Two people were killed and six others were wounded when a gunman opened fire at Florida State University, and police said a 20-year-old suspect — the stepson of a sheriff's deputy — was shot and taken into custody.
The university issued an active shooter alert at midday Thursday near the university's student union. A campus lockdown was lifted shortly after 3 p.m. when Florida State's alert system announced that law enforcement had ''neutralized the threat.''
How is the community responding?
Students and staff on Friday were allowed into buildings near the shooting to retrieve their belongings, which police ordered left behind in the immediate chaotic aftermath.
Geology major Josh Jontiff collected his backpack containing his laptop and other materials from his calculus class a few hundred yards (meters) from the shooting scene.
When projector screens in the classroom flashed a message about an active shooter on Thursday, ''we all filed to one side of the room and turned the lights off,'' Jontiff said.
Police officers with guns drawn then banged on the door and led the group outside with their hands on their heads.
''It was a very scary situation," Jontiff said. ''I tried to keep calm and keep others around me calm.''