UNC-Chapel Hill faculty member killed in shooting prompts campus lockdown

A teacher is dead and another is in custody after a shooting that shut down the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for three hours and prompted emergency warnings for students to evacuate.

Classes had started a week earlier, but the shooting had turned into an eerie and eerie silence during what was normally a happy and exciting time on campus.

“This is truly a sad day for our campus community,” said UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin M. Guskiewicz said at an afternoon news conference.

Authorities have not released the suspect’s name because he has not yet been charged, nor the victim’s next of kin, officials said.

UNC Police Chief Brian James said at a news conference that the first call to 911 about a shooting at the Gaudill Laboratory, a center that focuses on chemistry, came in at 1:02 p.m.

Hundreds of police officers from other agencies descended on the campus, some in armored vehicles, and a helicopter buzzed overhead. School principals soon canceled classes.

UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz said at a news conference that the suspect shot and killed a faculty member in a campus building on Aug. 28. (Video: The Washington Post)

The shooting came two days after a gunman in Jacksonville, Fla., visited Edward Waters University and killed three people in what authorities said was a racist attack at a Dollar General store. A security guard refused to allow the shooter to enter the school, the university said.

The suspect in the UNC shooting was arrested around 2:31 p.m., James said.

It’s too early to know a motive, he said at an evening news conference, and investigators are still looking for the gun used in the shooting. During the lockdown, authorities released a photo of an “armed and dangerous” man and described him as a “person of interest.” They later did not confirm if the man was a suspect in custody.

See also  College football Week 13 winners and losers: Michigan travels to Ohio State

North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper (D), an alumnus of the school, Tweet “All state resources necessary to apprehend the shooter and secure the UNC campus” will be available. According to a White House statement, President Biden was briefed on the shooting.

Jackson Kertesz, a sophomore, was walking into a dining hall when he received a university alert on his phone, instructing everyone on campus to stay in place.

Gerdes told the employee who was swiping his student ID about the alert before rushing up the escalator to the cafeteria’s second floor, where a friend spotted him.

As the two sat at the table, students around them began scrolling through the anonymous messaging app Yik Yag, using local police scanners, trying to find more information. Friends who live in different states texted Gerdes asking if he was safe. All he knew was that nothing happened.

“The campus is a ghost town,” he said. “It was surreal to see and hear nothing happening.”

Kuskiewicz said he was pleased with how the crew followed their training and executed the plan to react to the shooting.

But Kyle Santino, a junior studying political science and theater arts, wanted more communication from the university.

Santino and his classmates received an emergency alert to take shelter where they were. Their professor tried to lock the classroom door but was unable to lock the door, Santino said.

After 1 p.m., about 20 geography students, their professor and a teaching assistant rushed into the basement of Mitchell Hall and locked themselves in a room.

The students met with about 10 people from a lab in the building, Santino told The Washington Post via a messaging app, before the all-clear was given.

See also  'This storm is a bit tricky.' Minnesotans are bracing for snow on Sunday

“You never think it’s going to happen to you, maybe I had similar thoughts, but it happened today,” he said. “This is happening as I write this, and it could happen to anyone else in this country.”

Guskiewicz said mental health resources will be available to students and staff.

“Shooting damages the trust and security we often take for granted,” Guskiewicz said.

Nick Anderson contributed to this report.

JP Morgan expects to cut the base rate by 100 basis points this year

At the start of the month Wall Street was hopeful—but not convinced—that it would get a much-anticipated interest rate cut in September. Fed Chairman Jerome...

There are great players and potential matches

NFL Guardian Here's what we know about Caps right nowGuardian caps provide added protection over the helmets of players in inherently violent sports. Are...

Nasdaq falls as investors put their time ahead of Nvidia earnings

Shares of Coles ( KSS ) rose as much as 7% in early trading after the company beat Wall Street's revenue expectations by 15...

Dinosaur footprints found on two continents match

The video shows a large dinosaur with identical green bonesThe 150-million-year-old bones discovered in Utah will go on display at the Natural History Museum...

HMD’s Barbie Flip Phone is tough

HMD's Barbie-branded flip phone may be a bit late to catch the hot foldable summer wave, but it's certainly not lacking in appeal. Pre-announced...

Mark Zuckerberg says White House pressured Facebook to censor Covid-19 content | Meta

Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg has said he is bowing to what he says is pressure from the US government to censor Facebook and Instagram...