WBURBoston Police: Psych Patient Stabs Doctor And Is Shot Dead

Police say a psychiatric patient stabbed his female doctor while being treated at a downtown Boston medical building Tuesday afternoon.

The building is near Massachusetts General Hospital in downtown Boston. (Lisa Tobin/WBUR)

Police said the attack took place on the fifth floor of this medical office building near Massachusetts General Hospital. (Lisa Tobin/WBUR)

An off-duty security guard brandished a gun, ordered the man to drop the knife, and then fatally shot the man, said Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis.

Bonnie Michelman, the hospital’s head of security called the actions of the guard “heroic.” She said the guard was not affiliated with the hospital and just happened to be in the building at the time.

The attack took place on the fifth floor at 50 Staniford St. (map), a high-rise building affiliated with Massachusetts General Hospital, about 2:10 p.m., Davis said.

The doctor, whose name was not released, is said to be in stable condition. Police say the suspect, identified as Jay Carciero, 37, of Reading, died from the gunshot wounds.

An Eyewitness Account

Professor David Schoenfeld, a biostatistician at Harvard School of Public Health, works across the hall from where the shooting occurred.

After a gunshot was heard coming from the adjacent suite, Schoenfeld said he called for help from two research nurses who work in his office.

“Our two nurses went in and put on rubber gloves and administered as much first aid as they could before the ambulances arrived, which was about several minutes later,” Schoenfeld said.

View larger map (Google Maps)

View larger map (Google Maps)

Schoenfeld said the man apparently had been shot in the head. He described the suspect as tall, heavyset and white, casually dressed, and estimated he was about 35. Schoenfeld said he did not see a weapon.

He couldn’t say exactly how long it took emergency workers to respond. “It seemed like a long time, but it probably was not,” Schoenfeld said. “Everything seems like a long time when you’re waiting for an ambulance.”

The suspect was still breathing when the ambulance arrived, Schoenfeld said. He was rushed to Massachusetts General Hospital and then pronounced dead.

Schoenfeld said he did not know the security guard who shot the suspect, nor the doctor who was stabbed. “We share a kitchen with that suite, but they’re two separate MGH offices,” he said.

Kenneth McPherson, an ophthalmic assistant, works on the sixth floor of the building.

“I didn’t so much hear the gun shot, but you definitely heard there was someone rustling around or arguing,” McPherson said. “You heard a little bit of the shouts — it was muffled because I was above the floor.”

Employees in the building said they received an e-mail about 2:30 p.m. informing them of a shooting and ordering them to remain on their floors. Police locked down the building. Nearby streets were shut down.

The attack took place at the Massachusetts General Hospital Bipolar Clinic & Research Program, in a building near the main hospital. The program provides clinical care, conducts research and educating the community about bipolar disorder, according to its Web site.

The building is in a largely commercial area. It contains businesses with treatment specialties and several medical groups associated with Massachusetts General.

Davis said no one else was injured.

Last week, a previously convicted sex offender was charged with assaulting an employee at Massachusetts General Hospital.


Lisa Tobin reported from the scene and Andrew Phelps from the WBUR newsroom.

WBUR Topics · Boston
Please follow our community rules when engaging in comment discussion on wbur.org.
  • Think

    I’m in a baiting mood this morning. Try to think logically about what I post; I know nobody will but heed my point: IF the suspect were black, and the security guard were white, this would hace exploded into a race issue, especially in neo-liberal, whining Mass. My point being: Jackson, Sharpton and every other racist activist would be asking the question, “Why did he have to shoot him in the head, why didn’t the security guard aim for his arms or legs.” And don’t tell me for minute this argument isn’t plastered all over when a black person gets shot by a white person. Also, there would be speculationas to why a “mentally disturbed” patient was shot dead? We live in a one-sided racist society. If you don’t believe one sentence of what I wrote, you’re lying to your face. Truth is always harder to face.

  • Curious

    I am surprised WBUR doesn’t have an editorial policy on gender labels. “Female” doctor in the lead implies that being a woman doctor is so unusual as to be newsworthy.
    I suppose the real question with gender labels is, would you use the opposite? Would you have used “male doctor?”

  • Also curious

    Spot on, @Curious. Of course the focus here is on this tragic situation, but yes, it’s surprising to see WBUR use labels like that–it’s definitely offensive, implying that one gender is “normal” for a particular profession: female doctor, male nurse, female soldier, male prostitute, female police officer, male stripper…it’s a slippery slope, and quite offensive. Just say “stabbed his doctor”–to do otherwise is distracting.

  • carolyn

    There is nothing to comment. This is a sad outcome. There is not enough money to help people with mental illnesses to manage their illness. While this tragic incident was occurring, many mentaLly ill people and their families (including myself) were valianting lobbying at the State House to prevent the Clubhouses from closing. Clubhouses are a place where people with mental illness can go during the day for all kinds of support and activities that help them to better manage their illness. So much money is being cut from the Dept. of Mental Health; psychiatric beds are being reduced in hospitals; drug crisis centers are being closed. We need to speak up for people with mental illness and be their voice, support them, give them the tools they need that will help them toward a recovery (not a cure, unfortunately…not yet…they are working on it but it will be years before the brain is fully understood).

  • olderworker

    I think the doctor’s gender is relevant, because statistically, more violence is perpetrated against women than against men (in non-combat situations, at any rate). This is a sad story, nonetheless, and points to the need for more support for people struggling with mental illness, as well as more protection for professionals who work with disturbed people.

  • Insane

    My eye doctor’s office is in this building, and I can assure you: I’m changing doctors.

    The insane thing about this (or, at least, the most insane thing) is that some vigilante can he called a “hero” for shooting a mentally ill man—in the head! I can tell you for sure that I’m not ever going back in that building, I might get bludgeoned into a coma for sneezing.

    The real story here is the profound ignorance of mental health issues and how to handle people whose illness cause them to act violently.

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