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UNCW Chancellor says investigation to come in the aftermath of campus lockdown

UNCW Chancellor Dr. Aswani Volety delivers remarks to public.
UNCW
UNCW Chancellor Dr. Aswani Volety delivers remarks to public.

On Friday morning, UNCW Chancellor Dr. Aswani Volety released a video addressing the public about a three-hour search for an alleged gunman or gunmen on campus yesterday evening, which officials now say was a “false alarm.”

On Thursday night, UNCW issued a shelter-in-place order after images and videos of an alleged armed attacker circulated on social media.

Volety said he, too, had to hunker down with about 35 faculty members, staff, and students inside the Burney Center. He said that the campus community collectively experienced “fear, dread, concern, and anger” while hundreds of campus, local, state, and federal law enforcement officers swept the campus and investigated the threats.

He walked the public through how it started.

“The incident began with a series of anonymous reports and tips about a gunman on campus. University police continued to work to validate the threat to our campus. When a report from a credible individual was received, we then sent out a campus alert. Reports continued to come in. Campus was secured and cleared. Finally, the university was declared free and clear of any threat,” he said.

Volety said their response is now moving to a new phase.

“Our law enforcement partners are shifting from a safety and intervention position to investigating what started this chain of events,” he said.

The videos, including one showing someone carrying a rifle through a parking garage, claimed to have been taken at UNCW. This led to a heavy law enforcement presence sweeping the campus and investigating the threats, with authorities becoming involved. UNCW later called the images misinformation.

The posts followed several days of tension on campus, as students clashed over a memorial to Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist who was killed last week. Several students painted over the memorial, drawing criticism from conservatives and the UNCW chancellor, who said he was “appalled” at their behavior.

Subsequently, several online threats were made towards students, faculty, and administrators who opposed Kirk. Those threats, along with images and videos from last night, remain under investigation by UNCW.

Out of caution, Volety cancelled classes for Friday, and some university facilities will have reduced hours. Isaac Bear High School, located on UNCW’s campus, had a remote day for students planned. It preceded Thursday evening’s events — it was in response to those online threats saying an NC militia group would come to campus on Friday following the painting over of the campus rock dedicated to Kirk.

Volety said hoped that Friday would be a “new and better day" for the UNCW community.

Link to Volety’s full remarks

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Rachel is a graduate of UNCW's Master of Public Administration program, specializing in Urban and Regional Policy and Planning. She also received a Master of Education and two Bachelor of Arts degrees in Political Science and French Language & Literature from NC State University. She served as WHQR's News Fellow from 2017-2019. Contact her by email: rkeith@whqr.org or on Twitter @RachelKWHQR
Ben Schachtman is a journalist and editor with a focus on local government accountability. He began reporting for Port City Daily in the Wilmington area in 2016 and took over as managing editor there in 2018. He’s a graduate of Rutgers College and later received his MA from NYU and his PhD from SUNY-Stony Brook, both in English Literature.