Shooter killed ex-wife and son at Pawtucket ice rink, police say

The shooter had a flareup of domestic disputes with their family in 2020, but investigators say they are still searching for a ‘trigger event’ closer to the shooting six years later

Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves addresses the media at a press conference on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026.
Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves addresses the media at a press conference on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026.
Mike Jones/Ocean State Media
Share
Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves addresses the media at a press conference on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026.
Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves addresses the media at a press conference on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026.
Mike Jones/Ocean State Media
Shooter killed ex-wife and son at Pawtucket ice rink, police say
Copy

Officials provided new details about the shooter who killed two family members and wounded three others at a high school hockey game in Pawtucket on Monday before taking their own life.

Pawtucket police on Tuesday identified the deceased victims as Rhonda L. Dorgan and Aidan Dorgan, the ex-wife and son of the shooter. Rhonda’s parents, Gerald and Linda Dorgan, and a family friend, Thomas Geruso, were also shot and remain hospitalized.

Police have identified the shooter as Robert K. Dorgan, though court records and social media posts show the 56-year-old identified as transgender and used the first name Roberta and the last names Dorgano or Esposito.

The records reveal a history of credit card debt and domestic disputes that flared up six years ago, landing Dorgan with numerous cases in Rhode Island’s court system.

Creditors began suing Dorgan for unpaid bills in 2018 and 2019. The following year, in February 2020, Dorgan accused their mother of physical abuse. (The case was soon dismissed.)

Their wife, Rhonda Lee Dorgan, filed for divorce later that month. The complaint initially listed the reason as “Gender reassignment surgery” and “narcissitic [sic] + personality disorder traits,” though the response was crossed out in pen and amended to the standard legal language of “irreconciliable differences.”

A day later, Dorgan accused their father-in-law of making threats, according to a complaint filed at the police station in North Providence, where they lived with their family at the time.

“I have recently undergone GRS surgery (sex change operation),” Dorgan wrote, “and Gerald told me, ‘There is no goddam [sic] way a tranny is going to stay in my house.’”

“My sister-in-law Jill was there also to further intimidate me because her husband is Asian and I know he has ties to Asian street gangs,” Dorgan wrote.

The Attorney General’s office later dismissed that case too, stating that an investigation revealed the brother-in-law was a doctor with a long-established medical practice in Worcester.

At a press conference about the shooting on Tuesday, Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves said the family disputes still don’t provide a clear motive for why Dorgan would shoot his son, ex-wife, ex-parents-in-law and a family friend six years later.

Goncalves said she could not comment on Dorgan’s mental health, and that police are still seeking access to medical records.

In the years since the court cases, Goncalves said Dorgan appeared to have moved away from Rhode Island. General Dynamics Bath Iron Works, a shipyard in Maine, confirmed Dorgan was an active employee of the company.

Goncalves said Dorgan still traveled to attend their son’s hockey games, so their appearance at the Dennis M. Lynch arena on Monday didn’t raise any alarms among the other family members in attendance.

“From the video, it doesn’t appear that there was any conversation or confrontation between the family before the incident happened,” Goncalves said.

Goncalves said investigators are still waiting to interview the injured victims because their health is unstable.

“We continue to look into maybe what the motivation was,” Goncalves said. “We’re not sure at this point what the trigger event was that happened yesterday. We are conducting several search warrants at this time looking for additional information.”

A stunning season by the New England Patriots and the rise of Drake Maye under Mike Vrabel, historic college runs and hometown stars staying put, New England sports are delivering an unexpected—and welcome—January gift
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