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Driver in Short North mass shooting turns himself in

A storefront window broken.
Mark Ferenchik
/
WOSU
This storefront is in the 1100 block on North High Street was broken during a shooting
incident.

A Groveport man turned himself in at Columbus police headquarters Sunday and identified himself as the driver of a car seen fleeing an early morning shooting in the Short North that sent 10 people to hospitals, one in critical condition, police said.

Deangelo Russell, 19, was arraigned Monday on a charge of obstructing official business, according to Franklin County Municipal Court records.

A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for July 2.

Columbus Police posted on X that the car, a Honda Civic, also was recovered.

Columbus police said officers dispatched to the Short North Arts District north of the downtown area just before 2:30 a.m. Sunday found six people with gunshot wounds. They later discovered that four other victims had also been taken to hospitals.

The eight adult and two juvenile victims were treated at three different hospitals in the city, police said. The victims ranged in age from 16 to 27. One adult was in critical condition and the other nine were listed as stable. All were expected to survive, police said.

Columbus Police Sgt. Joe Albert told reporters that a male suspect dressed in black was seen getting into a car that fled at high speed. Police pursued the car, which at one point went the wrong way on a street, then got onto Interstate 670 and fled west.

Anyone with information or video from the shooting was asked to contact the police felony assault unit.

Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther posted a statement on social media urging people to come forward with any information that might hold the perpetrators accountable.

“The gun violence that occurred early this morning in the Short North is outrageous, it’s unacceptable, and it must stop,” he said.

Ginther also called for more action from state and federal governments to keep guns off the streets and out of the hands of criminals. He called on parents “to step up – to know where their kids and teens are, and to enforce a curfew in their homes.”

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