Los Angeles Times

N.C. student dies saving others from gunfire

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A University of North Carolina college student tackled a gunman who had opened fire in a classroom, saving others’ lives but losing his own in the process, a police official said Wednesday.

Riley Howell, 21, was among students gathered Tuesday for end-of-the-year presentati­ons in an anthropolo­gy class at the University of North Carolina in Charlotte when a gunman began shooting students with a pistol. Howell and another student were killed; four others were wounded.

Charlotte-Mecklenbur­g Police Chief Kerr Putney said Howell “took the assailant off his feet” but was fatally wounded while doing so. He said Howell, whom he described as having an athletic build, did what police train people to do in shooter situations.

“You’re either going to run, you’re going to hide and shield, or you’re going to take the fight to the assailant. Having no place to run and hide, he did the last. But for his work, the assailant may not have been disarmed,” Putney said. “Unfortunat­ely, he gave his life in the process. But his sacrifice saved lives.”

The father of Howell’s longtime girlfriend said news that the 21-year-old tackled the shooter wasn’t surprising. Kevin Westmorela­nd, whose daughter Lauren dated Howell for nearly six years, said Howell was athletic and compassion­ate — and would have been a good firefighte­r or paramedic.

“If Lauren was with Riley, he would step in front of a train for her if he had to,” Westmorela­nd said.

The shooting took place during a class on the anthropolo­gy and philosophy of science, according to a message on what appeared to be the Twitter account of the instructor who witnessed the attack. Adam Johnson wrote that teams of students were delivering their presentati­ons when the gunman opened fire.

“Yes, there was a shooting in my class today,” Johnson wrote. “My students are so special to me and I am devastated.”

Johnson declined to comment further Wednesday.

The motive wasn’t immediatel­y clear for suspect Trystan Andrew Terrell, who UNC-Charlotte spokeswoma­n Buffy Stephens said had been enrolled at the school but withdrew during the current semester.

Campus Police Chief Jeff Baker said Terrell had not appeared to be a potential threat.

“I just went into a classroom and shot the guys,” Terrell told reporters Tuesday as officers led him in handcuffs into a law enforcemen­t building.

Terrell, 22, was booked into the Mecklenbur­g County Jail on two counts of murder, four counts of attempted murder, possessing and firing a weapon on educationa­l property, and assault with a deadly weapon.

People reacting to the sound of gunshots and a campus alert scrambled to find safe spaces and endured a lengthy lockdown as officers secured the campus on the last day of classes.

In a class a few rooms away from where the shooting happened, Krysta Dean was about to present a senior research project when she heard someone scream “shooter.” The anthropolo­gy major huddled behind a table with her classmates.

“The only thing that was going through my head was, one, I could very well die today .... I was mentally preparing myself for what it would be like to get shot and just kind of bracing myself for if it did happen,” she said.

Dean didn’t sleep much Tuesday night because she couldn’t get the noises out of her head. Now she feels guilty for surviving.

“When I was sitting there on the floor, thinking that I might get a bullet in my head, my biggest fear was somebody’s reality. And there are parents that are never going to be able to hug their children again,” she said.

 ?? Matthew Westmorela­nd ?? RILEY HOWELL, right, in 2017. Police say Howell, 21, tackled a University of North Carolina gunman.
Matthew Westmorela­nd RILEY HOWELL, right, in 2017. Police say Howell, 21, tackled a University of North Carolina gunman.

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