Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘His sacrifice saved lives’

Slain student called hero for tackling UNC-Charlotte gunman

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In an alert that flashed across computer and phone screens all over campus, the instructio­ns were spare but urgent: “Run, Hide, Fight. Secure yourself immediatel­y.”

But Riley Howell could neither run nor hide. The gunman was in his classroom. So, the authoritie­s said, he charged at the gunman, who had already fired several rounds, and pinned him down until police officers arrived.

“But for his work, the assailant may not have been disarmed,” Chief Kerr Putney of the Charlotte-Mecklenber­g Police Department said of Mr. Howell, who was among six victims of a mass shooting at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte campus Tuesday evening.

“Unfortunat­ely, he gave his life in the process. But his sacrifice saved lives.”

On Wednesday, students and teachers were still reeling from the attack that left two students, including Mr. Howell, dead and four others injured. Chief Putney said the death toll could have been far worse had Mr. Howell, a 21-yearold former high school soccer goalie, not intervened.

“He is my hero,” said Mr. Howell’s girlfriend of nearly six years, Lauren Westmorela­nd, who said she was overcome with grief. “But he’s just my angel now, as well.”

Police identified the gunman as Trystan Andrew Terrell, 22, and said he had been charged with two counts of murder and four counts

of attempted murder. The authoritie­s said the handgun used in the shooting had been purchased legally.

Chief Putney declined to discuss the suspect’s motive and also would not say whether any of the students in the crowded classroom had been targeted. But, he said, the building was familiar, and the choice to focus on it “intentiona­l.”

Students said Mr. Terrell had attended classes at UNC-Charlotte, but also said that he appeared to have been absent from classes in recent months.

The attack Tuesday evening was the latest in a string of mass shootings at educationa­l institutio­ns across the country that have left parents, police and school administra­tors grappling with how to stanch the violence.

It came, too, on the heels of a massacre at a California synagogue last weekend and the recent 20th anniversar­y of the Columbine shootings.

The shooting punctured what had been a celebrator­y graduation week at one of the largest schools in the University of North Carolina system, a leafy, often sun-drenched campus built on old farmland about 10 miles northeast of uptown Charlotte. About 30,000 students attend classes in its red brick buildings.

On Tuesday, the final day of classes, students were looking toward exams and graduation. LBST 2213, a class that examines the anthropolo­gy and philosophy of science, was scheduled to meet at 5:30 p.m. in Kennedy Hall.

Adam Johnson was teaching, and his students were planning to give group presentati­ons. According to a descriptio­n of the class, the students had spent the semester examining critical philosophi­cal questions, such as: What is science? What is evolution?

Miranda Finch, 20 and a sophomore, sat at a large circular table, watching a group presentati­on about the galaxy. Her group, which had planned to deliver a talk on lobotomies and electric shock, was next. Then she heard three loud pops.

She said she wasn’t sure what the sound was — she had never before heard a gunshot.

She hadn’t heard anyone come into the classroom, so she wasn’t sure whether the attacker entered quietly or just stood up from the table closest to the door.

But there he was, pointing a gun.

“I looked at him,” she said, “and the gun was aimed at my table and at me.”

Tristan Field, a 19-year -old sophomore, said the gunman began shooting about 10 minutes into class. It was quiet, he said, until violence broke out and people began to scream and run away.

Mr. Field said it was the silence beforehand that stood out to him the most on Wednesday. “Only the presentati­on video was playing, and then suddenly, shots and chaos,” he said.

One bullet grazed a cheek of Ms. Finch’s friend. Another boy at their table slumped on the floor. Then a bullet hit a third person. Three of the four people wounded in the shooting had been sitting at that table, about 20 feet from the door, Ms. Finch said. They were all in her group, waiting to give their presentati­on.

Ms. Finch and her friend crawled behind a table. For a moment, she said, she crouched there, terrified that the gunman would come looking for them.

Ms. Finch didn’t notice Mr. Howell lunge at the gunman, but she said it could have happened while she was ducking behind the table.

The next thing she knew, the gunman was lying on the floor.

“That was the weird thing,” she said. “He just came in and shot, and then he stopped shooting, and then he didn’t say a word at all.”

Ms. Finch and her friend ran out of the classroom and into a building across the street. Ms. Finch’s friend sat down inside, crying.

“She asked me to look at her hip, and when I looked, it was the first time I had ever seen it, it was definitely a gunshot wound,” Ms. Finch said. She applied pressure until help arrived. And then she went home covered in blood.

Mr. Field was also among those who ran away. In a tweet after the ordeal, he tried to process what had happened.

“Why here?” he wrote. “Why today? Why UNC-Charlotte? Why my classroom? What did we do?”

The six people who were killed or wounded were all students at the university, officials confirmed.

In addition to Mr. Howell, of Waynesvill­e, N.C., Ellis R. Parlier, 19, of Midland, N.C., also was killed.

 ?? Matthew Westmorela­nd via AP ?? Riley Howell, in an undated photo, was killed after he tackled a gunman who opened fire Tuesday in a UNC-Charlotte classroom.
Matthew Westmorela­nd via AP Riley Howell, in an undated photo, was killed after he tackled a gunman who opened fire Tuesday in a UNC-Charlotte classroom.
 ??  ?? Trystan Andrew Terrell, arrested on charges of murder and attempted murder.
Trystan Andrew Terrell, arrested on charges of murder and attempted murder.

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