Delta State shooting: Police seek suspect after history professor killed

Ethan Schmidt and Shannon Lamb taught together at Delta State University.

A photo on the school’s website shows them standing side by side, smiling at a 2013 holiday party. That same year, Schmidt thanked Lamb in the acknowledgments of his book.

Now, Schmidt is dead after someone shot him Monday in his office on the school’s campus in Cleveland, Mississippi. Police say Lamb is a suspect in the slaying.

Lamb remains at large and is considered armed and dangerous, Cleveland Police Chief Charles Bingham said Monday evening.

Police in a city 300 miles away also described Lamb as a suspect in another homicide there — and said they’d spoken with him at some point on Monday.

Gautier Police Chief Dante Elben warned law enforcement to “use extreme caution” if they spotted the suspect. At some point on Monday, Elben said, Lamb spoke with police and told them “he wasn’t going to jail.”

The police chief didn’t specify when investigators spoke with Lamb or how.

“We do not have the suspect in custody at this moment, but we are actively pursuing him,” Bingham said.

He declined to detail a motive in the case.

“Right now we have no motive,” Bingham said, “and we’re not going to speculate on a motive until we have facts in hand.”

Authorities named Lamb as a suspect hours after finding Schmidt dead in his office. Schmidt was shot in the head, Bolivar County Deputy Coroner Murray Roark said.

Investigators said they believe the suspect drove away from the campus after the shooting. He could be driving a black Dodge Avenger, authorities said, asking anyone with the information to call police.

At this time we don’t think he’s on campus,” Bingham told reporters, “but we’re not taking anything lightly.”

The university, which is about 115 miles south of Memphis, Tennessee, will remain on lockdown Tuesday as the hunt for the shooter continues, University President William LaForge told reporters.

But he said buildings at the school had been cleared.

“We have checked the campus out thoroughly,” LaForge said. “We believe that our buildings are clear. And our students, most importantly, are safe.”

Students who remain on campus will confined to their residence halls, LaForge said. Only 250 of the 1,150 students who normally stay there remained late Monday.

A biography of Lamb posted on the school’s website says he received his Ph.D. from Delta State in 2014, and has taught geography and social sciences education courses there.

Connected to another case?

Police in Gautier, Mississippi, say Lamb is also a suspect in the killing of a woman found dead Monday morning in the coastal city, which is about 300 miles away from the university.

Elben said Lamb is wanted in the shooting death of 41-year-old Amy Prentiss. The police chief described the shooting as an “isolated domestic incident.”

Lamb and Prentiss lived together, Gautier Police Lt. Scott Wilson said.

Authorities said they received a call Monday morning reporting a shooting and discovered Prentiss dead inside a Gautier home.

‘Beloved’ professor

At Delta State, the hunt for Schmidt’s killer brought together campus police and city police as well as the Mississippi Highway Patrol, Bolivar County Sheriff’s Department and agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The school said it was scheduling a series of counseling sessions for Tuesday.

“We lost one of our beloved professors today,” Michelle Roberts, vice president of university relations, told reporters. “We are grieving on this campus.”

Schmidt’s Delta State biography says that he taught undergraduate courses in American history, and completed his Ph.D. at the University of Kansas in 2007. Schmidt had written several books and scholarly papers and had expertise in Native American history.

Before working at Delta State, he taught for six years at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, where he received the President’s Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2011.

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