Police officers gather near the site of a mass shooting reported by authorities at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, U.S. December 13, 2025. REUTERS/Taylor Coester

Dec 13 (Reuters) - Police in Rhode Island were searching for a suspect in a shooting at Brown University in Providence in which two people died and eight were critically wounded at the Ivy League school, officials said.

Streets around campus remained blocked off hours after the shooting and law enforcement officials heightened security around the city as police continued their manhunt.

Providence officials told reporters at a news conference that police are looking for a male dressed in black and were scouring local video cameras in the area for footage to get a better description of the suspect. Officials said the gunman escaped after shooting people in Brown's Barus & Holley engineering building, where exams were taking place at the time.

"We are a week and a half away from Christmas. And two people died today and another eight are in the hospital," Mayor Brett Smiley said. "So please pray for those families."

Officials could not yet disclose details about the victims, including whether they were students, Smiley said.

Brown is on College Hill in Providence, Rhode Island's state capital. The university has hundreds of buildings, including lecture halls, laboratories and dormitories.

As news of the shooting spread, the school told students to shelter in place.

Brown University student Chiang-Heng Chien told local TV station WJAR he was working in a lab with three other students when he saw the text about the active shooter situation a block away. They waited under desks for about two hours, he said.

The search for the suspect was hampered in part because downtown Providence was crowded with holiday shoppers and thousands of people attending concerts, local media said. Federal law enforcement and police from surrounding cities and towns were assisting in the search, officials said. According to local news reports, venues across the city were bringing in extra security.

President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House that he had been briefed on the situation, which he called "terrible."

"All we can do right now is pray for the victims and for those that were very badly hurt."

Compared to many countries, mass shootings in schools, workplaces, and places of worship are more common in the U.S., which has some of the most permissive gun laws in the developed world. The Gun Violence Archive, which defines mass shootings as any incident in which four or more victims have been shot, has counted 389 of them this year in the U.S., including at least six such shootings at schools.

Last year the U.S. had more than 500 mass shootings, according to the archive.

(Reporting by Chris Prentice, Jason Lange in New York, and Svea Herbst; Writing by Raphael Satter, Jason Lange and Chris Prentice; Editing by Sergio Non, David Gregorio and Lincoln Feast.)