The death of a beloved Detroit neurosurgeon that left friends and patients in utter shock has officially been ruled a homicide. 

Devon Hoover, 53, was found dead on Sunday in his home in the Boston-Edison Historic District — a well-known, wealthier neighborhood in Detroit. Police were at his home performing a welfare check when they discovered the slain neurosurgeon.

The cause of death was ruled multiple gunshot wounds to the head, according to the Wayne County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Details surrounding the death are slim. 

An outpouring of love for Hoover, and grief at his death, have flooded social media. Hoover was known for his kindness and generosity. He was brilliant, an “exceptional person in nearly every way” and a “larger-than-life” type of person, his friend and neighbor Paddy Lynch said.

“A loving son and brother, a brilliant, accomplished surgeon, an unrivaled collector and caretaker of all things beautiful, and a champion of art and culture. But perhaps most admirably, he was beyond generous with his time and his treasure,” Lynch said.

Lynch said Hoover was one of the first of his neighbors to offer home advice, support and kindness. Hospitality was his specialty, he said, and he opened his doors to “countless neighbors, friends, and charitable organizations.”

“I pray that there’s a heaven and that Devon is there now, drinking wine and resting from his many labors. May his good life be remembered and may his memory be eternal,” Lynch said.

‘Justice for Dr. Devon Hoover’ 

In a Facebook group dedicated to seeking justice in Hoover’s death, named “Justice for Dr. Devon Hoover,” dozens of former patients of Hoover’s spoke of how he had saved their lives. He treated his patients with kindness, compassion and respect, many wrote.

Others who knew Hoover added their own tributes to the late doctor to the Facebook group, expressing disbelief, grief, heartache and anger over his death. More than 1,100 people had joined the Facebook group as of Wednesday afternoon.

Hoover performed three spinal surgeries on Maureen McKinley Light over the last 10 years. Hoover was humble and invested in his patients, she said.