LOS ANGELES: A student armed with a handgun killed another student in a “confrontation” at an Arizona university early on Friday that also left three others with multiple gunshot wounds, police said, in the latest shooting at a US college.

The deadly incident at Northern Arizona University (NAU) came hours before President Barack Obama was to meet families of victims of last week’s shooting rampage at Umpqua Community College in Oregon that left nine people dead before the gunman killed himself.

The first emergency calls came through to police at 1:20am on Friday, when most NAU students would have been in bed at the sprawling university campus in the city of Flagstaff.

“Two of our student groups got into a confrontation. The confrontation turned physical and one of our students shot the other students. Four of our students were shot,” said Gregory Fowler, chief of NAU police.

“We have one student deceased and three others being treated at the Flagstaff medical centre”. The alleged shooter, named by police as 18-year-old freshman Steven Jones, was taken into custody and did not attempt to escape arrest. All the victims were male students.

It was not immediately clear what the confrontation was about, but Jones was cooperating with police, Fowler said.

NAU spokeswoman Cindy Brown told CNN that the incident occurred in a parking lot next to a residence hall on campus, which is a designated “gun-free” zone with 20,000 students.

Students described how they were awoken by a university text message warning them of the shooting or by calls from worried friends and family.

“You don’t expect that in Flagstaff. I never thought it would happen here”, one student, Megan Aardahl, told CNN, describing how her room was just yards from where the shooting took place. Aardahl said fellow students frantically contacted one another.

Published in Dawn, October 10th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

Editorial

Diplomatic resolve
Updated 30 May, 2026

Diplomatic resolve

Iran, too, must engage seriously and provide credible assurances about its nuclear programme if it wants sanctions relief and a more stable relationship with the outside world.
Weaponising water
30 May, 2026

Weaponising water

CLIMATE Minister Musadik Malik’s warning against what he described as “water aggression” indicates ...
Rabies toll
30 May, 2026

Rabies toll

EVERY year, rabies, the deadliest zoonotic disease, kills more than 59,000 people worldwide. In Pakistan, it is one...
Pressure politics
Updated 28 May, 2026

Pressure politics

The attempt to connect the Iran conflict with the Abraham Accords makes little sense.
Eid’s true spirit
Updated 27 May, 2026

Eid’s true spirit

Pakistan celebrates Eid while grappling with economic strain that continues to weigh heavily on ordinary households.
Cotton crisis
Updated 29 May, 2026

Cotton crisis

We need a coherent long-term cotton strategy or else, Pakistan might lose a key pillar of its export economy.