Professor Ajit Mal was in his University of California, Los Angeles, office Wednesday getting ready to teach his engineering class when IIT-Kharagpur alumni Mainak Sarkar shot and killed 39-year-old professor William Klug, who he had accused of stealing his computer code and giving it to someone else.
Mal praised another UCLA professor Christopher Lynch for his quick action that kept the 38-year-old UCLA gunman from escaping and potentially shooting more people.
Lynch said all UCLA employees and graduate students sign over any intellectual property developed there to the university and, if it is subsequently licensed, enter royalty agreements to share in the profits.
Both men said that Sarkar had enrolled in their classes several years earlier but left little impression.
Mal said Sarkar was quiet and reserved and would not even greet him when the two men passed each other, which the professor found somewhat odd since both hail from West Bengal and speak the same language.
"This whole thing is so incredible and bizarre because Bill is the least likely to have some conflict with students. He was so very caring," Mal said.
Recounting the horrific incident, Mal said after hearing odd sounds, he came out of his fourth-floor office in the Engineering 4 building as did Lynch.
However, Lynch did know that Klug would never take his own life. He figured a shooter was inside. And he knew that more than a dozen faculty and staff members were on the floor at the time.
So he went to Klug's office and held the door shut.
"If he had stepped out. We'd all be in trouble," Lynch said of the shooter.
After that, Lynch heard a third shot inside and then silence. Lynch assumed the shooter had killed himself.
Within minutes, the professors said, police converged and cleared out the floor. Lynch gave the door key to police without looking inside and left.
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