Three University of Virginia football players who were shot on a bus as they returned from a field trip each died of a gunshot wound to the top, in line with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
The reason for death for Lavel Davis Jr., D’Sean Perry and Devin Chandler was released in response to a request from The Associated Press on Thursday. LaKeshia Johnson, Central District Administrator of the medical expert’s office, also said in an email that the way of death was homicide.
The scholars were shot late Sunday night as they returned to campus after traveling to Washington, where they saw a play and had dinner together. Authorities have said that Christopher Darnell Jones Jr., a UVA student and former member of the football team who was on the trip, began shooting students on the charter bus because it pulled to a stop at a campus parking garage.
Jones, 23, faces second-degree murder and other charges stemming from the shooting, which set off a manhunt and 12-hour campus lockdown before Jones was apprehended in suburban Richmond. Jones is being held without bond.
A witness told police the gunman targeted specific victims, shooting one as he slept, a prosecutor said Wednesday at Jones’ first court appearance. Two other students were wounded. Neither Jones nor his attorney addressed the fees in court.
Officials said Thursday that an outdoor special counsel will assist the state attorney general in reviewing the shooting.
In a letter, University of Virginia President Jim Ryan and University Rector Whitt Clement asked Attorney General Jason Miyares to appoint outside counsel to research UVA’s response to the shooting in addition to efforts prior to the violence to evaluate the potential threat of the suspect.
“After a tragedy of this nature, it can be crucial for the affected institution to take a tough have a look at what circumstances led as much as the event and, how the University responded within the moment,” Clement said in a press release.
Miyares granted the university’s request for the skin review, saying he would enlist special counsel to help his office.
“A public report can be shared with students, families, the larger UVA community, and government officials at the suitable time,” Miyares spokesperson Victoria LaCivita said in a press release.
UVA has said Jones had been on the radar of the college’s threat-assessment team because the fall. The university also has provided sometimes conflicting or erroneous statements about that team’s work over the course of the week.
Davis, Perry and Chandler can be honored Saturday in a memorial service on campus. A female student who was injured has since been discharged from a hospital. Football player Mike Hollins, who was also injured, underwent surgery and is recovering within the hospital.
Hollins was “progressing positively” on Thursday and can hopefully begin to take some steps, in line with Joe Gipson, a family spokesperson.
In an interview with ESPN Thursday, Hollins’ mother said her son at first thought he heard balloons popping on the bus before he saw Jones. Hollins then yelled for the bus driver to stop and ran off the bus with two other students.
Hollins quickly realized that no other students had fled the bus and ran back to assist, Brenda Hollins said. Her son encountered Jones pointing a gun at him on the bus’s first step, prompting Hollins to show to run.
“All he remembers is he tried to show, but he saw him lift the gun,” Brenda Hollins said. “And he felt his back get hot … And he pulled his shirt up as he ran, and he saw the bullet protruding from his stomach.”
After assuming the lead within the criminal investigation from campus police, Virginia State Police on Thursday provided essentially the most detailed accounting yet of what happened.
In a news release, the agency said Jones had traveled with other students and a professor to Washington for a theater performance on the Atlas Performing Arts Center. The group ate dinner together before a professor and 22 students returned to Charlottesville, state police said.
Because the bus pulled as much as the campus parking garage and students were getting up to go away, Jones “produced a weapon and commenced firing,” the discharge said. As he exited the bus, he fired additional rounds, fled on foot and eventually left the world in a Dodge Durango, in line with state police.
The news release said investigators are still “piecing together Jones’ movements between the time he fled the shooting scene and was apprehended” within the Richmond area and couldn’t comment on a motive.
A handgun was recovered in “relative proximity” to the bus and no firearms were recovered inside, state police said. A search warrant executed on Jones’ residence in Charlottesville led to the recovery of a rifle and a handgun, in line with the news release.
The university said earlier this week that Jones drew the eye of the university’s threat-assessment team this fall within the context of a “potential hazing issue.” UVA has declined to elaborate on the possible hazing incident.
During its threat-assessment review, university officials began investigating a report Jones had a gun and ended up discovering Jones had previously been tried and convicted of a misdemeanor concealed weapons violation in 2021, which he had did not report, in line with a press release.
The varsity initially said it “escalated his case for disciplinary motion” on Oct. 27. But a spokesman, Brian Coy, revised the timeline Tuesday night. He said that likely resulting from either a human or technical error, the report had not actually been transmitted to the University Judiciary Committee, a student-run body, until Tuesday night after the shooting.