TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – When a 20-year-old opened fire at Florida State University Thursday, terrified students barricaded doors and fled across campus, abandoning chemistry notes and even shoes, in a shooting that investigators said killed two men and wounded at least six others.
By Friday morning, memorials of candles and flowers dotted the campus and students and professors began returning to retrieve their belongings as they tried to start healing from the previous day’s shooting, which sent shockwaves of fear across the campus. A pair of vigils were planned for the afternoon.
“I heard some gunshots and then, you know, just blacked out after,” said Carolina Sena, a 21-year-old accounting student who was inside the student union when the shooting started. “Everyone was crying and just panicking. We were trying to barricade ourselves in a little corner in the basement, trying to protect ourselves as much as we could.”
The shooter, identified by police as Phoenix Ikner, is believed to be a Florida State student and the stepson of a sheriff’s deputy who opened fire with his stepmother’s former service weapon, investigators said. Authorities have not yet revealed a motive for the shooting, which began around lunchtime Thursday just outside the student union.
Officers quickly arrived and shot and wounded the gunman after he refused to comply with commands, said Tallahassee Police Chief Lawrence Revell.
The two men who were killed were not students, said Florida State University Police Chief Jason Trumbower, adding that he would not release additional information about the victims.
The brother of one of the victims, however, identified him as Robert Morales, a dining service employee at the campus.
The second man killed was identified as Tiru Chabba, 45, of Greenville, South Carolina. He was a regional vice president for Aramark Collegiate Hospitality.
On Friday, doctors at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare confirmed to reporters that they received six patients after the shooting, three of whom underwent surgery.
According to Dr. Brett Howard, all six were stable upon arrival and are expected to make full recoveries. He said one remains in fair but stable condition.
Howard said two patients will hopefully be able to go home Friday.
Five people who were wounded were struck by gunfire, while a sixth was hurt while trying to run away, Revell said in a statement Thursday night.
Howard declined to say whether the shooter was among those taken to Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare, but did confirm that all of the patients had gunshot injuries.
According to Leon County Sheriff Walt McNeil, the shooter obtained access to a weapon that belongs to his stepmother, who has been with the sheriff’s office for over 18 years and has been a model employee. Police said they believed Ikner shot the victims using his stepmother’s former service handgun, which she had kept for personal use after the force upgraded to new weapons.
The shooter was a long-standing member of the sheriff’s office’s youth advisory council, the sheriff said.
“He has been steeped in the Leon County Sheriff’s Office family, engaged in a number of training programs that we have,” McNeil said. “So it’s not a surprise to us that he had access to weapons.”
As of Thursday night, Ikner was in the hospital with “serious but non-life-threatening injuries,” according to Revell.
Witness says the suspect’s shotgun jammed
Ambulances, fire trucks and patrol vehicles from multiple law enforcement agencies raced toward the campus just west of Florida’s capital after the university issued an active shooter alert.
Aidan Stickney, a 21-year-old studying business management, was running late to class when he said he saw a man get out of a car with a shotgun and aim at another man in a white polo shirt.
The gun jammed, Stickney said, and the shooter rushed back to his car and emerged with a handgun, opening fire on a woman. Stickney ran, warning others as he called 911.
“I got lucky today. I really did. I really, really did,” he said.
Trumbower said investigators have no evidence that anyone was shot with the shotgun.
Shots sent students scattering
Holden Mendez, a 20-year-old student studying political science and international affairs, said he had just left the student union when he heard a series of shots. He ran into a nearby campus building, where he said his previous emergency response training kicked in.
“There was a lot of fear. There was a lot of panic. There was a lot of misinformation that was being spread around. I was doing my best to kind of combat that,” he said. “I told people, ‘Take a deep breath. This building is secure. Everything is going to be ok.’”
Andres Perez, 20, was in a classroom near the student union when the alarm sounded for a lockdown. He said his classmates began moving desks in front of the door and police officers came to escort them out.
“I always hang out in the student union,” Perez said. “So the second I found out that the threat was there, my heart sank and I was scared.”
Shooting shocks campus and the nation
President Donald Trump said from the Oval Office that he had been fully briefed on the shooting.
“It’s a horrible thing. It’s horrible that things like this take place,” he said.
But Trump also suggested that he would not be advocating for any new gun legislation, saying, “The gun doesn’t do the shooting, the people do.”
University President Richard McCullough said he was heartbroken by the violence.
“Our hearts go out to our students and the victims of this terrible tragedy,” he said.
Another shooting a decade ago at Florida State
Florida State is one of Florida’s 12 public universities, with its main campus in Tallahassee. About 44,000 students are enrolled in the university, per the school’s 2024 fact sheet.
In 2014, the main library was the site of a shooting that wounded three people. Officers shot and killed the gunman, 31-year-old Myron May.
The university canceled classes for the rest of the week and canceled home athletic events through Sunday.
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Fischer reported from Fort Lauderdale. Associated Press reporters Stephany Matat in West Palm Beach, Curt Anderson in St. Petersburg, Michael Schneider in Orlando, Mike Balsamo in New York, Eric Tucker and Christopher Megerian in Washington, John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, and Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed to this report.