The Boston Globe

Salem State student, 18, dies in shooting

Teen will face murder charge

- By Jeremy C. Fox GLOBE STAFF and Grace Gilson GLOBE CORRESPOND­ENT John R. Ellement and Kathy McCabe of the Globe staff contribute­d to this report. Jeremy C. Fox can be reached at jeremy.fox@globe.com. Grace Gilson can be reached at grace.gilson@globe.com

An 18-year-old Salem resident was arrested Wednesday night in the shooting death of a Salem State University basketball player who was found in a car parked near campus, authoritie­s said.

Missael Pena Canela is due to be arraigned Thursday in Salem District Court on a charge of murder, Essex District Attorney Paul F. Tucker’s office said in a statement.

Early Wednesday, Pena Canela allegedly fatally shot Carl-Hens Beliard, 18, a killing that does not appear to be random, officials said.

Beliard, was found suffering from gunshot wounds inside a vehicle near 22 Forest Ave. after police received a 911 call at 1:24 a.m. reporting a shooting in that area, according to a joint statement released by Salem State president John Keenan, law enforcemen­t and city officials.

The location is across from a parking lot near the university’s athletics facilities. The shooting occurred just a short time after thousands of Halloween revelers departed the North Shore city’s annual celebratio­n.

Beliard, a forward on the men’s basketball team, was taken to Salem Hospital, where he died.

Authoritie­s said there is no ongoing threat to the campus.

“As both the Salem State president and a college dad, this tragedy is heartbreak­ing for all in our community and every parent’s worst nightmare,” Keenan said in the statement.

Tucker said the killing “is tragic not only for the victim’s family but for the SSU community and beyond.”

Beliard’s death is the second fatal shooting on a state university campus in less than a week. A 19-year-old Southbridg­e man, Randy Armando Melendez Jr., was killed Saturday in a double shooting in a parking lot at Worcester State University that also injured a man. Neither victim attended the university, officials said.

Beliard graduated this year from North High School in Worcester, where he played on the basketball team that won the Division 1 state championsh­ip. At a May meeting of the Worcester City Council, Mayor Joseph M. Petty presented team members with keys to the city for their achievemen­t.

Beliard also made the high school’s honor roll in the second quarter of his senior year.

The team defeated Needham 73-64 at Tsongas Arena in Lowell on March 19 to claim the title after a 24-2 season, according to the Worcester Telegram & Gazette.

At a rally celebratin­g the victory one week later, Beliard, the team’s only senior, said the championsh­ip felt “like a dream come true.”

Beliard told the Telegram he planned to study exercise science in college and eventually pursue a doctorate in physical therapy.

In a press conference at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday, Al Pettway, Worcester’s North High School dean of students and boys basketball coach, shared his memories of Beliard.

“He was a great kid, smart, smart student, he had a smile that would just brighten up any room when he would open his mouth,” said Pettway.

 ?? RICK CINCLAIR/WORCESTER TELEGRAM & GAZETTE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Carl-Hens Beliard, a basketball star at North High School in Worcester before playing for Salem State, met Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll at a tour of the State House in April.
RICK CINCLAIR/WORCESTER TELEGRAM & GAZETTE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Carl-Hens Beliard, a basketball star at North High School in Worcester before playing for Salem State, met Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll at a tour of the State House in April.

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