BOSTON (Echosphere News) — Following a tragic shooting at Brown University, the U.S. Department of Justice revealed that the perpetrator, Claudio Neves Valente, had been planning the attacks for over six semesters before executing them in December. Valente, a former Brown student and Portuguese national, reportedly expressed no remorse for his actions.

The shocking incidents began on December 13 when Valente killed two Brown University students and injured nine others at an engineering building. Just two days later, he murdered MIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro in his Brookline home. Authorities later found Valente's body in a New Hampshire storage facility.

Investigators recovered an electronic device during the search, which contained a series of videos made by Valente. In those clips, he admitted to plotting the attack for a prolonged period, stating in Portuguese, I felt I had nothing to apologize for. He hinted at a perceived injustice against himself and expressed a twisted sense of satisfaction with what he had done.

Despite the inconsolable loss inflicted on the community, Valente's chilling recordings provide a glimpse into the fractured psyche of the shooter. He claimed that his only objective was to leave more or less on my own terms and seemed indifferent to the pain he caused, describing his attack as a little incompetent yet expressing that at least something was done. The revelation of these self-recorded admissions has left many grappling with the underlying issues that led to such a heartbreaking event.