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Campus Alert Archive
SDSU

He Hid the Gun in the First-Aid Kit Before His Thesis Defense

CAshootingadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Mechanical engineering graduate student Frederick Martin Davidson, 36, shot and killed three professors at the start of his master's thesis defense, which convened shortly before 2:00 PM PDT in the engineering building at San Diego State University on August 15, 1996. Davidson had hidden a 9mm handgun and five extra magazines in a first-aid kit on the wall of the meeting room about four hours earlier (~10:00 AM PDT). The pre-Clery, pre-cellphone era campus had no SMS alert mechanism; word of the shooting spread by 911 dispatch, news radio, and people running through corridors of the engineering complex.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
3
Injured
0
Institution
San Diego State University
Public R2 · CA
~30,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPhone
Approximate reconstruction257 chars
[San Diego Police were dispatched to the SDSU engineering building shortly before 2:00 PM PDT after multiple 911 calls reported gunfire inside a faculty conference room. No campus-wide text or email alert was issued; in 1996 no such system existed at SDSU.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The shooting began as Davidson's thesis defense was about to start, shortly before 2 PM PDT, with multiple 911 calls coming in within minutes
SDSU did not have a campus-wide mass-notification system in 1996; the Clery Act had passed in 1990 but did not yet require timely warnings or emergency notifications in their modern form
News of the shooting reached most of the campus through KGTV, KFMB, and KNSD television and radio coverage that afternoon, plus phone-tree calls between department offices
FOLLOW-UPPhone
Approximate reconstruction349 chars
[Davidson surrendered without further violence to San Diego State University Police Department officers in front of the engineering building. The building was sealed as a crime scene; campus officials notified faculty and graduate students via departmental phone trees. The university president addressed media at a late-afternoon press conference.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Davidson surrendered to SDSU Police outside the engineering building shortly after the shooting and was taken to police headquarters for booking
The university held a press conference that afternoon; classes were not yet in session because fall semester had not officially begun (Aug. 15 was during summer-session/registration period)
Departmental phone trees and bulletin boards were the primary internal communication tools for the College of Engineering throughout the evening
Context

Background

The 1996 San Diego State University shooting is one of the most premeditated faculty murders in U.S. higher-education history. Frederick Martin Davidson, a 36-year-old mechanical engineering master's candidate, had failed his thesis defense once already and believed his three faculty advisers — Professors Chen Liang, D. Preston Lowrey III, and Constantinos Lyrintzis — were conspiring against him. According to court records and the Washington Post's contemporaneous coverage, Davidson entered the conference room at approximately 10:00 AM PDT on the morning of August 15, 1996 — about four hours before the defense was scheduled to begin shortly before 2:00 PM PDT — and concealed a 9mm semi-automatic handgun and five loaded magazines inside a wall-mounted first-aid kit. He then returned in the afternoon for the defense itself, retrieved the weapon, and shot all three professors in front of three student witnesses, who fled and called 911. Davidson was found guilty under a plea bargain on July 19, 1997 and sentenced to three consecutive life terms without the possibility of parole. The case is significant for this archive because it predates the modern campus emergency-notification framework: the Clery Act of 1990 was on the books, but its 'emergency notification' subsection (§ 668.46(g)) would not be added until the 2008 Higher Education Opportunity Act, two years after the Virginia Tech shooting. SDSU's response in 1996 relied entirely on 911 dispatch, departmental phone trees, and broadcast news. The shooting also illustrated a category of risk — the disgruntled graduate student attacking thesis-committee members — that would recur at the 2002 University of Arizona Nursing shooting six years later.
Analysis

Key Findings

Davidson hid the firearm in the room about four hours before the defense (~10:00 AM PDT for a ~2:00 PM PDT defense), demonstrating extreme premeditation
The shooting predates the modern Clery emergency-notification framework (added 2008) by 12 years; no SMS or email alert was issued
The disgruntled-graduate-student attacking thesis advisers pattern would recur at the 2002 UA Nursing shooting
Three student witnesses escaped uninjured; Davidson did not target them, only the faculty
The plea bargain on July 19, 1997 spared Davidson from the death penalty in exchange for guilty pleas to three counts of first-degree murder
Outcome
Three faculty killed: thesis adviser Chen Liang, D. Preston Lowrey III, and Constantinos Lyrintzis. Three students who were present as witnesses to the defense escaped uninjured. Davidson surrendered to police shortly after the shooting and pleaded guilty in July 1997 under a plea bargain that spared him the death penalty; he was sentenced to three consecutive life terms without possibility of parole.
Provenance

Sources

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  2. News
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Tags
shootingfaculty-murdergraduate-student-perpetratorpremeditated1990spre-emergency-notificationcaliforniaengineering-buildingthesis-defensehistorical
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion