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Former student charged in fatal shooting at Winston-Salem State University

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — One student was shot dead and another wounded after gunfire erupted Sunday near dormitories on the Winston-Salem State University campus.

Police arrested the man accused in the shooting. Jarrett Jerome Moore was charged with Anthony White Jr.’s death. Moore was a former student at the university.

The historically black school urged visitors to the campus to stay away, but said student services were operating normally and that classes will be held on regular schedules Monday.

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The slaying victim was 19-year-old Anthony White Jr., a second-year student from Charlotte, according to campus and Winston-Salem police.

A second student hit by gunfire received hospital treatment but was released early Sunday, city police said. His name and condition were being withheld.

Sunday night, more than 100 students gathered on the campus for a prayer vigil to remember White’s life.

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Kedarius Whitley used to play sports with White and told Channel 9 he saw him hours before he was killed.

"When I left, he was standing right here in this area. Wasn't messing with nobody, and I asked him ‘What you about to do?’ And he was like, ‘I'm about to just chill,’" said Whitley.

The shooting happened at about 1:20 a.m. in Lot W near Wilson Hall and Gleason-Hairston Terrace.

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White was studying information technology and though he was an accomplished high school football player, he wanted to focus on his studies rather than try for a spot on the college's team, his mother said.

"He went academically because he wanted to do sciences, and the football schedule wouldn't allow him" to do both, said Xavier Martin of Charlotte.

White worked during holiday and summer breaks from college with his uncle's landscaping business or doing handyman jobs, she said.

Martin said she didn't know whether her son's plans Saturday evening included festivities related to the school's homecoming weekend or a Halloween party.

"I don't know anything" about how he spent his final hours, she said.

Kiyah Graves, a 19-year-old sophomore, lived in the same dormitory as White and said she knew him. She said she had just returned to her dorm room when the campus sirens went off. She said she heard later that there had been a shooting.

Graves described White as outgoing. She said she didn't have any classes with him.

"He was real chill, laid back," Graves said. "We spoke to each other. That was it. We didn't like hang out or nothing like that, but when we saw each other, we spoke."

Brandy Pittman, a 20-year-old junior who was among several hundred students who attended a vigil beneath the school's clock tower Sunday night, said she had a civil rights class with White. She said he made his classmates step up their studies because of his own energy.

"We could tell by his spirit, just him coming to class that he wanted to do better," Pittman said. "He might not have had the best of things, and he might have been off on some days, but there were days that Anthony would come into class and he would be on top of things and he would make an impact on the other students."

She said White had an uplifting spirit that brightened the day for his classmates.

"If you were having a bad day and you were to come into class and he would just speak to you, you would just light up," she said. "Something about him, you would just light up inside."

The shooting was reported around 1:20 a.m. Sunday at a parking lot near two dormitories. The campus was locked down for more than three hours before the warnings against venturing outdoors were lifted at 4:50 a.m.

Winston-Salem State was founded in 1892 and touts itself as being one of the first historically black colleges to grant elementary education teaching degrees in 1925. The school, part of the public University of North Carolina system, is known for strengths in education and health sciences instruction.

It had been a festive atmosphere on campus on the weekend. There was an installation ceremony for Chancellor Elwood Robinson on Friday, followed by the homecoming football game Saturday.

He addressed the vigil.

"The best advice ... is to support one another, to communicate with one another, to look out for one another, to understand that safety is everybody's issue," Robinson said.

Decorations marking the weekend's activities were still visible across the campus on the city's east side. Light poles had signs announcing homecoming and displaying the school's mascot logo attached to them, while balloons were attached to entrances to several buildings. A few students could be seen walking into the student center as skies were gray and a light rain fell.

Chancellor Elwood Robinson posted the following statement on Facebook:

This message is being presented with deep sadness #WSSU

This morning we awoke to a terrible tragedy on our campus. A shooting near Wilson Hall and Gleason-Hairston Terrace left one of our students dead and another injured. Our deepest condolences are with the family of Anthony White, Jr., and with the student injured in the incident.

Law enforcement has lifted the lockdown on campus and classes will be held as normal tomorrow, but we are asking our faculty to be sensitive to the needs of our students and families. Counseling support services are set up in Thompson Center Room 304. If you have questions about counseling, please call 336-750-2000. We encourage the Ram family to continue to support one another during this difficult time.

Be assured that we will work closely with the Winston-Salem Police Department to investigate this incident and to bring the person responsible to justice. If you have any information about the incident, please call Winston-Salem Police Crime Stoppers at 336-727-2800.

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