UCLA shooting: Former mentor shot dead by Mainak Sarkar helped him graduate

At a time when Sarkar's dissertation was deemed 'not good enough' by his professors, William Klug asked his colleagues to wave his student through to graduation

Los Angeles Police officers walk by the Mathematical Sciences Building on the UCLA campus after a fatal shooting at the University of California, Los Angeles, Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Los Angeles Police officers walk by the Mathematical Sciences Building on the UCLA campus after a fatal shooting at the University of California, Los Angeles, Wednesday, June 1, 2016
APPTI Los Angeles
Last Updated : Jun 04 2016 | 2:00 PM IST
The kindly professor whom the gunman blamed for his ruin had, in truth, quietly seen to his academic success.

As a shy graduate student struggling to secure his Ph.D., Mainak Sarkar had bristled at the doubts expressed by professors at UCLA's engineering department. His dissertation, they told him, simply was not good enough.

Sarkar's mentor had his own doubts, but after Sarkar submitted a new document professor William Klug asked his colleagues to wave his student through to graduation.

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"We could easily have said, 'It's not enough, you need to do more,'" said professor Jeff Eldredge, Klug's colleague and close friend. "We just said, 'Ugh, let's get him out of here.'"

That was 2013. This week, Sarkar returned.

After killing his estranged wife in a Minneapolis suburb, Sarkar packed two guns, drove from Minnesota to Los Angeles, parked in his old neighbourhood, took a bus to campus and shot Klug in the professor's office Wednesday before taking his own life.

Though Sarkar seemed to have genuine affection for his mentor while in school, more recently an animosity grew. In March, Sarkar posted online that Klug had "made me really sick" after stealing computer code from him. Colleagues said only a deranged person could conclude someone of Klug's character would defraud a student.

"That's what's so frustrating about this. He turned into a completely different person in these last few days or weeks or whatever," Eldredge said.

Sarkar's descent may go back further than that. He held his last known job in 2014 - the same year he separated from his wife, Ashley Hasti, according to Hasti's grandmother.

Sarkar, 38, had entered mid-life with a foundation of success, a wall's worth of academic degrees from top universities and a new wife in his chosen country.

He came to the US on a student visa in 2001 after earning a degree in aerospace engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology at Kharagpur.

In India, former classmates and teachers described a solid student who gave no indication of aggression.

He attended Stanford University from fall 2003 until spring 2005, when he received a master's degree in aeronautical and astronautical engineering.

A year later, he moved south to the University of California, Los Angeles and began working under Klug.

Even before his death, Klug had been hailed as a caring father and gifted educator who inspired his students. Hundreds gathered to honour him at on-campus vigils. Klug's outgoing personality contrasted with Sarkar's introversion.
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First Published: Jun 04 2016 | 1:13 PM IST

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