SOUTHPORT: A mass shooting that shattered the evening tranquility of a seaside town in North Carolina was a “highly premeditated” attack that left three people dead and five injured, police said Sunday. The suspect accused of carrying out the attack at a waterfront bar was in custody.
Nigel Edge, 40, of Oak Island, is accused of opening fire Saturday night from a boat into a crowd at the American Fish Company in Southport, a historic port town about 30 miles south of Wilmington, Police Chief Todd Coring said.
At a press conference Sunday, Coring said the location was “targeted,” but did not elaborate.
Authorities said Edge piloted a small boat close to shore, where bars and restaurants line the waterfront, stopped briefly and fired before speeding away.
About half an hour later, a US Coast Guard crew spotted a person matching the suspect’s description pulling a boat from the water at a public ramp on Oak Island. The person was detained and turned over to Southport police, officials said.
Edge is charged with three counts of first-degree murder, five counts of attempted first-degree murder and five counts of assault with a deadly weapon. He could face additional charges, Coring said.
The weapon used was an assault rifle, though Coring did not specify the type.
“We understand this suspect identifies as a combat veteran. He self-identifies. Injured in the line of duty is what he’s saying. He suffers from PTSD,” Coring said, referring to post-traumatic stress disorder.
Edge is scheduled to appear in court on Monday, District Attorney Jon David said. He is being held without bond.
Among the five people hospitalized with injuries, at least one “is now clinging for their life,” David said. Some of the victims were vacationers from out of town.
Oak Island Police Chief Charlie Morris said the suspect was known to police as someone “who frequently hung out on our pier” and had filed lawsuits against the town and police department in recent years. He did not elaborate.
David said Edge had “minor contacts” with police in the past, "but nothing significant in his past which would give us any indication that he was capable of such horror.”
It was not immediately known whether Edge has an attorney. No attorney was listed on court documents, and a call to Legal Aid in Brunswick County went unanswered Sunday.
Investigators from multiple agencies, including the State Bureau of Investigation and the Coast Guard, remained on the water and at the scene on Sunday, collecting evidence and interviewing witnesses. Officials did not release the names of the victims.