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Kent State University Officials Review Emergency Notification System After Shot Fired on Campus

Kent State University spokesman Eric Mansfield, left, and president Lester Lefton (Kabir Bhatia / WKSU)
Kent State University spokesman Eric Mansfield, left, and president Lester Lefton (Kabir Bhatia / WKSU)

Local and campus police locked down campus while searching for Quavaugntay Tyler, a 24-year-old freshman from Cleveland. Police say he shot himself in the hand during a dispute with two women he was in relationships with.

Kent State tweeted and sent emails during the situation. Sophomore Raymond Allan was in a dorm and says the school’s emergency notification system worked excellently, even if social media buzz was unhelpful.

“I got text messages from friends being like, ‘Are you safe? Did you get injured?’" Allan said. "Looked on Twitter and there was a bunch of people saying false things. People really made it worse than it had to be, I feel.”

Dorms also had public address systems providing updates, and there were some reports that loudspeakers malfunctioned and produced static or garbled audio. Campus police Chief John Peach says those systems had been tested just six weeks ago.

“In most of the buildings, they heard it very clearly," Peach said. "We continually do testing on the speakers and monitors on a more-than-a-semester basis. But the system is so wide [and] complex, that it needs constant testing.”

No one else was hurt in the shooting, and the motive is not clear. Police say Quavaugntay Tyler was the subject of a campus theft investigation and was on probation from a separate theft case in Brimfield. He told police he had a gun because he’d been the victim of an armed robbery.

Nick Castele was a senior reporter covering politics and government for Ideastream Public Media. He worked as a reporter for Ideastream from 2012-2022.