1 of 3 victims has died after a shooting at Virginia's Old Dominion University, campus police say

This Sept. 11, 2013, photo, shows an overview of an area on the Old Dominion University campus in Norfolk, Va. Old Dominion University police say a gunman and one victim are dead, and two other victims are hurt after a shooting at the school on Thursday morning.

This Sept. 11, 2013, photo, shows an overview of an area on the Old Dominion University campus in Norfolk, Va. Old Dominion University police say a gunman and one victim are dead, and two other victims are hurt after a shooting at the school on Thursday morning. (Rich Joseph-Facun, The Virginian-Pilot via Associated Press )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • A gunman and one victim died in a shooting at Old Dominion University.
  • Two other victims, both Army ROTC members, are in stable condition.
  • Classes are canceled and operations suspended until Friday as investigations continue.

NORFOLK, Va. — A gunman and one victim are dead, and two other victims are hurt after a shooting at Old Dominion University on Thursday morning, the Virginia school's police said.

At a news conference Thursday afternoon, Old Dominion University Police Chief Garrett Shelton said officers responded after receiving reports that people were being shot in one of the classrooms in the university's business school building, Constant Hall.

After the university initially said there were two victims, Shelton said authorities learned that there was a third victim who brought themselves to a hospital. The two surviving victims appear to be in stable condition, he said. It wasn't immediately clear how the shooter died.

He did not acknowledge whether any officers fired a weapon.

He said all three victims are affiliated with the university. Shelton said authorities are "very early" in the investigation and have not yet determined the "full cause of death" of the shooter.

Within a matter of less than 10 minutes, the call came in, officers arrived, and they determined the shooter was dead, the chief said.

Lt. Col. Jimmy Delongchamp, public information officer for the U.S. Army Cadet Command at Fort Knox, Kentucky, told the Associated Press that the two people wounded are members of the Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps at ODU.

"We will continue to coordinate with the university and law enforcement agencies as they investigate the incident," Delongchamp said in a brief telephone interview. "There's still a lot more stuff we have to work out."

Within about an hour of the shooting, ODU declared that there was no longer a threat on the campus.

The public university in Norfolk canceled classes and suspended all operations on its main campus through Friday and urged people to avoid the area in and around Constant Hall while emergency officials continued to work. Counseling and food services will remain available.

In a message to the university community, ODU President Brian Hemphill said the school faced a tragedy on campus. He expressed gratefulness for the swift emergency response and thoughts and prayers to those impacted.

"The safety of our campus community is my top priority," Hemphill wrote. "We are deeply committed to safeguarding all Monarchs and ensuring a secure learning, living, and working environment at all times."

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said on the social platform X that it had agents on scene supporting the response.

Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger said in social media posts that she was monitoring the situation and that "state support is being mobilized" to help ODU. She didn't provide specifics.

FBI Director Kash Patel said on X that personnel from his agency are working with the local authorities who responded to the shooting.

Located in coastal Norfolk, Old Dominion University has about 24,000 students, 17,500 of them undergraduates. The school has around 240 degree programs, and is known for its research spending and doctoral programs. Nearly 30% of its students are military-affiliated, according to the university website. The area is also home to Naval Station Norfolk, the largest naval station in the world.

Contributing: Allen G. Breed

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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