November 16, 2011 3:20 PM

Berkeley shooter dead after police confrontation

University of California at Berkeley police guard the entrance of the Haas School of Business on Nov. 15, 2011 in Berkeley, Calif. A man with a gun was shot by police Tuesday inside the campus building at the University of California, Berkeley, the school said. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

(CBS/AP) 

BERKELEY, Calif. - An undergraduate student shot by campus police after brandishing a loaded gun at the University of California, Berkeley died at a hospital hours after the confrontation, a university spokesman said Wednesday.

Christopher Nathen Elliot Travis, 32, had just started his first semester at Berkeley after transferring from another school, and had been attending classes at the prestigious Haas School of Business, spokesman Dan Mogulof said.

University officials said a staff member first saw the man carrying what appeared to be a gun in an elevator at the business school after 2 p.m. on Tuesday. The staff member called police at 2:17 p.m., saying she saw the man remove the gun from a backpack.

Police officers tracked the suspect into a Haas computer lab. The suspect raised the loaded gun and was shot by an officer at about 2:22 p.m., roughly five minutes after the initial call, according to the school.

At the time, four students were between the officer and the suspect, UC Chancellor Robert Birgeneau said Tuesday. None of the students was hurt, and Mogulof said there was no evidence to suggest Travis had any intentions to harm others.

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Bill Travis, the suspect's father, sobbed during a brief telephone interview with The Associated Press from his home in Lodi, Calif. He said he learned his son had been shot Tuesday night, and didn't wish to make any further comment.

As Twitter lit up with concerns and rumors about what had happened following the shooting Tuesday afternoon, news helicopters arrived on the scene and began buzzing overhead.

At 2:53 p.m., campus authorities sent out the first alert to the Berkeley community, saying there had been a shooting at Haas Business School and that police on the scene had the situation under control but that the area should be avoided, said Claire Holmes, an associate vice chancellor for public affairs. Another warning went out at 2:59 p.m. saying the only suspect was in custody.

A third alert went out nearly an hour later, said there was no longer a threat and that campus activities had returned to normal. The official UC Berkeley Twitter account later posted a link to an official university statement describing the incident and saying that Haas had been reopened.

When asked whether the school's emergency alert system was effective given the reporting delay, Holmes said she felt the school had done an admirable job.

"I think that given the situation, you're balancing the urgency to get something out with the knowledge that you currently have, and not creating a situation where people are overly concerned and doing things they shouldn't be doing," she said. "It went out as soon as it was possible."

It was the first on-campus shooting since 1992. In that earlier incident, an Oakland police officer fatally shot a machete-wielding activist from nearby People's Park who had broken into the former chancellor's mansion on the north side of campus.

Mogulof said Wednesday that the suspect was taken to an Oakland hospital, where he died later Tuesday.

"It's a very fast moving investigation," he said. "There were an enormous of witnesses who police had to interview so that's why it's taken this long to get the information out."

Staff, students and administrators gathered at the business school Wednesday morning for a meeting about the shooting. Grief counselors were on hand and classes were held as scheduled Wednesday.

School administrators issued a statement directing students where to find their belongings left behind Tuesday afternoon after the temporary evacuation of the school and cancellation of classes.

The shooting occurred as anti-Wall Street activists were preparing another attempt to establish an Occupy Cal camp after a failed effort last week led to dozens of arrests.

ReFund California, a coalition of student groups and university employee unions, called for a campus strike, and protesters planned a rally and march to protest banks and budget cuts to higher education.

More than 1,000 students, campus employees, faculty and other demonstrators filled an outdoor plaza Tuesday after many took part in morning teach-ins.

Officials did not yet know whether the suspect was part of the Occupy Cal movement, although many have said the Occupy protests and the shooting do not appear related, KCBS-TV in San Francisco reports.

"I just hope it wasn't from the protest or the movement, because that's not what the movement is about," said Sadia Saif, a 19-year-old sophomore at UC Berkeley.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
by Patriot_70 November 17, 2011 9:58 AM EST
he police officer that did the shooting is dead? How'd that happen?
Reply to this comment
by Kwarrant November 16, 2011 5:22 PM EST
Pretty scary. I just wonder whos gonna save us from these armed thugs ..Police..
Reply to this comment
by Patriot_70 November 17, 2011 10:03 AM EST
Now I agree with you on that. The police represent a military force on US soil, and should not be allowed that much freedom and should be held accountable to a greater extent.
by MaxPower5 November 16, 2011 5:14 PM EST
As usual, the media is manipulating the facts to make for a better "story," without any regard to accuracy.

This had nothing to do with the Occupy protests (which were being held in front of Sproul Hall, located nearly a half-mile away from Haas). This was a deranged fool who showed up in a very peaceful building, brandishing a firearm. In this day and age, you deserve to be shot for being that stupid, and I have no problem with the way the officers handled this situation, because this could have easily turned into yet another instance of innocent people being gunned down because some coward who wasn't fit to live in society.

I was two rooms over when this happened, so, yeah, I have zero sympathy for this clown. Good riddance.
Reply to this comment
by jade84116 November 16, 2011 5:09 PM EST
No evidence that he wanted to hurt others hardly rises to the level of siccing the police on him.
Reply to this comment
by Zann-Zel November 16, 2011 5:38 PM EST
He had a gun in a school.
Yeah thats when the police are called.
by venicementor November 21, 2011 1:49 AM EST
O.K., so what you're saying with your comment, is that they should of waited till he gunned down a couple of people, maybe a few or a whole bunch? Oh, yes, I see your point - then you can be pissed at the police for not doing their job. People need to make up their bloody mind about what they want the cops to do when a guy is carrying a gun on campus.
by mecanik-2009 November 16, 2011 5:05 PM EST
"Police officers tracked the suspect into a Haas computer lab."

I myself have wanted to shoot my computer when it gave me trouble. He probably had his computer lock up on a Windows program and he just wasn't going to take it any more.
Reply to this comment
by ToolMangler1 November 16, 2011 8:32 PM EST
Shooting the computer just proves that you let it 'beat' you...
by legacyABQ2 November 16, 2011 4:55 PM EST
So he didnt do the shooting, the police did. The article and headline are both written in such a way as to imply that he was "a shooter". He was a man in possession of a firearm, nd in california thats an offense punishable by death without trial apparently.

Why didnt they taser him instead they love that.
Reply to this comment
by ToolMangler1 November 16, 2011 8:51 PM EST
If you point a gun at a Law Officer, they are to stop you any way they can. If you Tase him, he may kill you with the needles still in him. I could because I am not easily disabled by Taser voltages.. They just make me angry and spoil my aim when they first go off, but I always regain control after a moment... (Yes, I have been tased so that I would know what it feels like...) They also make my body ache for days later...
by swiftone186 November 16, 2011 4:09 PM EST
"The shooting occurred as anti-Wall Street activists were preparing another attempt to establish an Occupy Cal camp after a failed effort last week led to dozens of arrests."
ReFund California, a coalition of student groups and university employee unions, called for a campus strike, and protesters planned a rally and march to protest banks and budget cuts to higher education"

"I just hope it wasn't from the protest or the movement, because that's not what the movement is about," said Sadia Saif, a 19-year-old sophomore at UC Berkeley

Really?? Of course it was!!

I wonder if the Ultra liberal POS Berkeley professors are protesting the police for killing the alleged gunman and possibly saving their lives. Where's the screaming and yelling for non-violence now that you got someone killed?
Reply to this comment
by legacyABQ2 November 16, 2011 4:56 PM EST
You were there huh. Where does it say he threatened anyone. Sounds like you are an anti-gun, gun-control-loving liberal communist to me.
by swiftone186 November 16, 2011 5:32 PM EST
legacyABQ2 - "The man who police say brandished a weapon at UC Berkeley's business school and was fatally shot Tuesday by campus police was identified Wednesday as Christopher Travis, 32, an undergraduate transfer student. Authorities said they are investigating reports that he may have acted erratically in the past."
"A student inside the building at the time of the shooting says he heard four or five shots. At a news conference Tuesday afternoon, the UC Berkeley police chief said the suspect was shot. Four students were in the room at the time of the shooting. "
"University officials credit an alert staff member for notifying police when she thought she saw a gun in the man's backpack. Police say they confronted the man in the computer lab and told him to raise his hands. They opened fire after the man raised a gun. "
I guess raising a loaded weapon at a school with kids in a classroom nowadays is ok in your feeble mind?

You liberals can't take it when it's your BS policies that caused this - own up that Occupy Cal camp got someone killed!!
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