College Athlete's Death: Was He Targeted?
Police investigating the shooting death of a college football player said it was too soon to tell if he had been targeted because they had not determined a motive or identified any suspects.
Although University of Memphis officials said Monday they believed the attack on Taylor Bradford was not random, city police - who are handling the case because it is a homicide investigation - expressed less certainty.
"We really don't know whether it was a random act or whether or not this individual was targeted," City Police Director Larry Godwin said.
Earlier Sunday night, Bradford reportedly stopped by all the sorority houses with his fraternity brothers to encourage all the sororities to participate in an upcoming fraternity event in order to promote diversity.
Bradford told one of his friends that he needed to go back to the apartment to get some keys, and that's when police say a gunman shot him, CBS Affiliate WREG-TV reports. Bradford got back into his car and drove one block where he crashed into a tree.
Bradford, 21, apparently was shot near his apartment complex Sunday night, then crashed a car he was driving into a tree a short distance away on campus, authorities said. They have not determined whether he was shot before or after he started driving.
Police were responding to the crash when they found Bradford slumped over in the car.
"It wasn't until the paramedics got there that they determined there was a possible gunshot wound," said Bruce Harber, director of university police. He was apparently shot once, police said, though an autopsy was pending.
University President Shirley Raines said authorities quickly determined Bradford's killer or killers were not a threat to other students but still banned all outsiders from campus housing throughout the night.
In an e-mail alert to faculty, students and staff members early Monday, the university said "the initial investigation indicates this was an act directed specifically toward the victim and was not a random act of violence."
The university, which is primarily a commuter campus and has more than 20,000 students, still decided to cancel classes. They were to resume Tuesday.
Witnesses saw two unidentified men running from the area where investigators believe the shooting occurred and other witnesses reported hearing gunfire, said Goodwin, the city police director.
He said investigators had no evidence that Bradford was involved in any illegal activity.
"Everything I've heard about him ... he was just a good kid," Godwin said.
Bradford, a 5-foot-11, 300-pound defensive lineman, was a junior who transferred to Memphis last year after two seasons at Samford University in Birmingham, Ala. The Nashville resident was to play for the Tigers this season.
Monday afternoon, several football players and others tied a large red ribbon to the tree Bradford struck with his car and put up a large poster board for friends and acquaintances to leave personal notes.
"Our entire football team is deeply saddened by the loss of Taylor," Memphis head coach Tommy West said. "He was well respected and a popular member of our team."
The Memphis Tigers host Marshall University on Tuesday night, and a moment of silence was planned before the game.
"Taylor was my brother," Bradford's friend and fraternity brother Will Terrell told the University of Memphis Daily Helmsman by phone from the hospital. "We will miss him dearly. He will be remembered. He loved to play football. He loved his family, he loved his friends and he loved Kappa. He was always full of innovation and ideas. If you were around him, you were going to have a good time."
Bradford lettered in three sports at Antioch High School in Nashville, and held school records in shot put and discus.