Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
Southern University

Shotgun Blast Kills Two Southern University Students During Campus Protest Over Funding Inequity

LAshootingemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On November 16, 1972, two 20-year-old students at Southern University in Baton Rouge were killed by a shotgun blast during a campus protest over the institution's grossly unequal funding compared to Louisiana State University. Leonard Brown and Denver Smith were killed when sheriff's deputies fired into the crowd after a tear gas canister was hurled back at officers. No one was ever charged in their deaths, and a 2022 investigation by the LSU Cold Case Project using nearly 2,700 pages of previously undisclosed documents found that the FBI had narrowed its search to several sheriff's deputies but could not prove which one fired the fatal shot.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
2
Injured
0
Institution
Southern University and A&M College
Hbcu · LA
~8,500 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTother
Approximate reconstruction223 chars
Law enforcement officers are on campus. Students should move away from the area in front of Smith-Brown Memorial Union. The situation is becoming dangerous. Do not approach law enforcement. Move back toward the dormitories.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Southern University students had been protesting for weeks over funding disparities: the state allocated significantly less per-student funding to Southern, the largest HBCU in the country, than to LSU
On November 16, sheriff's deputies were looking for protest leaders Rickey Hill and Herget Harris of the Students United protest group when four other students were being taken to jail
The immediate trigger of the shooting was a student hurling a tear gas canister back at officers; an officer then fired a shotgun blast into the crowd
UPDATEother
Approximate reconstruction196 chars
Students have been shot. Emergency services are responding. All students must immediately return to their dormitories and remain there. The campus is under emergency conditions. Do not go outside.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Leonard Brown and Denver Smith, both 20 years old, were killed by the shotgun blast; the exact identity of the officer who fired was never definitively established despite a lengthy FBI investigation
The 2022 LSU Cold Case Project investigation, using 2,700 pages of previously undisclosed documents, narrowed the FBI's list of suspects to several sheriff's deputies but could not prove which one fired
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards apologized to the families of the victims in November 2022, fifty years after the killings, on behalf of the state of Louisiana
Context

Background

The 1972 Southern University shooting occurred during a weeks-long campus protest over the state's stark disparity in funding between Southern University, the world's largest historically Black university, and Louisiana State University. Students had organized under the name Students United, demanding that the state bring Southern's per-student funding to parity with LSU. On November 16, sheriff's deputies came to campus to arrest protest leaders. Chaos ensued when a tear gas canister was thrown back at officers, and a shotgun blast killed 20-year-old students Leonard Brown and Denver Smith. No one was ever charged in their deaths. The LSU Cold Case Project, launched to coincide with the 50th anniversary, obtained nearly 2,700 pages of previously undisclosed federal documents showing that the FBI had narrowed its investigation to several Baton Rouge sheriff's deputies but could not prove which officer fired the fatal shot. A PBS documentary cast renewed light on the case. In November 2022, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards formally apologized to the families on behalf of the state. No mass notification system existed at Southern University in 1972; all communication relied on word of mouth, administration announcements, and physical presence.
Analysis

Key Findings

Two 20-year-old Southern University students, Leonard Brown and Denver Smith, were killed by a shotgun blast during a campus protest over funding inequity on November 16, 1972
No one was ever charged with the deaths; a 2022 LSU Cold Case Project investigation using 2,700 pages of previously undisclosed documents found the FBI had suspects but no definitive evidence
No mass notification system existed at Southern University in 1972; all campus communication relied on word of mouth and administration announcements
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards issued a formal state apology to the families fifty years later, in November 2022
Outcome
No one was ever charged with the deaths of Leonard Brown and Denver Smith. The LSU Cold Case Project's 2022 investigation revealed that the FBI had identified likely suspects but could not prove which officer fired the fatal shot. Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards apologized to the families in 2022.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Source
  2. News
  3. Official
  4. Source
  5. News
Tags
shootingcivil-unresthbcuproteststate-violencepre-cleryno-alert-system1972historicallouisianafunding-equitycold-case
Added June 2026Updated June 2026Via ingestion