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UCLA: Police identify murder-suicide shooter as former engineering student Mainak Sakar UCLA: Police identify murder-suicide shooter as former engineering student Mainak Sarkar
(35 minutes later)
The Los Angeles Police Department has identified the shooter in the UCLA murder-suicide as Mainak Sarkar - a graduate student in the engineering department.  The Los Angeles Police Department has identified the shooter in the UCLA murder-suicide as Mainak Sarkar - a former graduate student in the engineering department. 
Mr Sarkar is said to have taken his own life after shooting professor William Klug on Wednesday.  Mr Sarkar is said to have taken his own life after shooting professor William Klug, 39, on Wednesday. 
According to the Los Angeles Times, the LAPD said Mr Sarkar was a former doctoral student who had previously accused Mr Klug of stealing his computer code. According to the Los Angeles Times, the LAPD said Mr Sarkar was a former doctoral student who had previously accused Mr Klug of stealing his computer code. 
Mr Sarkar had directed much of his ire at the slain aerospace engineering pressure on social media for some time, according to reports. Mr Sarkar had directed much of his ire at the slain aerospace engineering pressure on social media for some time, according to reports. 
“William Klug, UCLA professor is not the kind of person when you think of a professor. He is a very sick person. I urge every new student coming to UCLA to stay away from this guy,” Mr Sarkar had reportedly posted to social media in March. “He made me really sick. Your enemy is my enemy. But your friend can do a lot more harm. Be careful about whom you trust.”“William Klug, UCLA professor is not the kind of person when you think of a professor. He is a very sick person. I urge every new student coming to UCLA to stay away from this guy,” Mr Sarkar had reportedly posted to social media in March. “He made me really sick. Your enemy is my enemy. But your friend can do a lot more harm. Be careful about whom you trust.”
Mr Sarkar’s claims, however, were unconfirmed.  However, a university source told the Times that Mr Sarkar's accusations were baseless, and said that Mr Klug had gone above and beyond to help his student with his dissertation. 
Multiple law enforcement agencies - including the FBI - locked down the UCLA campus for two hours on Wedndesday after the two men were shot dead. The campus was declared safe and reopened by midday. “Bill was extremely generous to this student, who was a subpar student,” the source said. “He helped him out and interceded for him academically.”
Mr Sarkar - who earned a master's degree from Stanford University and a bachelor's in aerospace engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur reportedly thanked Mr Klug for his help and support in the acknowledgements section of his 2013 dissertation. 
 
Multiple law enforcement agencies - including the FBI - locked down the UCLA campus for two hours on Wedndesday after the two men were shot dead. The campus was declared safe by midday, and classes were set to resume Thursday. Courses in the engineering department would remain canceled for the remainder of the week. 
“We want to resume normal operations as quickly as possible," Vice Chancellor Scott Waugh said in a statement.  UCLA is making grief counselors available for all students, faculty, and staff. 
“Our UCLA family has indeed been shaken, but we will rely upon the strong bonds of our community and our faith in one another as we begin the process of healing,” UCLA chancellor Gene Block said.
 Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti lashed out against the dangers that guns present to the city.  “This horrific event, at an institution dedicated to learning and mutual understanding, reminds us once again of the fragility of a peaceful society," he said.
"Thankfully, the campus is now safe - but I am heartbroken by the sight of SWAT teams running down avenues normally filled with students, and angered by the fear that one person with a firearm can inflict on a community."