On Providence’s College Hill, relief and anxiety after officials say Brown shooting suspect is dead

Some felt a sense of relief. Others questioned what had motivated the shooting

Brown University graduate student Yannick Etoundi visited a memorial outside the building where the shooting took place on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025.
Brown University graduate student Yannick Etoundi visited a memorial outside the building where the shooting took place on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025.
Isabella Jibilian/Ocean State Media
Share
Brown University graduate student Yannick Etoundi visited a memorial outside the building where the shooting took place on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025.
Brown University graduate student Yannick Etoundi visited a memorial outside the building where the shooting took place on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025.
Isabella Jibilian/Ocean State Media
On Providence’s College Hill, relief and anxiety after officials say Brown shooting suspect is dead
Copy

After a frenzied 5 days, the manhunt for the person who police believe killed two people and wounded 9 others in a mass shooting at Brown University is over. But feelings were mixed on Friday on campus and in the surrounding Providence neighborhoods.

Some felt a sense of relief. Others questioned what had motivated the shooting.

Graduate student Yannick Etoundi visited a memorial outside the Barus and Holley building, where the shooting took place, for the first time since the tragedy. He wondered about Brown’s future.

“It’s still unnerving and still very frightening and terrifying,” Etoundi said. “But at the same time, I think it’s slowly coming to the realization that this happened and just thinking about, ‘What does our day-to-day look like after this?’”

Brown University cancelled most classes and exams after the shooting. Second semester classes aren’t scheduled to begin until Jan. 21.

Many, of course, breathed a sigh of relief when they learned that the suspect was found dead on Thursday at a storage unit in New Hampshire.

Angie Felix said she has a coworker who lives close to the scene of the shooting. She lives in Lincoln and she traveled to Providence on Friday to shop with her daughter.

“I felt a little safer just to know that, okay, they found someone,” Felix said. “I mean, I hope it’s the right person.”

Mourners placed flowers and other mementos at a makeshift memorial outside the Barus and Holley building, where the shooting took place.
Mourners placed flowers and other mementos at a makeshift memorial outside the Barus and Holley building, where the shooting took place.
Isabella Jibilian/Ocean State Media

Abigail Donaldson, a mother of two, said she has experienced a variety of emotions this week.

“It’s made me think a lot more about the world that we’re in now and the world that my kids are growing up in,” Donaldson told Ocean State Media. “It really, honestly, makes me sad.”

Donaldson says she’s grateful that Providence schools remained open this week because it provided her kids with a sense of normalcy.

Nicole Gonzalez, a cashier at Pleasant Surprise, a gift shop on Thayer St., said it has been nerve-wracking to come to work this week. She sheltered in the basement of the store during the shooting.

Gonzalez said she feels a little better after learning the suspect is no longer at large. But there’s a sense of loss in the neighborhood.

“Usually, it’s Christmastime, like everyone’s shopping, everyone’s happy, it’s a pretty cute vibe in Providence,” Gonzalez said. “Now it’s like, it’s empty, no one’s really feeling happy. You can just feel how heavy everything is now.”

Ocean State Media’s Joe Tasca contributed to this story.

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee released his budget proposal. Now the General Assembly will spend months reviewing the plan
Written before COVID but hitting close to home, the comedy by Jonathan Spector skewers groupthink, social justice jargon and the limits of consensus
Counterclaim comes after three years and a trio of lawsuits by North Kingstown country club over shoreline dispute
From a sharp school-board satire at The Gamm to Black storytelling, chamber music and medieval fencing, here’s what’s happening this weekend and beyond in Rhode Island
In the aftermath of the deadly shooting at Brown University, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley reflected on what the city did right following the tragedy and what it can do better in the event of future emergencies
Mayor Brett Smiley said initial indications are positive, but that he ordered the city to engage an outside firm to review the city’s response