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Campus Alert Archive
Appalachian School of Law

A Dismissed Student's Reckoning: The Appalachian School of Law Shooting

VAactive shooteremergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On January 16, 2002, Peter Odighizuwa, a 43-year-old former student dismissed for academic failure, shot and killed three people at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Virginia, and wounded three others. The dead included Dean L. Anthony Sutin, 42, a former acting assistant U.S. attorney general; Professor Thomas Blackwell, 41; and student Angela Denise Dales, 33. Odighizuwa was subdued by students, two of whom were off-duty law enforcement officers who retrieved personal firearms from their vehicles.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
3
Injured
3
Institution
Appalachian School of Law
Private Masters · VA
~400 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPA System
Approximate reconstruction220 chars
EMERGENCY: There has been a shooting at the law school. All students and staff are to remain inside and lock all doors. Police have been called and are responding. Do not leave the building until you are told it is safe.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The Appalachian School of Law had approximately 400 students at the time, housed in a single main building in rural Grundy, Virginia
The shooter was subdued by students within minutes, limiting the duration of the active threat
Two of the students who intervened, Tracy Bridges and Mikael Gross, were off-duty law enforcement officers who retrieved firearms from their vehicles
UPDATEPA System
Approximate reconstruction171 chars
The shooter has been restrained and is in custody. Emergency medical services are on the way. Please remain calm and do not leave the building until police clear the area.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Students tackled Odighizuwa after Bridges and Gross confronted him with firearms, forcing him to drop his weapon
The rapid student intervention kept the active shooting phase extremely short compared to incidents where police were the sole responders
Context

Background

The Appalachian School of Law shooting on January 16, 2002, took place at a small private law school in the remote Appalachian town of Grundy, Virginia. Peter Odighizuwa, a 43-year-old Nigerian immigrant, had been dismissed from the school for repeated academic failures including failing grades in contracts. On the morning of the shooting, he told professor Dale Rubin to 'pray for him.' He returned to campus around 1:00 PM EST with a .380 ACP semi-automatic handgun and went to the offices of Dean L. Anthony Sutin and Professor Thomas Blackwell, killing both with shots to the head. He then moved outside and shot student Angela Denise Dales and wounded three other students. The shooting was halted when law students Tracy Bridges and Mikael Gross, both off-duty law enforcement officers, retrieved personal firearms from their vehicles and confronted Odighizuwa, who dropped his weapon. He was then tackled and held by several unarmed students until police arrived. The case became a focal point in gun rights debates because of the role armed civilians played in stopping the shooter.
Analysis

Key Findings

The shooting was stopped by students, including two off-duty law enforcement officers who retrieved personal firearms from their vehicles
The rural location of Grundy, Virginia, meant longer police response times, making the student intervention especially consequential
Odighizuwa's academic dismissal and the loss of his student visa were identified as primary motivators
No mass notification system existed at the small law school in 2002; the entire student body of approximately 400 was in close physical proximity
Outcome
Odighizuwa was initially found incompetent to stand trial and spent three years in psychiatric treatment. In 2005, he was found competent and pleaded guilty to avoid the death penalty. He received six life sentences and an additional 28 years without the possibility of parole.
Provenance

Sources

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  2. News
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Tags
active-shooterlaw-schoolacademic-dismissalstudent-interventionarmed-civiliansrural-campusno-alert-system2002historical
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion