TALHASSEE, Fla. (WFLA) – Healing six people are ongoing as they were taken to hospital after a deadly mass shooting at Florida State University.
Tallahassee Memorial Hospital continued to treat six patients in the campus shooting, killing two other people.
All six injured people are hoping to fully recover after a deadly FSU mass shooting
“The response was very fast and the patient was relatively stable, so we managed to treat all the injuries involved with abdominal and facial surgery.”
Tallahassee Memorial Hospital staff say they needed surgery on six patients and three patients they saw.
The two deceased victims were identified as foodservice workers. One of them is Robert Morales, a campus dining employee. Morales’ family shared a social media post saying they love FSU and his work with his beautiful wife and daughter.
The second victim, Tiru Chabba, the 45-year-old father of two who lived in Greenville, South Carolina, worked for a vendor on campus.



“As ample enough.”
Climbing the road from campus, community members and FAMU students joined Seminole students, celebrating the victims of the shooting and the lost lives.
“This tragedy shows that gun violence is not limited to a particular community, and can happen anytime, anywhere, in any situation, especially if you live in a state where bullets prioritize over body,” a student member said.
FSU is staying up all night after shooting on campus
FSU students and supporters in the community are hoping for a change, especially from state lawmakers voting for gun law at the Capitol.
“Members, lawmakers, elected civil servants have not heard our cries, pain and frustration from local federations that have not heard,” said Andres, FSU’s Student Demand Behavior. “There is a law aimed at lowering the age limit to buy firearms up to 18. This, of course, completely ignores the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas safety law, which was passed by a few years ago with bipartisan support and Republican governor Rick Scott.
Hospital staff say they hope for a full recovery from all patients as students continue to demand change in honor of the lives and victims lost from Thursday’s catastrophic events.