UCLA gunman killed estranged wife before
campus attack
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[June 04, 2016]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A former
University of California, Los Angeles, graduate student shot dead his
estranged wife at her Minnesota home before driving halfway across the
country to UCLA, where he killed a professor and himself, authorities
said on Friday.
Gunman Mainak Sarkar's first victim was Ashley Hasti, a
31-year-old medical school student with a love of acting and
stand-up comedy, her sister, Alex Hasti, said on Facebook on Friday,
two days after Sarkar's attack sparked a two-hour lockdown of UCLA's
sprawling urban campus.
Sarkar fatally shot 39-year-old engineering professor William Klug
and intended to kill a second professor, police said. The native of
India was convinced that Klug had stolen software he had developed,
according to police, who called Sarkar's claim unfounded.
So far no motive has emerged to explain why he killed Hasti in the
home they had shared in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, some 2,000 miles
(3,200 km) from Los Angeles.
Hasti was found dead early on Thursday morning of multiple gunshot
wounds, the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office said in a
statement.
"Because this was an unwitnessed death, a more accurate date and
time of death cannot be determined," the statement said.
 Sarkar is believed to have forced his way into Hasti's home through
a window, which was found broken, Brooklyn Park police said in a
statement.
Police only decided to check on Hasti after finding a note at the
Los Angeles crime scene written by Sarkar, 38, asking authorities to
check on his cat at his home in St. Paul.
The bizarre hint led to the discovery of a "kill list" that included
Klug, Hasti and the second professor, Los Angeles Police Chief
Charlie Beck told reporters on Thursday.
Alex Hasti on her Facebook post offered no indication of what might
have provoked Sarkar.
"My sister, Ashley Hasti, was the smartest, coolest, and funniest
person I knew. She could do anything she dreamed of," the sister
said. "Unfortunately, she won't get to see that last dream come true
as her life was cut short much too soon by her estranged husband ...
I'm still in a state of shock right now."
Sarkar was armed with twin 9mm semiautomatic handguns and multiple
extra clips of ammunition, authorities said.
The two guns were legally bought in Minnesota, according to Meredith
Davis, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives. She declined to say who bought the weapons.
Investigators on Friday were still searching for Sarkar's car, a
2003 Nissan Sentra, said Los Angeles police spokesman Aareon
Jefferson.
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
Mainak Sarkar, who killed a UCLA professor and took his own life,
also killed a woman found at this house pictured in Brooklyn Park,
Minnesota, north of Minneapolis, police said on June 2, 2016.
REUTERS/David Bailey
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The shooting drew a massive response of heavily armed police.
Students hid in classrooms behind doors, some of which did not lock,
according to social media posts.
It was just the latest in a long string of deadly shootings at U.S.
schools, including an October attack at an Oregon community college
that killed nine and a 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech, in which a
gunman killed 32 people, was the deadliest mass shooting in U.S.
history.
PAIR WED IN 2011
Ashley Hasti married Sarkar in 2011, according to a copy of a
marriage license obtained by Reuters. An active Facebook page
belonging to Hasti shows pictures of Sarkar, none more recent than
May 2011.
A page apparently belonging to Sarkar, with no public posts since
2011, prominently displayed several photos of them together.
Sarkar came from India's eastern state of West Bengal, where he
graduated from the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology at
Kharagpur in 2000 after studying aerospace engineering, according to
an ex-classmate and the university's alumni list.
Staff at his secondary school in the industrial town of Durgapur
remembered him as an able student who passed his exams with good
results.
"My initial reaction was one of shock and disbelief," said Gautam
Biswas, who taught Sarkar in the 9th and 10th grades at St.
Michael's School in Durgapur, West Bengal. "How could he do this?
That was the question that racked my mind for long hours."
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(Additional reporting by Amy Tennery in New York, Brendan O'Brien in
Milwaukee and Sujoy Dhar in Kolkata; Writing by Scott Malone;
Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and David Gregorio)
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