Black student found hanging at Delta State; no foul play suspected

A main stadium for Delta State university is seen in Cleveland, Mississippi. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

Police are investigating the death of a Black college student found hanging from a tree at Delta State University in Mississippi, a case that has fueled online speculation tied to the state’s Jim Crow-era racial violence, though authorities say there is no initial evidence of a crime.

What they're saying:

The campus police chief said there are no signs of foul play in the death of the 21-year-old student, whose body was discovered by a staff member early Monday near the campus pickleball courts.

Delta State Police Chief Michael Peeler said there was also no evidence of an ongoing threat to students and faculty. He told reporters Monday the death investigation was being assisted by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation as well as local police and sheriff’s deputies.

A woman who answered the phone at the campus police department on Tuesday said the agency had no further information to release.

Dig deeper:

Online rumors that the student was found with broken limbs were disputed by Bolivar County Coroner Randolph Seals Jr. In a statement cited by local news outlets, Seals said his office conducted a preliminary examination and concluded the student did not suffer any lacerations, contusions, compound fractures, broken bones or injuries consistent with an assault.

The coroner did not immediately return phone messages Tuesday from The Associated Press.

The other side:

Attempts to reach the student’s family weren’t immediately successful. A woman identifying herself as a cousin told the AP in an online message that the family wasn’t speaking to reporters. Two others who said they were distant relatives declined to comment when reached by phone.

What's next:

The university is scheduled to hold a news conference Wednesday at 10 a.m. local time to provide further details. 

In a video posted Tuesday to the university’s Facebook page, Delta State President Dan Ennis said the university was resuming operations while continuing to mourn. He said campus officials were staying in touch with the student’s family.

"We know that we can never fully heal this wound," Ennis said. "We continue to cooperate with investigators. We continue to make sure that all the information necessary is given to authorities. And we continue to hope for answers."

Classes were canceled Monday at the university, as were events to celebrate the 100th anniversary of its opening as Delta State Teachers College in September 1925.

The backstory:

Located in the heart of the Mississippi Delta near the Arkansas state line, Delta State had a fall 2024 enrollment of more than 2,600 students, 42% of them Black.

Numerous social media posts about the case evoked a darker period in U.S. history when killings of Black people, almost exclusively at the hands of white male vigilantes, inflicted racial terror in Mississippi and other parts of the Deep South.

The Delta State campus in Cleveland is located only about 30 miles (48 kilometers) from a site closely associated with the infamous lynching of Emmett Till. A sign at the Tallahatchie River landing near Glendora commemorates the discovery 70 years ago of Till’s mutilated body in the water.

The Source: The information in this story comes primarily from statements by Delta State University Police Chief Michael Peeler, Bolivar County Coroner Randolph Seals Jr., and Delta State President Dan Ennis, as reported by the Associated Press. This story was reported from Los Angeles. 

MississippiNews