EAST LANSING, Mich. – Two days after a gunman’s rampage left three students dead on the campus of Michigan State University, investigators were still hunting Wednesday for an answer to one question: Why?
The gunman, who lived in Lansing and had no known ties to the university, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound when confronted by police about three hours after his rampage Monday evening, authorities said. A tip had led police to the killer just 17 minutes after photos from surveillance video were released to the public.
He lived the past two years with his father at the end of a quiet street of older homes in Lansing’s north end, neighbors said.
“We have absolutely no idea what the motive was,” Chris Rozman, MSU’s interim deputy police chief, said Tuesday.
Developments:
- All five students wounded in the attack remain in critical condition, campus police said Wednesday.
- The University of Michigan said it will hold a vigil Wednesday evening in support of the Michigan State University community and some of the Wolverines’ athletes will wear helmet decals with the Spartans logo as a tribute to the victims.
‘OUR SPARTAN HEARTS ARE BROKEN:3 students killed are ID’d. Updates.
‘The Rock’ at MSU painted with pro-gun slogan
A symbolic rock at Michigan State that has been serving as an impromptu memorial to victims of the shooting was repainted overnight with a pro-gun slogan. The rock, which has bouquets of flowers strewn around it since the attack, had been painted with a sign that said, “How many more?” On Wednesday morning the message was, “Allow us to defend ourselves & carry on campus.”
The university will host a vigil to honor and remember the shooting victims Wednesday evening at The Rock. University officials, including interim President Teresa Woodruff and the chair of the university’s Board of Trustees, Rema Vassar, and student leaders are expected to attend.
MSU student from near Sandy Hook: ‘We can no longer be complacent’
Alerts urging Michigan State students to “run, hide, fight” sent them fleeing into the night in the minutes after the shooting started Monday. The chaos brought back memories of the Sandy Hook Elementary tragedy for Jaqueline Matthews. She crouched for so long at a nearby middle school when gunfire erupted at Sandy Hook a decade ago that her back was permanently injured. On Monday, the 21-year-old international law major and member of the Michigan State rowing team watched mayhem unfold again, this time from her campus window.
“The fact that this is the second mass shooting that I have now lived through is incomprehensible,” she said in a TikTok video. “We can no longer be complacent.”
Another MSU student is also experiencing a horrible case of deja vu. Jennifer Mancini told the Detroit Free Press that her daughter survived the November 2021 shooting that left four students dead at Oxford High School in southeastern Michigan. She’s now a freshman going through a similar trauma.
“I can’t believe this is happening again,” said Mancini, who didn’t want her daughter’s name used.
Three bouquets for three Michigan State shooting victims
MSU senior Julia Wallace placed three bouquets of flowers at the feet of the school’s Sparty statue. Wallace was at Bessey Hall on Monday in a club meeting, talking to an alumni panel on a video conference, when an alert about the shooting came across the screen.
“Once it was announced, I was like, ‘Oh … I need to get out of here.’ Then we all awkwardly got up,” she said. “Do we hide? I was like, ‘I’m not going to sit here and be a sitting duck, that’s the last thing I’m going to do.'”
She said everyone got up and calmly walked out of the building – then sprinted to their cars and “booked it home.”
“For some reason that was the first thought on my mind this morning – to go show my community that I’m impacted and that I feel for others,” she said. “I kind of didn’t think, I just did. I got the three (bouquets) for the three lives lost because it’s just horrible.”
Michigan lawmakers put gun violence back on state agenda
Democratic lawmakers responding to the MSU shooting say they will introduce state legislation to address gun violence that stalled in the past. While they provided a general outline of bills they plan to put forward, exact details on the forthcoming proposals and their timing remain unclear.
Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer last month proposed universal background checks, extreme risk protection orders to keep guns away from those deemed a danger to themselves or others and safe storage requirements. Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks, a Democrat, on Tuesday called the proposals “common sense” measures that enjoy public support – and that other proposals are likely. Read more here.
– Clara Hendrickson, Detroit Free Press
Student hid in car for three hours
Ted Zimbo, a 26-year-old astrophysics major, said he was heading back to his residence hall after an off-campus meeting when he saw police cars everywhere and a blood-covered woman hiding behind a car. She told him that someone came into her classroom and started shooting.
“Her hands were completely covered in blood. It was on her pants and her shoes,” he told The Associated Press. “She said, ‘It’s my friend’s blood.’”
That, he said, is when it hit him: “There was a real shooting, a mass shooting.”
The woman picked up her phone and started crying, unsure of what happened to her friend. Zimbo spent the next three hours hunkered down in his Toyota SUV, a blanket tossed over him.
MOURNING THE MICHIGAN STATE SHOOTING VICTIMS:An aspiring pediatrician. ‘Phenomenal daughter.’ Beloved ‘leader’
The students who died were from the Detroit area
University police identified the three dead students as sophomores Arielle Anderson and Brian Fraser and junior Alexandria Verner. Fraser was a fraternity chapter president. Verner was a science student with fond memories of her days as a high-school athlete. Anderson was a frequent volunteer who wanted to become a pediatrician. All were from the Detroit area. Read more here.
“It’s just a senseless, unspeakable tragedy that’s impacting the Michigan State community, impacting the Grosse Pointe community and it’s just, it’s horrific,” Grosse Pointe Superintendent Jon Dean said.
Shooter had history of mental health problems
A clearer picture began to emerge Tuesday about the 43-year-old shooter. Anthony Dwayne McRae served 18 months’ probation after pleading guilty to a gun-related charge in 2019. Police had found him with a Ruger LCP .380 semi-automatic pistol in his pants pocket and a loaded magazine in his breast pocket despite not having a concealed weapons permit, according to court records.
McRae was originally charged with a felony, and a conviction would have prevented him from legally owning a gun in the future. But McRae agreed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, a charge that did not bar his ability to buy a firearm after he successfully completed probation.
Authorities said McRae had a history of mental health struggles, and relatives described him as secluded. Neighbors and family members told the Detroit Free Press he fired a gun dangerously in his backyard.
Police said McRae shot and killed himself after they confronted him in an industrial area about 5 miles from campus following a three-hour manhunt.
Contributing: Bryce Airgood and Mike Ellis, Lansing State Journal; Kristen Jordan Shamus, Detroit Free Press; The Associated Press
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