Authorities say a former North Carolina law enforcement officer planned to kill Black people in a mass shooting at a major New Orleans festival but was arrested at a Florida hotel with a handgun and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
Authorities in several states did not name the event, but the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, commonly known as Jazz Fest, runs from Thursday through May 3. The gathering attracted about 460,000 people last year, organizers said.
Christopher Gillum of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, was wanted for âterroristic threats,â the Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Office in Florida posted online Thursday. Federal authorities told the sheriffs office that Gillum was in the Florida Panhandle âheading to do a mass shooting at a large festival in Louisiana.â The sheriffs office did not name the federal agency, and the FBI office in New Orleans did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Okaloosa sheriffâs office said Gillum was arrested without incident Wednesday night at a hotel in Destin, and posted a photo of him being led away in handcuffs. Deputies recovered a handgun and about 200 rounds of ammunition from the hotel room, the statement said.
Gillum was arrested as a fugitive from justice and will be extradited to Louisiana to face charges there, the sheriffâs office said. It was not immediately known if he had a lawyer. The Associated Press left a message at phone numbers listed for him.
Gillumâs family reported him missing on Tuesday and he had a history of self-harm, according to Lt. Clint Lyons of the Alamance County Sheriffâs Office in North Carolina. Gillumâs family told law enforcement he had a gun and âexpressed recent threats to harm âBlack people,ââ according to a bulletin from police in Burlington, North Carolina.
Lyons said Gillum crossed state lines before his agency could prepare the paperwork to involuntarily commit him to psychiatric treatment. Lyons said that there were no criminal grounds to detain Gillum despite his comments about Black people âbecause there was no victim.â
âBut we felt that there was definitely something there that needed to be shared, so thatâs what we did,â Lyons said.
Gillum was located and stopped by law enforcement in Oklaloosa County on Wednesday, according to Lyons and the Burlington police bulletin.
However, Gillum âdid not present any grounds for involuntary commitment or criminal chargesâ and was allowed to continue on his way, the bulletin stated. Gillum told officers that he was âenroute to New Orleans,â the report added.
Okaloosa deputies were initially asked to make a âwelfare checkâ on Gillum Wednesday morning and were ânot awareâ of any threats he had made, sheriff spokesperson Michele Nicholson said. Later that day, after the sheriff’s office learned Gillum was being investigated, deputies surveilled him until a signed warrant arrived from Louisiana, she added.
Gillum had been hired as a detention officer by the sheriffâs office in Orange County, North Carolina, in October 2023 but he left in July 2024, department spokesperson Alicia L. Stemper said.
âWe hired him again as a deputy on Jan. 13, 2025,â she said in an email. âHe resigned his position on Sept. 21, 2025, and we terminated him accordingly.â
Gillum also served as a sworn police officer for Chapel Hill from 2004 until his resignation in 2019, town communications manager Alex Carrasquillo said.
âHe returned as a non-sworn employee in 2024 before leaving for another job by the end of that year,â Carrasquillo said in an email.
Louisiana State Police spokesperson Trooper Danny Berrincha said the agency is still investigating the episode with the FBI.
âAt this time, there are no known direct threats to any festivals in Louisiana,â he added.
In a statement, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival said it works closely with law enforcement and applauded their efforts, saying âwe look forward to another safe and joyful Jazz Fest.â
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Mustian reported from Natchitoches, Louisiana, and McCormack from Concord, New Hampshire. Associated Press writer Allen G. Breed in Wake Forest, North Carolina, contributed.
