Appalachian School of Law Shootings http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian News Stories in the week after the Appalachian School of Law Shootings en Roanoke Times & World News (Roanoke, VA) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/20#054 <p><span class="normal">Spring semester was one week old, and the Appalachian School of Law was returning to full academic life.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At a weekly coffee meeting for students and faculty, professor Thomas Blackwell chatted with first-year student Mikael Gross about practice exams.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Anthony Sutin, dean of the school, finished some research at the law library and headed back to his office.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Angela Dales talked with classmates during a break between classes.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Everyone at the school was busy and preoccupied with the work that lay ahead.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Everyone, that is, except Peter Odighizuwa.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa, described as a troubled loner unable to cope with his failure as a law student, had recently been told that he had flunked out of school. Yet Odighizuwa refused to leave, lurking around campus and complaining bitterly about how the school had treated him.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Wednesday afternoon, Odighizuwa returned to the school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Instead of law books, he carried a .380-caliber semiautomatic handgun.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"><hr></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Professor Gail Kintzer was in her second-floor office about 1:15 p.m. talking with a student when she heard the first shot.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I heard a pop, which made me stop, and a second pop, which I knew was a gunshot,&#8221; she said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Someone - she&#8217;s not sure who - opened Kintzer&#8217;s door, and two secretaries rushed in. Melanie Lewis, Sutin&#8217;s secretary, and Donna Horn, a faculty secretary, were hysterical.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Lewis and Horn had just seen Peter Odighizuwa shoot Blackwell, two offices down the hall, Kintzer said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Professor Wes Shinn, whose office is next to Blackwell&#8217;s, had opened his door long enough to see Lewis and Horn standing horrified in the hallway.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;He&#8217;s got a gun; he&#8217;s got a gun,&#8221; the women screamed.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Once the women got inside Kintzer&#8217;s office, they crawled under her desk.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kintzer tried to call for help. All emergency numbers were busy, swamped by calls from others who had heard the shots.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">As Horn and Lewis ran into Kintzer&#8217;s office, Shinn ducked back into his office and slammed the door. &#8220;My assumption was that he was going to go from office to office,&#8221; he said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Shinn heard two more shots that seemed to come from farther down the hall.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">He ventured out and found Blackwell still sitting behind his desk. He was slumped over in his chair and bleeding from the neck. Shinn checked for a pulse and found none.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Blackwell&#8217;s telephone was off the hook.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At the time he was shot, Blackwell was on the phone with Charlotte Varney, the secretary of his church. They were talking about an upcoming congregational meeting at Buchanan First Presbyterian Church.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Suddenly, Blackwell stopped talking.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Varney heard a sound as if someone had blown up a paper bag, then popped it. Then she heard the phone drop and what sounded like static. After that, she heard muffled voices and footsteps.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I asked him what was going on, but he didn&#8217;t come back on the line,&#8221; she said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">After about two minutes, Varney thought she had been disconnected. So she hung up and went on an errand, figuring Blackwell would call her back if he needed to.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A half-hour passed before she learned the truth.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Meanwhile, Kintzer and Shinn had rushed down the hall to Sutin&#8217;s office. They were met by another professor who had found the dean lying face down on the floor of his office. Two powder burns - indicating that he had been shot at close range - could be seen on Sutin&#8217;s bloodstained white dress shirt. Sutin had also been shot a third time, in the side.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">He was dead, too.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"><hr></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Downstairs, most people did not realize what had just happened.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Arun Rattan, a first-year student, had just returned from lunch at the Italian Village, a downtown eatery frequented by students. He was with Stacey Bean and her boyfriend, James Davis.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">They walked into the Lions Lounge, a lobby area named for the two statues of crouched lions that stood near the entrance. About 20 students were in the lounge, sitting in sofas and chairs or passing through on the way to class.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Sensing movement behind him, Rattan glanced over his left shoulder and saw Odighizuwa standing next to him. It appeared he had just come down the stairs that led to Sutin&#8217;s office.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I looked at him, and he just nodded his head at me,&#8221; Rattan said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It was only after Odighizuwa walked past him that Rattan realized he had a gun. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t think it was a real gun at first,&#8221; he said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa walked up to the couch where students Angela Dales, Rebecca Brown and Madeline Short were sitting.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Standing about five feet from the women, Odighizuwa opened fire, Rattan said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Run! Run!&#8221; panicked students yelled. Rattan fled out a side door and ran behind the library, next to the school&#8217;s main building.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rose Hurley, director of career services, was in her first-floor office adjacent to the lounge talking to two students when they heard the shots.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">One of the students, Peter Tsahiridis, got up, closed the office door and locked it. The trio huddled together, trying to figure out what to do. When the commotion in the lounge stopped, they ventured out.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In the doorway of the career services office lay Dales. Blood was pouring from her neck. Tsahiridis tried to help.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Short was lying nearby. The bullet had entered her back, ripping through her abdomen and liver.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Bean was also down, bleeding from the chest.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Brown, despite being shot in the abdomen, had been able to run to the library.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"><hr></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Outside, Mikael Gross was walking back from lunch with a group of friends when they heard a gunshot.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It seemed to have come from the second floor. The sound was as if something had hit tin, followed by a whizzing noise. Later, he would learn that it was the bullet that went through Sutin&#8217;s window.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But then, his focus was on the end of the building, where students were pouring out of the entrance to the Lions Lounge.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Peter O&#8217;s got a gun! Run!&#8221; someone yelled.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa was known on campus simply as &#8220;Peter O&#8221; because most people could not pronounce his last name. The Nigerian immigrant spoke with a heavy accent that made him hard to understand - something that may have contributed to his sense of alienation on the campus. As students heard the news, many recalled the deep anger that Odighizuwa harbored.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;You never knew with him,&#8221; Rattan said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Students were scattering. </span><span class="tackle">Third-year student Ted Besen crept along the side of the building toward Odighizuwa, who had just come outside from the lounge. Gross sprinted for his car, about 100 yards away, and retrieved a bulletproof vest and a 9 mm handgun. Back home in North Carolina, he&#8217;s an officer with the Grifton Police Department.</span></p> <p><span class="tackle">He ran back, gun in hand.</p></span> <p><span class="tackle">By then, Odighizuwa had placed his gun and a clip on a light fixture about four feet off the ground and put his hands in the air. He was yelling something unintelligible to the students, Besen said. Besen, a former Marine and Wilmington, N.C., police officer, told him to get onto the ground.</p></span> <p><span class="tackle">Besen had heard shots on the second floor while waiting for a class to start. He and fellow student Tracy Bridges, another former police officer, had ushered students down the back stairs to safety before Besen went to his car to get his own gun.</p></span> <p><span class="tackle">Now, outside the Lions Lounge, Besen was taking a punch on the jaw from Odighizuwa. As the two wrestled, third-year student Todd Ross ran up and tackled Odighizuwa in the legs, hard. All three went down.</p></span> <p><span class="tackle">More students had reached the scene, helping hold Odighizuwa. Bridges sat on him. Gross ran back to his car to get handcuffs.</p></span> <p><span class="tackle">Before he did so, he heard Odighizuwa muttering: &#8220;I had to do it. I didn&#8217;t know what else to do. I had nowhere else to go.&#8221;</p></span> <p><span class="tackle">Handcuffed, Odighizuwa lay outside the building while people rushed into the lounge to help the wounded. </span><span class="normal">A Buchanan County sheriff&#8217;s deputy showed up and put the suspect into his car.</p></span> <p><span class="normal">Ambulances were nowhere to be seen.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But inside the lounge, a rescue was unfolding.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"><hr></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Melissa McCall-Burton had just returned from the nearby Subway for her 1:30 p.m. class when she learned what happened. The former emergency room nurse took her medical bag from her car and ran into the lounge.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The first victim McCall-Burton saw was Dales, lying in the career services office doorway. Right after being shot, Dales had been talking, according to Besen. But as McCall-Burton worked on Dales, she went into cardiac arrest. McCall-Burton was performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation when Dr. Jack Briggs, nurse practitioner Susan Looney and registered nurse Carol Breeding arrived.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Briggs had been in his office, just a few miles down the road, when an announcement came over the speaker system: &#8220;Dr. Briggs, pick up the phone, stat!&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It was Hurley, still holed up in the career services office. She knew Briggs had a background in emergency medicine and wasn&#8217;t far away. And Briggs knew that a state police helicopter was waiting at Buchanan General Hospital to take one of his patients to Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn. He called for it to be held.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Then he rushed from his office, his nurses in tow.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In the lounge, Looney took over Dales&#8217; care. The others checked Short and Bean.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Briggs figured that all four injured women needed blood. But he knew it would take too long for ambulances to arrive. Both Grundy ambulances were on other calls, and other units were 20 minutes away.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The women needed to go to the hospital - immediately. So some students volunteered their own vehicles.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stephanie Mutter backed her Toyota 4-Runner to the lobby doors. Short was put inside on a table, which just hours earlier had held coffee and snacks at the student-faculty gathering. Now, the table was one of several makeshift gurneys; the leftover food was dumped onto the floor as the bleeding women were taken out, one by one.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Students Daniel Boyd and Rob Sievers, president of the student bar association, jumped into Mutter&#8217;s vehicle with Short and made sure she didn&#8217;t fall out the open back door. Others took Brown and Bean.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Every time Mutter hit a bump, Short cried out.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We were just glad she was talking,&#8221; Mutter said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Honking and screaming for help, Mutter pulled up to Buchanan General Hospital, a few miles from the law school. Emergency room nurses rushed to their aid.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Dales, meanwhile, was on her way to the hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Buchanan County Sheriff&#8217;s Office had called the Grundy Funeral Home, which used to run an ambulance service and still helps police during emergencies. Funeral director T.C. Mullins sent four men with a hearse. They weren&#8217;t sure whether they were going for a patient or a corpse.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Dales, still alive, was loaded into the hearse, but died shortly after reaching the hospital. Brown, Short and Bean were taken away in two state police helicopters.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I wish we&#8217;d gotten Angela first,&#8221; Mutter thought when she heard the woman had died.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"><hr></span></p> <p><span class="normal">By then, Odighizuwa was locked up. By the next morning, he had been charged with three counts of capital murder and three counts of attempted capital murder. Prosecutors have said they will seek a death sentence.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Now, a man who once aspired to be a lawyer must rely on one to save his life.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Laurence Hammack can be reached at</span></p> <p><span class="normal">981-3239 or laurenceh@roanoke.com.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kimberly O&#8217;Brien can be reached at</span></p> <p><span class="normal">981-3334 or kimo@roanoke.com.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Lindsey Nair can be reached at</span></p> <p><span class="normal">981-3349 or lindseyn@roanoke.com.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">CORRECTION-DATE: January 31, 2002</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Correction</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Jan. 21 story on the shooting at the Appalachian School of Law reversed the roles of two of the students involved in apprehending the suspect. The passage should read: </span><span class="tackle">Ted Besen had heard shots on the second floor while waiting for a class to start. He and fellow student Tracy Bridges, another former police officer, had ushered students down the back stairs to safety before Bridges went to his car to get his own gun.</span><span class="normal"> (library note: the story ran Jan. 20.)</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p>