Shots fired on Memorial Drive in Cambridge, suspect in custody, officials say

“What happened today cannot stand,” Ryan said.
The alleged gunman was identified as Tyler Brown of Boston. He was shot in the extremities and being treated in the intensive care unit of a local hospital, Ryan said shortly after 7 p.m. during press briefing at the city’s police department.
Witnesses recalled the terrifying sound of gunfire in the middle of the afternoon in a stretch of road near the campuses of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Neither campus was affected)
“He pointed his, it looked a machine gun, at my windshield,” said Adonna Simpson-Correia, who was driving her van-style school bus, with a bus monitor only on board. “We both got out and ran, and he kept shooting.”
Emergency medical workers treated at least one person for a gunshot wound, authorities said. Witnesses said the gunman was shot by police after exchanging gunfire with troopers. Harvard University Police later said a suspect was in custody and there was no ongoing threat.
The violence broke out on a mild spring afternoon along one of Cambridge’s busiest corridors, where joggers, cyclists, students, and residents typically fill the sidewalks and paths running beside the Charles River. The scene was a short
Witnesses described a terrifying scene as gunfire echoed across Memorial Drive and motorists abandoned vehicles in panic.
Cars were detoured trying to cross the River Street Bridge amid a heavy police presence on Memorial Drive in Cambridge on Monday. Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Todd Czubek, a deaf studies lecturer at Boston University, said he was leaving work and driving down Memorial Drive when he heard the gunshots.
“I was like, What the heck? I’m like, this is the guy with a machine gun shooting,” he said.
He said he saw a man emerge from a parking lot wielding what appeared to be an automatic weapon and “shooting randomly.”
Joseph Minino Rodriguez, said he watched the shooting unfold from his apartment balcony overlooking Memorial Drive. He said the gunman fired at least five shots before appearing to have his weapon jam.
“This is like, I thought this was a video game,” Rodriguez said. “He didn’t give a [expletive]. He didn’t care.”
Rodriguez said the man then fired toward a truck before moving onto a nearby street, where he exchanged gunfire with police.
“Once he got in that gunfight, that’s when he got dropped,“ Rodriguez said.
Rodriguez said authorities rushed in to provide medical aid after the suspect was shot.
“He was moving,” he said.
Lisa Schill, Simpson-Correia’s bus monitor, said she first tried to hide inside the vehicle before fleeing on foot.
“They told me to run for cover but he was still popping, Schill said. “So I ran, and fell, and then ran down the street.”
Their abandoned van remained behind police tape hours later among dozens of other vehicles tranded at the sprawling crime scene.
Shannon Young, 34, said he and another driver, Brandon Mansolf, fled on foot after bullets struck their vehicles.
Officers interviewed people sitting in a car on Memorial Drive in Cambridge on Monday. Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
“He let off probably 10 shots within 15 seconds,” Young said. “As I got to about this tree, state troopers were coming in on different sides, like seven people on foot coming in.”
Young estimated “easily 100″ people fled the area as traffic snarled and drivers attempted frantic U-turns to escape the gunfire.
Video footage provided by Mansolf showed law enforcement providing aid to a person laying motionless on the ground.
Witnesses credited law enforcement with responding quickly. Czubek said he abandoned his car in the roadway while dialing 911.
“Thankfully the police responded so quickly and professionally,” he said. “They did a great job.”
By midafternoon, a large section of Memorial Drive near River Street remained sealed off with yellow police tape as more than a dozen marked and unmarked State Police cruisers crowded the area with lights flashing. Multiple helicopters hovered overhead.
Investigators appeared focused on a small commercial plaza at 808 Memorial Drive that includes a Dunkin’ store. Yellow and green evidence markers dotted the pavement outside.
Two gas stations along Memorial Drive near the scene were also roped off with yellow police tape, the same area where, during the manhunt following the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, the marathon bombers stopped for gas after a carjacking and the kidnapping victim escaped by running to the other gas station for help.
The disruption Monday rippled through the busy university area as pedestrians and drivers encountered roadblocks and confusion while police directed traffic away from the scene. Nearby, rowing crews continued gliding across the Charles River as abandoned cars sat gridlocked along Memorial Drive.
Kathy McCabe of the Globe Staff contributed to this report.
This breaking news story will be updated.
Travis Andersen can be reached at [email protected]. Bryan Hecht can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Instagram @bhechtjournalism. Nick Stoico can be reached at [email protected]. Jessica Rinaldi can be reached at [email protected].




