Ex-officer planned to kill Black people in mass shooting at a New
Orleans festival, authorities say
[April 24, 2026]
By JACK BROOK, JIM MUSTIAN and KATHY McCORMACK
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Authorities say a former North Carolina law
enforcement officer planned to kill Black people in a mass shooting at a
major New Orleans festival but was arrested at a Florida hotel with a
handgun and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
Authorities in several states did not name the event, but the New
Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, commonly known as Jazz Fest, runs from
Thursday through May 3. The gathering attracted about 460,000 people
last year, organizers said.
Christopher Gillum of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, was wanted for
“terroristic threats,” the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office in Florida
posted online Thursday. Federal authorities told the sheriff's office
that Gillum, who is white, was in the Florida Panhandle “heading to do a
mass shooting at a large festival in Louisiana.” The FBI in New Orleans
said it's working on the investigation with law enforcement across the
three states.
The Okaloosa sheriff’s office said Gillum was arrested without incident
Wednesday night at a hotel in the city of Destin, and posted a photo of
him being led away in handcuffs. Deputies recovered a handgun and about
200 rounds of ammunition from the hotel room, the statement said.
Gillum was arrested as a fugitive from justice and will be extradited to
Louisiana to face charges there, the sheriff’s office said. It was not
immediately known if he had a lawyer. The Associated Press left a
message at phone numbers listed for him.
Gillum’s family reported him missing on Tuesday and he has a history of
self-harm, according to Lt. Clint Lyons of the Alamance County Sheriff’s
Office in North Carolina. Gillum’s family told law enforcement he had a
gun and had “expressed recent threats to harm ‘Black people,’” according
to a bulletin from police in Burlington, North Carolina.

Lyons said Gillum left the state before his agency could prepare the
paperwork to involuntarily commit him to psychiatric treatment. Lyons
said there were no criminal grounds to detain Gillum despite his
comments about Black people “because there was no victim,” however the
agency decided it needed to spread the word about him to other
departments.
Gillum was located and stopped by law enforcement in Oklaloosa County on
Wednesday, according to Lyons and the Burlington police bulletin.
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This photo provided by the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office shows
Christopher Gillum being arrested Wednesday, April 22, 2026, at a
hotel in Destin, Fla. (Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office via AP)

However, he “did not present any grounds for involuntary commitment
or criminal charges” and was allowed to continue on his way, the
bulletin stated. Gillum told officers he was “enroute to New
Orleans,” the report added.
Okaloosa deputies were initially asked to make a “welfare check” on
him Wednesday morning but they didn't know he'd been making violent
threats, sheriff spokesperson Michele Nicholson said. Later that
day, after the sheriff's office learned Gillum was being
investigated, deputies surveilled him until an arrest warrant
arrived from Louisiana, she added.
“At this time, there are no known direct threats to any festivals in
Louisiana,” State Police spokesperson Trooper Danny Berrincha said.
Gillum served as a sworn police officer in Chapel Hill from 2004
until his resignation in 2019, town spokesperson Alex Carrasquillo
said.
He worked as a police officer in the coastal town of Carolina Beach
from October 2019 until his resignation the following October, town
administrative services officer Sheila Nicholson said. Gillum became
a detention officer in October 2023 with the Orange County, North
Carolina, sheriff’s office and left in July 2024, spokesperson
Alicia L. Stemper said.
He returned the Chapel Hill police force as a non-sworn employee in
2024 before leaving again by the end of the year, Carrasquillo said.
He was then rehired as an Orange County sheriff's deputy in January
2025 but resigned that September, she said.
___
Mustian reported from Natchitoches, Louisiana, and McCormack from
Concord, New Hampshire. Associated Press writer Allen G. Breed in
Wake Forest, North Carolina, contributed.
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