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College friend remembers ODU shooting victim Lt. Col. Brandon Shah in moving tribute: ‘He loved the Army’

March 14, 20263 Mins Read
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A longtime friend of Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, the Old Dominion University ROTC instructor who was viciously gunned down by a convicted ISIS supporter, offered an emotional on-air tribute to his late college buddy.

“He was a beautiful soul,” Carlos Ortiz, 41, told CNN’s Victor Blackwell in an interview Friday.

“He was always smiling. … He put his heart and all his effort into serving the United States Army. You couldn’t ask for a better soldier than Brandon.”

The two met as underclassmen at ODU in Norfolk.

“We trained together every day — ate together ever day,” said Ortiz. “He loved military. He loved the army.”

After graduation, they were deployed separately, but the pair stayed in touch.

Shah, 42, fulfilled his dream of being an Army pilot, flying an AH64 Apache helicopter over Iraq, Afghanistan and Eastern Europe during Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom and Atlantic Resolve.

He logged more than 1,200 flight hours, 600 of them on combat missions — in three different aircraft.

He collected more than 17 awards linked to his storied military career, including the Air Medal of Valor and three Army Commendation Medals.

Four years ago, he returned to ODU as a professor of Military Science to teach the next generation of service members.

Shah, 42, who was married and had a son in elementary school, was about to retire and build a “forever home” in his beloved Virginia, so he could spend time with his family, Ortiz said.

“And now that next chapter in his life will never happen,” he added.

Shah was in the middle of teaching an ROTC course at ODU on Thursday when Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, 36, stormed into the classroom and opened fire.

Shah was killed and two students were injured, before students subdued and killed Jalloh at the scene, naccording to federal authorities.

Another friend of Shah’s who served with him in Iraq, said he would not be surprised to learn that Shah was shot while protecting his students.

“Knowing him, he was that kind of guy,” De Quincey Dixon said, according to the Washington Post.

Jalloh — a naturalized citizen from Sierra Leone — became absorbed into the world of the terrorist organization ISIS after leaving his post as a combat engineer with the Virginia National Guard.

In 2017, he was sentenced to 11 years in prison for attempting to provide material support to ISIS, according to the DOJ. But he was granted early release from federal prison in 2024 after completing a drug treatment program.

FBI Director Kash Patel said in a post on X that the shooting is being investigated as an act of terrorism, and added: “In the meantime, please pray for the victims, their families, and the ODU community.”

Read the full article here

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