it to someone else.

But neither Mal nor Lynch, both professors of mechanical and aerospace engineerin­g, knew that at the time.

Lynch did know that Klug, a 39-year-old engineerin­g professor and devoted family man, described by colleagues as both brilliant and kind, would never take his own life. He figured a shooter was inside.

And he knew that more than a dozen faculty and staff members were on the floor at the time.

So he went to Klug’s office and held the door shut.

“If he had stepped out,” Lynch said of the shooter, “we’d all be in trouble.”

After that, Lynch heard a third shot inside. Then silence. Lynch assumed the shooter had killed himself.

Within minutes, the professors said, police converged and cleared out the floor. Without looking inside, Lynch gave the door key to police and left. He said he did not feel Sarkar try to open the door after the shooting but was sure the gunman had heard the yells from the hallway to clear out and that police had been called.

Mal credits Lynch with saving his life. Besides holding the door shut, Mal said, Lynch also shouted at him and other colleagues to return to their offices and close their doors.

Sarkar had been armed with two semiautoma­tic pistols and extra magazines, and was “certainly prepared to engage multiple victims,” LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said.

“If he had come out with a loaded gun, I don't think I’d be alive,” Mal said of Sarkar. “Chris Lynch’s presence of mind and quick action saved us.”

Lynch, speaking to The Times on Friday in his first public comments about the shooting, confirmed Mal’s account reluctantl­y, saying he wanted the focus to remain on Klug and his family.

He also praised his colleagues in the mechanical and aerospace engineerin­g

department for their calm actions during the crisis. He and Mal said that Angie Castillo, the department manager, and Tsu-Chin Tsao, the department chair, acted swiftly to call 911 and support the group throughout the harrowing day and aftermath.

“Not a single person panicked,” Lynch said. “Everyone acted profession­ally.”

The two men both said that Sarkar’s allegation that Klug had stolen his computer code was groundless. Lynch said all UCLA employees and graduate students sign over any intellectu­al property developed there to the university and, if it is subsequent­ly licensed, enter royalty agreements to share in the profits.

Mal said it was “common practice” for computer codes developed by one student to be used by others. One of his former students, now working at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, still consults with current graduate students who continue to use his code involving the effect of outside forces on new materials being used in aerospace.

“There just isn’t an issue worth discussing here,” Lynch said. “This is what a very sick mind dredged up. It’s delusional.”

Both men said that Sarkar had enrolled in their classes several years earlier but left little impression.

Mal said Sarkar was quiet and reserved and would not even greet him when the two men passed each other, which the professor found somewhat odd since both hail from West Bengal in India and speak the same language.

He also said it was likely that Klug never knew of Sarkar’s animosity toward him. If he had, Mal said, Klug would probably have consulted him for his Indian cultural insights and years of experience; the two men were close as Mal had headed the search committee that hired Klug in 2003.

“This whole thing is so incredible and bizarre because Bill is the least likely to have some conflict with students,” Mal said. “He was so very caring.”

Sarkar is also believed to have killed his wife in Minnesota before driving to UCLA.

‘There just isn’t an issue worth discussing here. This is what a very sick mind dredged up. It’s delusional.’ —Chris Lynch, UCLA professor, on Mainak Sarkar’s accusation of theft against William Klug

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? POLICE OFFICERS check students as they’re evacuated after the shooting at UCLA on Wednesday. Mainak Sarkar had been armed with two semiautoma­tic pistols and extra magazines, and was “certainly prepared to engage multiple victims,” LAPD Chief Charlie...
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times POLICE OFFICERS check students as they’re evacuated after the shooting at UCLA on Wednesday. Mainak Sarkar had been armed with two semiautoma­tic pistols and extra magazines, and was “certainly prepared to engage multiple victims,” LAPD Chief Charlie...

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