Happy Friday! I'm Dan McGowan, and I really hope "John" from Brown wins the Powerball tomorrow night. Follow me on X (Twitter) @DanMcGowan, on Bluesky @DanMcGowan, or send tips to
dan.mcgowan@globe.com.
It turns out that a police department run by a “DEI chief” in a city with a gay Democratic mayor can do some damn fine detective work.
Welcome to Providence, Rhode Island.
For most of the past six days, this city and its leaders have been raked through the mud on social media and cable television, painted as a place led by bumbling, incompetent losers who had no prayer of catching the man who
killed two Brown University students and injured nine others in a mass shooting last Saturday.
If racist, homophobic fearmongering mixed with dangerous conspiracy theories
is par for the course in our current news and entertainment ecosystem, it’s the naysayers here at home who bug me most of all. The ones who seemed to actively root against solving this heinous crime because it might further their own political agenda, or justify their intense cynicism.
Apologies aren’t necessary.
But can we try saying “thank you” for once?
It took hundreds of local, state, and federal law enforcement working around the clock over the last six days to crack open this case, which ended Thursday when 48-year-old Claudio Manuel Neves Valentetook his own life after officers tracked him to a storage facility in New Hampshire.
Police say Neves Valente is also responsible for the shooting death of MIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro on Monday evening. Neves Valente is a former graduate student at Brown and is believed to have attended the same school in Lisbon with Loureiro in the late 1990s.
Just as Chief Colonel Oscar Perez promised it would, it took remarkable police work to catch Neves Valente, including a timely tip from a hero Brown graduate – currently only known as “John” – and plenty of technological support across three states.
Anyone who watched the daily press briefings over the last week can see that there were a lot of cooks in the kitchen working to solve the case, and at times it didn’t always seem like everyone was on the same page.
But every time it seemed like things were beginning to go off the rails, Perez stepped up and assured the city, the state, and the world that progress was being made.
Rather than give him a chance, too many vile, online instigators assumed that his accent – which can only be described as Rhode Colombian – meant the only reason he had his job was because he was Latino.
What those internet cowards didn’t bother to understand is that Perez is the ultimate cop’s cop, a guy who has been on the job in Providence for more than 31 years, working narcotics and violent crimes as he moved up the ranks. He already had plenty of career cases before this week, but he proved himself on the biggest of stages.
Same goes with so many of the detectives in Providence, unsung heroes who have a high volume of cases and have steadily improved their clearance rates in the recent years.
What we saw was competence. Professionalism. Relentless work.
It’s not just law enforcement that deserves credit.
Mayor Brett Smiley, who was painted as a leftist extremist more interested in draping himself in a rainbow flag than letting the police do their work, showed a steadiness that you rarely see from first-term mayors in a crisis.
In 2023, Smiley ordered his staff and public safety departments to run a full-scale mass shooter training just to be as prepared as possible for a day he hoped would never come. He offered clarity and compassion in the hours and days that followed.
The good police work and steady leadership still won’t bring back Ella Cook and MukhammadAziz Umurzokov, the two students who were just trying to study for their finals when they were senselessly gunned down last Saturday.
And yes, the Providence Police Department is not perfect. Accountability still matters. Any officer who abuses power deserves consequences, and solving a big case shouldn’t buy anyone a lifetime pass.
But what matters this week is that when Providence was tested, Providence delivered.
🤔 So you think you're a Rhode Islander...
Who was Providence's first police chief?
(Answer at the bottom.)
Do you have the perfect question for Rhode Map readers? Don't forget to send the answer, too. Send me an email today.
The Globe in Rhode Island
⚓ What we know about Claudio Manuel Neves Valente, the man police believe was responsible for the mass shooting at Brown University and the killing of a MIT professor. Read more.
⚓ President Donald Trump suspended the green card lottery program on Thursday that allowed the suspect in the Brown University and MIT shootings to come to the United States. Read here.
⚓ While many students locked their doors or barricaded classrooms following the mass shooting at Brown, some inside 85 Waterman St. said all they could do was hope no one would enter. Read more.
⚓ My colleague Ed Fitzpatrick has a fantastic reflection on A.T. Wall, the longtime Department of Corrections director who never fit the stereotype of a prison leader. Read here.
🎂 Rhode Map readers have sent another round of Happy Birthday wishes to: Bill Crow (98), Grace Villari (1), Gus and Bea Hodge (4), Bruce Wolpert, Curt Columbus, Kevin McNamara, Attorney General Peter Neronha, Emily Crowell, Lennon Fox, Rich Luchette, Billy Keppala, Gordon Fox, Pedro Lovera (75), Providence Councilman James Taylor, Karen Bordeleau, John Palumbo, state Senator Tiara Mack, David Nicolato (49), Kara Young, Debra Marracco Russo, Jackie Graham Burns, Suzanne Williams Lewis, Penny Monk, Russell Paone, and Tim Finbow.
You can check out all of our coverage at Globe.com/RI
Also in the Globe
⚓ President Trump has directed his administration to work as quickly as possible to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug. Read more.
⚓ The trial over whether Arthur T. Demoulas should regain his job as Market Basket CEO turned contentious on Thursday, as a lawyer for the board that fired him peppered him with questions. Read more.
⚓ For Drake Maye, Sunday night is not about redemption. Instead, he sees it as an opportunity. An opportunity for the Patriots to clinch a playoff spot. To bounce back after a dramatic loss. And to show he’s grown into the leader the franchise hopes he can be. Read more.
⚓ Rhode Map readers, if you want the birthday of a friend or family member to be recognized Friday, send me an email with their first and last name, and their age.
⚓ Providence College men's basketball hosts Seton Hall at 6:30 p.m.
⚓ You can see "The Nutcracker" at The VETs beginning tonight through the Dec. 28.
⚓ Santa Claus will be at Track 15 in Providence tomorrow between 11:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
🏆 Pop quiz answer
Nelson Viall was the first chief of police in Providence.
RHODE ISLAND REPORT PODCAST Edward Fitzpatrick talks to Providence Mayor Brett Smiley about the shooting at Brown University. Listen to all of our podcasts here.
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