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Tyler Brown Declared Dangerous and Held Without Bail After Memorial Drive Shooting

The judge ordered him detained pending prosecution as investigators probe how he obtained the multi‑caliber rifle used in the attack.

Overview

  • A Cambridge man, Tyler E. Brown, allegedly fired about 50–70 rounds along Memorial Drive on May 11, wounding two drivers before a state trooper and an armed civilian shot and hospitalized him.
  • Prosecutors played video of the attack at a dangerousness hearing that led a judge to order Brown held without bail for 120 days under the state dangerousness law.
  • Investigators recovered a multi‑caliber BCI‑Defense FF‑15 rifle and roughly 70 spent casings at the scene and are actively tracing how Brown obtained the weapon.
  • Court records show Brown was recently discharged from a psychiatric hospital, contacted his parole officer with suicidal remarks on the day of the shooting, and was on parole after a 2020 shootout with Boston police.
  • Both victims have been released to recover at home with one, Casimir Bangoura, facing a long rehabilitation after multiple surgeries and several leg wounds, and community members are pressing officials for clearer oversight and victim support.