2 min ago
Students were attending voluntary study session when shooting happened, provost said
From CNN's Elise Hammond
When a gunman opened fire at the Barus & Holley building on Brown University’s campus, students were preparing for finals, making it difficult to determine exactly who was there, Brown University Provost Francis Doyle said.
A study session was happening in the classroom where the shooting happened, Doyle said. This means that it is taking longer than usual for officials to piece together what students were attending, he said.
“Had it been a final exam, we’d have a roster, we’d have handed it over. We’d know exactly who was in the room because everyone shows up for a final,” he said, when pressed about why it is taking so long for the school to tell investigators what students where there.
Study sessions, however, are optional, the provost said, “so we don’t know exactly what fraction of the overall roster turned out for a voluntary review session.”
Earlier, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha said there is no evidence so far that indicates the shooting was targeted at a specific person.