2023 Michigan State University shooting
On Monday, February 13, 2023, a mass shooting occurred in two buildings on the campus of Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan, United States. Three students were killed and five others injured. The gunman, 43-year-old Anthony Dwayne McRae, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound when he was confronted by police off campus three hours later.
In the aftermath of the shooting, classes at MSU were canceled for the remainder of the week, and they were relocated from the two buildings where the shootings took place for the remainder of the semester. Students and their supporters protested against gun violence at the Michigan State Capitol, and lawmakers promised gun control reforms.
It, along with the Oxford High School shooting, are the deadliest school shootings in Michigan history.
Shootings
At 7:19p.m. EST on February 13, 2023, the gunman, later identified as 43-year-old Anthony McRae, arrived at Michigan State University by bus. From 7:24 to 8:12, he was seen walking eastbound on Grand River Avenue and in front of the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum before he entered Berkey Hall on the university's campus. McRae entered Room 114, where Marco Díaz-Muñoz was teaching, and fired repeatedly into the classroom, hitting seven students, including Arielle Anderson and Alexandria Verner, who were fatally wounded. Díaz-Muñoz tried to hold the door to the classroom shut while his students took shelter and broke windows to evacuate. Some students escaped through the broken windows, while others stayed to help their injured classmates, putting pressure on wounds and fashioning a tourniquet from a belt. Díaz-Muñoz estimated that police arrived 10 to 15 minutes after the shooting.At 8:18, Ingham County Dispatch received a 9-1-1 call of shots being fired at Berkey Hall. Officers were dispatched a minute later and arrived another minute later at 8:20. MSU officials sent an alert tweet and text. Students were directed to "run, hide, fight." A shelter-in-place order was subsequently issued.
McRae left Berkey Hall and walked westbound along Grand River Avenue, firing a single gunshot outside the Human Ecology Building at 8:23. He arrived at the front of the MSU Union building at 8:24, where he killed student Brian Fraser. The first report of shots fired at the Union building was made at 8:26. At the same time, McRae left the north side of the Union, near the campus border. Officers responded to the Union building a minute later. At 8:30 and 8:31, two campuswide alerts were issued, advising people to shelter in place. East Lansing residents living near the campus were also asked to shelter in place.
There was a coordinated effort of local, state, and federal law enforcement with hundreds of officers assisting, as well as other emergency services. Approximately 30 fire engines, ambulances, and other emergency vehicles were present by the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum. At 10:04, McRae's description was provided in a third campuswide alert; at 11:18, campus police shared a photo of McRae on social media.
At 11:35, Ingham County Dispatch received a 9-1-1 call of a person matching the gunman's description walking off-campus on Lake Lansing Road, near High Street, in Lansing. At 11:49, officers arrived at the scene and found McRae, who fatally shot himself in the head during the confrontation. At 12:20, campus police confirmed McRae's death, and the shelter-in-place order was lifted seven minutes later. An investigation found that McRae was armed with two 9mm handguns: a Hi-Point C-9 purchased in September 2021 and a Taurus G3 purchased in October 2021. Both guns were legally purchased but not registered. A total of 18 rounds were fired on campus, all from the Taurus: 14 at Berkey Hall, one outside the Human Ecology Building, and three at the Union building. McRae was also carrying eleven additional magazines for both guns, along with 136 rounds of loose ammunition.
Victims
Eight people were shot, resulting in three dead and five injured. All of the victims of the shooting were Michigan State students. Three were killed: Arielle Diamond Anderson, a junior from Grosse Pointe, Michigan ; Brian Fraser, a sophomore and Phi Delta Theta chapter president from Grosse Pointe; and Alexandria Verner, a junior from Clawson, Michigan.Another five students were injured in the shooting. Four of the five injured victims required surgery, and one was taken directly to the ICU. All five were in critical condition. By February 21, one of the victims had been upgraded from critical to stable condition and two students had been upgraded to serious condition.
One injured victim was Guadalupe Huapilla-Perez, a junior from Immokalee, Florida. Two others who were injured were Chinese international students Hanyang Tao and Yukai "John" Hao; Hao was paralyzed from the chest down. Another injured student, junior Nate Statly, from Hartland, was identified by his family, who set up a GoFundMe account. Statly was shot in the head; his brother characterized him as "fighting hard to survive".
On February 23, another one of the victims, music student Troy Forbush, a graduate of Okemos High School, was released from the hospital. Of the four remaining students in the hospital, one remained in critical condition, two were in serious condition, and one was in stable condition. On March 3, two more of the injured students were released from the hospital, leaving one student still in critical condition and the other in fair condition.
Aftermath
In May 2023, paralyzed student John Hao was able to attend an NBA playoff game, in his wheelchair, as a guest of Philadelphia 76ers player James Harden. Harden, upon hearing of Hao's injuries, had reached out to the student shortly after the shooting, and donated support and money to his recovery.In July 2023, the family of injured student Nate Statly shared information about Statly's status. According to the family's lawyer, "fragments of the bullet remain scattered throughout brain. The core of the 9mm bullet remains in the center of his brain.... Statly isn't able to talk, walk, use his arm or leg on the left side of his body or consume whole foods. His right ear and eye are sutured closed, and he has significant and permanent scarring." Statly, in rehab, faced many long-term challenges, including mobility and sensory impairments. A GoFundMe page had raised over $305,000 for his care, but the family was seeking additional funds for a wheelchair-accessible van and home modifications.
In August 2023, the family of injured student Guadalupe Huapilla-Perez shared details of her ongoing recovery six months after the shooting. An initial surgery repaired Huapilla-Perez's abdominal organs, although the removal of her spleen was required. Returning home to Florida brought her emotional relief, but leg nerve damage complicated her recovery. A second surgery in July repaired Huapilla-Perez's colon. The family emphasized healing's non-linearity and asked for continued support.
Perpetrator
Anthony Dwayne McRae, a 43-year-old African-American male who resided in Lansing, was the gunman. McRae had no known connection to the university. McRae was born in Bear, Delaware, raised in Trenton, New Jersey, and moved to Michigan in 2003.McRae was arrested in June 2019 for carrying a weapon without a concealed pistol license. Initially charged with a felony, he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor unlawful possession of a loaded firearm as part of a plea agreement in November 2019. He was originally sentenced to twelve months' probation, which was later extended to 18 months, and in May 2021, he was discharged from probation. Because McRae was not convicted of a felony, his ban on possessing weapons ended with the end of his probation.
The decision to allow McRae to plead to a misdemeanor instead of a felony has proven controversial. Former Ingham County prosecutor Carol Siemon was criticized for her decision to limit the use of felony charges for firearms possession. In response Siemon described the plea deal as standard practice, saying that "nationally, about 95 percent of all criminal charges are resolved by pleas".
McRae's father said his son had anger issues, and, after the death of his mother in 2020, he became reclusive and socially isolated and "started to get evil and mean, and he didn't care about anything anymore." He described his son as "evil angry." According to the father, McRae had worked for about seven years at a warehouse loading trucks but quit his job shortly after his mother's death. McRae's sister, who had not seen McRae since her mother's funeral in 2020, described her brother as socially isolated and hostile, and often transient. At the time of the shooting, McRae lived in his father's home in Lansing, northwest of MSU's campus.
A note found in McRae's possession included threats to MSU, other local businesses including the Meijer warehouse where he had previously been employed, and two New Jersey public schools. McRae also claimed to lead a group of 20 people who were involved in his attacks, a claim that was dismissed by a Michigan State Police spokesperson.
In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, an internet hoax that incorrectly identified the perpetrator as "Lynn Dee Walker" spread on social media.
Aftermath
The shelter-in-place order was rescinded following the gunman's death. All MSU activities were canceled for 48 hours, and classes were canceled until the following Monday. Classes in Berkey Hall and the Union were relocated for the remainder of the spring semester, and Berkey Hall was to remain closed for the remainder of the year. Undergraduates were given the option to have grades reported as credit/no credit instead of the usual grade for spring semester classes.Counseling services were offered to members of the East Lansing and Michigan State communities at Hannah Community Center in East Lansing from February 14, with additional on-campus locations being added the following day. East Lansing closed all city offices and canceled a city council meeting on February 14, and continued to operate on a limited basis on February 15. Public schools in East Lansing and neighboring school districts canceled classes on the day after the shooting. Schools in Ewing Township, New Jersey were also closed after McRae was found carrying a note threatening two Ewing Public Schools.