SECOND Campus Shooting — Still No Arrests

Crime scene with evidence markers and a bullet casing on the ground
SHOCKING CAMPUS SHOOTING

Another mass shooting near a college campus exposes the ongoing failure to protect students and communities from escalating gun violence, this time leaving six injured—including two Illinois State University students—in what has become a disturbing pattern of lawlessness in Illinois.

Story Snapshot

  • Six people were injured in a mass shooting at a gathering in Normal, Illinois, on March 22, 2026, including two ISU students and two juveniles
  • No arrests have been made, and suspects remain unidentified as the investigation continues with the Normal Police Department leading the effort
  • The third mass shooting incident in the United States on the same day, highlighting the nationwide gun violence crisis
  • ISU community faces a second major shooting incident in weeks after the February 14 off-campus shooting, which injured one juvenile
  • Illinois State Police data reveals escalating firearm violence statewide, with 10+ shooting-related arrests from January to March 2026

Mass Shooting Rocks College Town

Normal Police Department responded to a mass shooting at a gathering near Illinois State University on March 22, 2026, where six individuals sustained gunshot injuries. Two ISU students were among the victims, along with two juveniles, though fortunately, no fatalities occurred.

The shooting happened in Normal, a college town of approximately 52,000 residents adjacent to Bloomington, where ISU’s campus houses over 20,000 students. Authorities have not released suspect information or made arrests, leaving the community on edge as the investigation unfolds under local police jurisdiction.

Pattern of Violence Near Campus

This incident marks the second significant shooting near ISU within weeks. On February 14, 2026, a 16-year-old girl was injured at The Flats at ISU, an off-campus apartment complex at 709 S. Main Street, at 12:58 a.m. ISU Police issued alerts at 1:03 a.m. and 2:33 a.m., but no suspects were identified.

Detective Matt Badalamenti handled that case, which remains unsolved. The recurring violence at off-campus housing locations highlights security vulnerabilities in student apartment complexes where social gatherings frequently occur, raising serious questions about adequate protection for young people.

Statewide Gun Violence Surge

Illinois State Police records document alarming firearm violence trends across the state in early 2026. From January through March, ISP investigated over ten shooting-related arrests or incidents, frequently linked to arguments and road-rage confrontations on major highways including I-90/94 and I-55.

These arrests occurred on March 11 and February 9, respectively, demonstrating a pattern of escalating violent crime. The March 22 Normal shooting coincided with two other mass shootings nationwide that same day in New Mexico and Georgia, making it one of over 20 mass shootings recorded nationally by late March 2026.

Community Impact and Safety Concerns

The shooting affects ISU’s entire student population and the broader Normal-Bloomington community, creating fear among families who send their children to college expecting safe environments.

Short-term consequences include heightened campus security alerts and potential lockdown protocols, while long-term implications involve increased scrutiny of off-campus housing security measures and juvenile access to firearms.

The economic costs of policing and medical treatment, combined with potential enrollment concerns, place additional burdens on the community. This violence fuels ongoing Illinois gun policy debates, particularly as law-abiding citizens question whether current approaches adequately address criminal gun use while respecting constitutional rights.

Parents and students deserve answers about how gatherings devolve into shooting scenes and why suspects consistently evade capture. The Normal Police Department continues investigating, but the lack of progress mirrors the unresolved February incident.

ISU officials confirmed the university did not send emergency alerts for this off-campus event, a decision that warrants examination given two students were injured. As Illinois grapples with this violence wave, communities are left wondering when law enforcement will restore order and hold perpetrators accountable, rather than cataloging incidents without resolution.

Sources:

1 person injured in shooting at off-campus apartment near ISU overnight

Illinois State Police Press Releases 2026

List of mass shootings in the United States in 2026