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The man charged with opening fire at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, killing two and wounding four, was intrigued by foreign languages, not weapons, his grandfather said Tuesday.
Trystan Andrew Terrell, 22, was charged with two counts of murder and four counts of attempted murder after firing into a UNC Charlotte classroom on the last day of classes.
Terrell's grandfather Paul Rold told The Associated Press that his grandson was attending UNC Charlotte and had taught himself French and Portuguese with the help of a language learning program Rold had bought for him.
Rold, who lives in Texas and was unaware of the shooting until the AP contacted him, said his grandson never showed any interest in guns or weapons of any kind.
"You're describing someone foreign to me," Rold told the AP Tuesday night. "This is not in his DNA."
He said the 22-year-old had moved from Texas to Charlotte with his father about two years ago after his mother died. Officials told NBC affiliate WCNC that Terrell was a history major at UNC Charlotte but had dropped out this semester.
University police Chief Jeffrey A. Baker described Terrell as "not somebody that is on our radar."
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Tristan Field, 19, who was in the campus' Kennedy Building, when shots rang out from the other side of the room, told NBC News that he didn't hear the gunman say a word.
"He just started shooting," Field said.
Three of the people wounded were in critical condition late Tuesday, police said. A fourth person suffered less serious injuries.
Terrell was also charged with four counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, possession of a firearm on educational property and discharging a firearm on educational property, according to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department.