US suspends green card lottery scheme after Brown shooting

In response to a tragic shooting incident at Brown University that resulted in multiple casualties, the Trump administration has implemented an immediate suspension of the Diversity Visa Lottery program. The decisive action comes after authorities identified Claudio Neves Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese national, as the prime suspect in both the university shooting and the separate killing of an MIT professor.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced the program’s suspension under presidential directive, stating the suspect ‘should never have been allowed in our country.’ Valente had originally entered the United States through the diversity lottery system in 2017 and subsequently obtained permanent residency.

The DV-1 program, which annually allocates up to 50,000 visas through randomized selection from countries with historically low immigration rates to the U.S., faces renewed scrutiny following this incident. Secretary Noem referenced previous security concerns, noting that the 2017 New York truck attack perpetrator had similarly entered through the program.

Law enforcement officials concluded a six-day multistate manhunt when Valente was discovered deceased in a New Hampshire storage facility from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. Investigators connected Valente to both crimes through vehicular evidence, CCTV footage, and witness accounts. Authorities recovered two firearms and a satchel at the scene.

The tragic events began on December 13th when a gunman opened fire in Brown University’s engineering building during final examinations, resulting in two student fatalities and nine injuries. Just two days later, Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Nuno Loureiro was fatally shot at his Brookline residence. Police confirmed both men had attended the same Portuguese university in the late 1990s, though no motive has been established for either attack.