A
Brilliant Student Who Vanished and Then Became a Wanted Man
The
parents of the suspect in the Brown and M.I.T. killings had not seen or heard
from him since he left Portugal to enroll at a graduate program at Brown more
than two decades ago.
By Azam
Ahmed Dana
Goldstein and Patricia Mazzei
Azam
Ahmed reported from Lisbon, Dana Goldstein from New York, and Patricia Mazzei
from Miami.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/19/us/mit-professor-shooting-suspect-portugal-lisbon-physics.html
Dec. 19,
2025
When
Claudio Neves Valente, a standout physics student in Portugal, headed off to
graduate school at Brown University more than 25 years ago, he seemed to have a
promising career in science ahead. Soon after, though, he stopped taking
classes. Then he cut off all contact with his family back home, a relative
said.
In fact,
he seemed to vanish.
His
mother and father had not seen or heard from him until Friday, when they saw
his image in news reports and learned that he was accused in the shooting of
students in one of Brown’s science buildings and of a Massachusetts Institute
of Technology professor he had once gone to school with in Portugal. Mr. Neves
Valente also did not appear to leave a social media trail or any discernible
evidence of what he had been doing, professionally or otherwise, in recent
years.
“They are
devastated,” Mirita Domingues, a relative of Mr. Neves Valente’s, told The New
York Times. “His mother said this morning that she had always worried that the
next time she would hear about him, he would be dead.”
The only
child of a well-to-do family, Mr. Neves Valente, 48, attended private school
before enrolling at a public high school in Torres Novas, a small railway town
about 70 miles northeast of Lisbon, the Portuguese capital. He excelled in
school, scoring top grades in every subject, according to the school’s
principal.
Mr. Neves
Valente had been a happy child, playful, smart and dedicated to his family,
according to Ms. Domingues.
In 1995,
he was accepted at the prestigious Instituto Superior Técnico to study physics,
and he participated in the International Physics Olympiad in Australia,
representing Portugal with four other young men. The professor who led the team
recalled Mr. Neves Valente as the brightest of the group, though Portugal did
not rank highly in the international competition.
José
Morgado, Mr. Neves Valente’s high school physics teacher, said he had trouble
squaring the image of the killer on the news with the quiet, brilliant boy he
taught for three years in high school, whom he described as the best student he
ever had.
“I never
forgot him,” Mr. Morgado said. “I spoke of him often to my students.”
At the
Instituto Superior Técnico, Mr. Neves Valente studied physics alongside his
victim, the M.I.T. professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro, and graduated at the top of
their class in 2000, according to the university. A spokesman for the
institute, Portugal’s premier school for science and engineering, said by phone
that Mr. Neves Valente and Dr. Loureiro had studied in the same class from 1995
until 2000. Mr. Neves Valente received the higher mark, the spokesman said.
But Mr.
Neves Valente’s early academic success belied a troubled life as an adult. Not
long after moving to the United States to enroll at Brown, he grew remote from
his family, Ms. Domingues said.
Soon, she
said, he disappeared entirely. The family heard nothing of him until he was
identified as the suspect in the killings of Dr. Loureiro and the students at
Brown, where Mr. Neves Valente had briefly studied.
Christina
H. Paxson, Brown’s president, said that Mr. Neves Valente had been enrolled at
the university for three semesters as a graduate student before he went on
leave in 2001. He formally withdrew from the university in July 2003 and did
not complete either a master’s degree or a doctorate.
Scott
Watson, a physics professor at Syracuse University, described himself as Mr.
Neves Valente’s only close friend when the two were classmates in the Brown
physics graduate program. “He wanted to isolate himself,” Dr. Watson said on
Friday.
Several
other classmates said they did not remember him well, though they noted that
students in the physics program spent the bulk of their time in the Barus and
Holley building, where the campus shooting took place last weekend.
Dr.
Watson recalled that Mr. Neves Valente was often unhappy and even angry,
complaining that classes were too easy and that the food on Brown’s campus was
subpar. The two friends enjoyed meals together at a local Portuguese
restaurant.
Mr. Neves
Valente could be “kind and gentle,” his former friend recalled — as well as
brilliant. But the suspect could also be a bully, Dr. Watson said, going so far
as to call a Brazilian classmate his “slave.”
“I had to
break up a fight once,” Dr. Watson said.
Mr. Neves
Valente appears to have posted to a Brown physics message board soon after he
stopped attending classes in the spring of 2001, saying he was back in Portugal
and leaving a contact email for classmates.
In the
post, Mr. Neves Valente wrote in Portuguese: “The greatest liar is the one who
is able to lie to themselves. These exist everywhere, but they sometimes
proliferate in the most unexpected places.”
He had
come to the United States in August 2000 on an F-1 visa, a type commonly issued
to international students, according to an affidavit from a police detective in
Providence, R.I., where Brown’s campus is. About 17 years later, the affidavit
said, Mr. Neves Valente flew into Kennedy International Airport and was
admitted to the United States as a legal permanent resident.
It is
unclear whether he was in Portugal from 2001 through 2017, what he did over
those years and where he worked once he returned to the United States.
His last
known address was in a middle-class neighborhood north of Miami, according to
the affidavit. But a man who identified himself as the longtime owner of the
one-story yellow house at the address said on Friday that he had no knowledge
of the suspect.
The
Miami-Dade County Sheriff’s Office said deputies “responded to a location
provided through a tip” to assist in the shooting investigation. “However, the
search did not yield any results,” the office said in a statement on Friday.
Mr. Neves
Valente flew into Providence in October, law enforcement officials said on
Thursday. They believe he moved around New England between then and now.
At least
two firearms were recovered inside the storage unit in Salem, N.H., where Mr.
Neves Valente’s body was found on Thursday, according to a person briefed on
the investigation who was not authorized to release the information. He died of
a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the authorities said.
Dr.
Loureiro, the M.I.T. professor who studied with Mr. Neves Valente in Portugal,
was shot Monday night in his home in Brookline, Mass., and a day later, he was
pronounced dead. After graduating from Instituto Superior Técnico, Dr. Loureiro
remained at the school, as a researcher and then team leader at its Institute
for Plasmas and Nuclear Fusion, before eventually joining M.I.T.
Mr. Neves
Valente stayed only briefly as a teaching assistant before moving to the United
States, according to the Diário da República, the Portuguese government’s
official gazette.
It is
unclear if their paths crossed again before Monday.
Reporting
was contributed by David C. Adams from Miami; Alan Blinder from Atlanta; Tiago
Carrasco from Lisbon; Patricia Fonseca from Torres Novas, Portugal; Ernesto
Londoño from Minneapolis; Jenna Russell from Boston; and Maria Cramer and
Stephanie Saul from New York. Daphné Anglès contributed research from Paris,
and Georgia Gee and Kirsten Noyes from New York.
Azam
Ahmed is international investigative correspondent for The Times. He has
reported on Wall Street scandals, the War in Afghanistan and violence and
corruption in Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean.
Dana
Goldstein covers education and families for The Times.
Patricia
Mazzei is the lead reporter for The Times in Miami, covering Florida and Puerto
Rico.


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