Jharkhand student found shot dead in US:Family

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

A student from Jharkand doing research in an Engineering college in the U.S was found shot dead at an apartment complex in the second incident of campus gun violence.

GAMARIAH (Jharkhand): A student from Jharkand doing research in an Engineering college in the U.S was found shot dead at an apartment complex in the second incident of campus gun violence in five weeks in that country where Indian students became victims.
     
The body of Abhijeet Mahato (29), who was doing his PhD on computational mechanics at the Dukes Pratt School of Engineering in Durham in North Carolina, was found in the 1600 Block of Anderson Street by his friends and colleagues on Friday, the student's grandfather and a former Jharkhand MLA Dhananjoy Mahato said on Sunday.
    
The crime was noticed at about 11:30 PM on Friday night (local time) at the apartment complex, several blocks south of the Duke campus. Durham police was quoted as having said they do not yet have a motive for the shooting by unidentified gunmen.
    
Dhananjoy said he would ask the government to make arrangements for bringing the body here after the post-mortem is completed on Monday.
    
Abhijeet told his parents Sitaram and Aarti Mahato  only last Wednesday that he had been  very busy as the examination was round the corner.
    
A pall of gloom descended on Abhijeet's home at Gamariah and relatives and friends streamed in as soon as the news of the tragedy came in.
    
Abhijeet was a meritorious student who studied in Hindu School and did his Bachelor in Engineering(BE) from Jadavpur University from Kolkata.  An M Tech from IIT, Kanpur he was in his second year of studies in the US.
     
Two Indian doctoral students hailing from Andhra Pradesh were found shot dead in Louisiana State University campus at Baton Rouge on December 13. Chandrasekhar Reddy Komma and Kiran Kumar Allam were found shot dead in Allam's apartment.

Duke University officials were quoted as saying that Mahato, originally from Tatangar,was in his second year for an engineering doctorate degree focused on computational mechanics.
   
Larry Moneta, Duke's vice president for student affairs, said the university has begun reaching out to Mahato's friends and to his family in India, as well as to Indian and other international students on campus. It is offering counseling services and has begun considering appropriate ways of commemorating Mahato's life.
  
"This is a tragic circumstance, and we are doing everything possible to assist those who may be affected by it," Moneta was quoted in the university website
   
At a meeting on Sunday, Mahato's adviser, engineering professor Tod Laursen, met with his lab team to talk about Mahato, whom he described as intellectually curious, kind and outgoing.
   
"He made friends very easily and always had a smile on his face," Laursen said. "Our research team was particularly close to Abhijit. He was very well read in both poetry and literature, and enjoyed conversation with others about what they were reading."
   
Before coming to Duke, Mahato worked for two years for the GE Global Research Center in Bangalore, where he focused on finite element analysis, a computer-simulation technique used in engineering. The experience prepared him well for his graduate work, according to Laursen.
  
"We were working together on an industry-funded research project and Abhijit's prior industry experience helped him develop close working relationships with our partner," Laursen said. "He understood their needs as a business and was a pleasure to work with."