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Prof fatally shot on Mississippi campus; suspect at large


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Prof fatally shot on Mississippi campus; suspect at large
By JEFF AMY and EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

CLEVELAND, Miss. (AP) — A professor was killed in his office at Delta State University in Mississippi, forcing terrified students and teachers to hunker down in classrooms as investigators searched for another school employee in connection with the killing, officials said Monday.

Investigators are searching for Shannon Lamb, who was initially identified as a person of interest and is now considered a suspect, Cleveland Police Chief Charles "Buster" Bingham said. Police do not yet know a motive in the slaying of Ethan Schmidt, a history professor at Delta State.

Bingham said Lamb is considered armed and dangerous but is not believed to be on campus anymore.

Lamb received a doctorate in education from Delta State University in the spring 2015, according to a copy of his resume posted on the university's website. He started working there in 2009 and taught geography and education classes, and volunteered with Habitat for Humanity, according to the resume.

Lamb also has been linked to a slaying in Gautier, about 300 miles away in south Mississippi, though authorities have not provided many details about that slaying.

Gautier police spokesman Matthew Hoggatt told The Sun Herald (http://bit.ly/1gmKAle) that a woman was found dead in her home, and that Lamb is the suspect in her death.

"We're working right now under the assumption that both events are related," Hoggatt said. "We hope that they are not. But at this point in time, information indicates that they probably are linked in some way, shape or form."

Mississippi Highway Patrol spokesman Johnny Poulos said investigators are searching for a black 2011 Dodge Avenger that they believe Lamb is driving.

The 3,500-student university in Cleveland, in Mississippi's Delta region near the Arkansas-Mississippi state line, was first put on lockdown around 10:45 a.m. amid reports of an active shooter. Everyone on campus was told to take shelter, away from windows.

Charlie King was in a history class down the hall from where the shooting occurred.

"A few minutes into the class, we heard these popping noises and we all went completely silent," he said.

Some people thought that it might be a desk or door closing or firecrackers, but King said he thought it sounded like gunshots. A few minutes later a police officer — gun drawn — burst into the windowless room and ordered everyone to get against the wall away from the door. Some people also hid in a storage closet, King said. The officer didn't explain what was going on, but King said the students understood.

"We put two and two together," he said. The professor gave the students chairs to throw if the shooter came in, said King's friend, Christopher Walker Todd.

Eventually police ushered the students into another building and questioned them about what they'd seen and how many shots they heard.

Freshman Noah Joyner, 18, was in his dorm building when reports of an active shooter began to spread. He hunkered down in a bathroom and heard others desperate to get in.

"There were like people banging on the doors to have somebody let them in," said Joyner, a swimmer at the college. "It was pretty terrifying."

Charly Abraham was teaching a class of about 28 students at the university's Delta Music Institute when he and the students received a message through the university's alert system.

"Everybody's phone just sort of went off at the same time," Abraham said. Then a staff member came in and told them that the campus was on lockdown.

"We discovered it was something very serious when we started getting text messages from people all over the world," he said.

Eventually, about two hours or so after the initial lockdown, about 25 heavily armed police officers swept through the building, Abraham said. All of the students were sent back to their dorms and other people such as faculty and students who live off campus were sent to the university's coliseum, Abraham said, though most were later allowed to leave.

The slain professor directed the first-year seminar program and specialized in Native American and colonial history, said Don Allan Mitchell, an English professor at the school, who called him "a gentleman in every sense of the word."

"Dr. Ethan Schmidt was a terrific family man, a good friend, a true son of Peabody, Kansas, and his beloved Emporia State University," he said.

One of his history professors at Emporia State University described him as one of the "brightest students" she'd ever taught.

"He was a super competent human being. He was president of his fraternity, in student government. He was an absolutely delightful student," said Karen Manners Smith.

King, one of the students who was in Jobe Hall when the shooting happened, attended the same Episcopal church as Schmidt. King was studying history, and Schmidt was his adviser.

"I looked up to the man," King said.
__

Pettus reported from Jackson. Associated Press writers Kevin McGill and Rebecca Santana in New Orleans Alina Hartounian in Phoenix and Roxana Hegeman in Wichita, Kansas, contributed to this report.

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-- (c) Associated Press 2015-09-15

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Re: ""Freshman Noah Joyner, 18, was in his dorm building when reports of an active shooter began to spread. He hunkered down in a bathroom and heard others desperate to get in.

"There were like people banging on the doors to have somebody let them in," said Joyner, a swimmer at the college. "It was pretty terrifying." "

So this wimp effectively hung his college colleagues out to dry....sad.png

Wonder if he's related to the Canadian Prime Minister who, when a gunman shot up Parliament hallways, hid in a closet leaving his caucus to stave off an expected breach of the cabinet room with flag staffs?

Edited by jingjoke
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Cuckolded?

As said above...easy access to guns....PLUS shooter's mentality of the culture.

If it was a cuckolding and a jealous rage, somewhere where there are no guns and no cultural shooters mentality, the victim would have been suffering a broken jaw and two black eyes, not death, and the jealous man would be spending a night in gaol, and sometime in the future a suspended sentence.

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Cuckolded?

As said above...easy access to guns....PLUS shooter's mentality of the culture.

If it was a cuckolding and a jealous rage, somewhere where there are no guns and no cultural shooters mentality, the victim would have been suffering a broken jaw and two black eyes, not death, and the jealous man would be spending a night in gaol, and sometime in the future a suspended sentence.

Your scenario is plausible, but so are some other more gruesome outcomes.

Lizzy Borden took an axe,

and gave her mother forty whacks.

When the job was nicely done,

she gave her father forty-one.

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Shooter found dead:

US police have locked down the campus of Delta State University in Mississippi after a professor was fatally shot in his office. The suspect in the shooting has been found dead.

The victim, identified as Ethan Schmidt, was an assistant professor of American history. Cleveland Police Department has identified the main suspect as Shannon Lamb. Authorities also suspect that Lamb might have been involved in another slaying in the south Mississippi city of Gautier earlier on Monday. Some sources suggest that the suspect has died from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

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Delta State Shooting: Suspected Gunman Dead After Professor Ethan Schmidt Killed on Campus

The man suspected of fatally shooting a professor at Mississippi's Delta State University on Monday was dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, police said.

Officers following Shannon Lamb, 45, also a professor at the school, witnessed him pull his car over near Greenville, Mississippi, exit the vehicle and flee into a wooded area, Cleveland, Mississippi Police Chief Charles Bingham said. The officers then heard a single gun shot and subsequently found Lamb's body, Bingham said.

"The crisis is over. This campus is safe again, and our lockdown has been dismissed," Delta State President Bill LaForge said.

Authorities had been searching for Lamb after Dr. Ethan Schmidt was found fatally shot in his office at Delta State Monday morning. No students were injured, according to police.

More - nbcnews

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