- by foxnews
- 03 Apr 2026
In a Tuesday press conference, law enforcement and university officials had very little to tell the public in regard to any leads or potential motives revealed by their investigation into the shooting that left two students dead and Paxon sparked criticism online over an answer where she discussed gun violence.
"The primary point that I wanted to address before we get to questions is that Brown is deeply committed to the safety, security, and well-being of our community. And I've been deeply saddened to see people questioning that," Paxson told reporters amid questions about why the school has been unable to provide video of the shooter from inside the building or any concrete information about a suspect.
"We understand that as time goes on, there is maybe a natural instinct to assign responsibility for a tragic event like this. Anxiety and fear is very natural, but the shooter is responsible. Horrific gun violence took the lives of these students and hospitalized others. It's deeply sad and tragic that schools across the country are targets of violence, Brown is no exception."
"That's kind of concerning," the reporter told her.
"I do," Paxson responded.
Paxson is an economist who has served as Brown's 19th president since 2012 after previously serving as the dean of the School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.
Since her hiring in 2012, Paxson's pay has increased over 700%, the outlet reported.
Paxson also serves as chair of the board of directors at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
In 2019, Paxson found herself at odds with pro-Palestine activists on campus by rejecting a BDS-style divestment platform despite a student referendum.
"Beyond the financial stresses of terminated and unpaid research grants and contracts, we have observed a growing push for government intrusion into the fundamental academic operations of colleges and universities, and with the stated purpose of compelling a commitment to comply with laws focused on prohibitions against antisemitism and discrimination," Brown wrote in a lengthy post at the time.
Only a few months later, when Trump's team offered select universities a "Compact for Academic Excellence," essentially extra access to federal funding in exchange for strict limits on DEI, caps on international students, and other ideological terms, Paxson publicly refused.
"According to Brown's own disclosures, the university employs 3,805 full-time non-instructional staff," Shieh said in his testimony. "With 7,229 undergraduate students, this translates to one non-teaching staff member for every 1.9 undergraduates. These staff do not include faculty members, but rather administrators, consultants, and support staff, many in roles of unclear necessity."
Shieh urged the House Judiciary Committee to look into why his school has become so expensive, and his recommendations included subpoenaing Paxson "for testimony and documents related to administrative growth, financial aid coordination, and retaliation."
Fox News Digital reached out to Brown University for comment.
Fox News Digital Rachel Del Guidice and Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report.
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