The Boston Globe

No students killed in Vegas shooting

Victims were faculty members, university says

- By Rio Yamat and Ben Finley

LAS VEGAS — The suspect in the deadly shooting at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, had a list of targets at the school and at East Carolina University in North Carolina, police said Thursday.

Three faculty members were killed and a fourth was wounded by the gunman who opened fire on the campus Wednesday before dying in a shootout with police, according to university officials.

Clark County Sheriff Kevin McMahill identified the suspect as Anthony Polito, a longtime business professor. Before the shooting, the gunman mailed 22 letters to university faculty members across the US, but the content of those letters wasn’t immediatel­y known, McMahill said at a news conference Thursday.

The sheriff said police have contacted everyone on the suspect’s list, except for one person who was on a flight.

“None of the individual­s on the target list became a victim,” McMahill said.

The sheriff said investigat­ors were still looking into a motive but noted that Polito applied for several jobs at various colleges and universiti­es in Nevada and was denied the job each time.

The suspect’s weapon, a .9mm handgun, was purchased legally last year, McMahill said. Police were still investigat­ing how many rounds were fired during the rampage. The sheriff said the gunman brought 150 additional rounds of ammunition with him to the campus, and that police found nine loaded magazines on the shooter after he was killed.

In a letter to students and staff, university President Keith E. Whitfield said that the shooting “was the most difficult day in the history of our university.” He identified two of the victims who were killed as business school professors Patricia Navarro-Velez and Cha Jan “Jerry” Chang. Whitfield said the name of the third victim will be released after relatives have been notified of the death.

The wounded man, a 38year-old visiting professor, was downgraded to life-threatenin­g condition Thursday, police said at a news conference.

Terrified students and professors cowered in classrooms and dorms as the gunman roamed UNLV’s Lee Business School on Wednesday and opened fire just before noon on the fourth floor, where faculty and staff offices for the accounting and marketing department­s are located.

Navarro-Velez, 39, was an accounting professor who held a Ph.D. in accounting and was currently focused on research in cybersecur­ity disclosure­s, according to the school’s website.

Chang, 64, was an associate professor in the business school’s Management, Entreprene­urship & Technology department and had been teaching at UNLV since 2001. He held degrees from Taiwan, Central Michigan University and Texas A&M University, according to his online resume. He earned a Ph.D. in management informatio­n systems from the University of Pittsburgh.

Polito was a professor in North Carolina at East Carolina University’s Department of Marketing and Supply Chain Management from 2001 to 2017, according to a statement released Thursday by the school. He resigned in January 2017 as a tenured associate professor.

One of Polito’s former students at East Carolina University, Paul Whittingto­n, said Polito went on tangents during class about his many trips to Las Vegas. Polito told his students he visited twice yearly, staying in different hotels and going to various clubs, Whittingto­n said.

The attack at UNLV terrified a city that experience­d the deadliest shooting in modern US history in October 2017, when a gunman killed 60 people and wounded more than 400 after opening fire from the window of a high-rise suite at Mandalay Bay on the Las Vegas Strip.

Lessons learned from that shooting helped authoritie­s to work “seamlessly” in reacting to the UNLV attack, McMahill said at a news conference.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Las Vegas police stood near the scene of the shooting at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, on Thursday.
JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Las Vegas police stood near the scene of the shooting at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, on Thursday.

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