GREENVILLE, Miss. — A college instructor suspected in the fatal shootings of a woman he lived with on Mississippi's Gulf Coast and a professor at Delta State University 300 miles away died Monday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound after trying to flee police, authorities said.
Shannon Lamb had earlier told authorities that he was "not going to jail."
Police in Greenville, Mississippi, were following Lamb as he was driving when the suspect pulled over and jumped out of his car, Lynn Buford, chief of the Delta State University police, told The Associated Press. One of the victims was killed at the university earlier Monday.
Police later heard one gunshot and then found Lamb, Buford said. They took him to a hospital in Greenville where he was pronounced dead of what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Buford said.
Police in Cleveland, Mississippi, where Delta State is located, confirmed Buford's information at a news conference early Tuesday, adding that Lamb died from a gunshot wound to the head.
Cleveland Police Chief Charles "Buster" Bingham said Lamb was returning from Arkansas when a license plate reader picked up his plate as he crossed a bridge over the Mississippi River.
Greenville police followed Lamb but did not try to apprehend him, Bingham said. Lamb then pulled over and took off on foot. Bingham said the police were waiting for backup when they heard a gunshot. When backup arrived, they searched and found Lamb with a gunshot wound to the head.
Lamb is suspected in the shooting deaths of two people in Mississippi including a woman he was living with and a teacher at Delta State. The shooting sent the entire campus into lockdown, which was lifted late Monday.