What began as a planned confrontation between young people ended in tragedy Monday morning when a fight at Leinbach Park in northwest Winston-Salem escalated into a shooting, leaving two people dead and several others injured.
Winston-Salem Police Department officers were called to the area around 9:52 a.m. on April 20 after reports of a fight in progress. While officers were still en route, the situation escalated into multiple people shooting at each other.
The incident sent shockwaves through a quiet suburban neighborhood and raised urgent questions about youth violence, access to firearms, and what it means when a public park becomes a crime scene on a Monday morning.
How a Fight Became a Mass Shooting
Authorities confirmed that two juveniles had agreed to meet at the park to fight. As officers headed to the scene, the call was upgraded to a shooting. The situation then escalated further, with multiple individuals firing at each other.
Several individuals — both victims and suspects — were identified and located in the aftermath. Due to the number of people involved, efforts were ongoing to account for everyone. By noon, police confirmed that all suspects and victims had been identified and located.
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation classified the incident as a mass shooting — a designation that underscores the scale of what unfolded in a place meant for recreation and community gatherings.
Schools Placed on Secure Hold
Jefferson Middle School and Mount Tabor High School, both located near the park, were placed on secure hold as a precaution. Classes at both schools continued as normal throughout the lockdown period.
Parents concerned for their children were given specific instructions for early pickup at Jefferson Middle School. Police were firm in reassuring the community that neither school was in direct danger and that students remained safe throughout the ordeal.
The proximity of the shooting to two schools added another layer of urgency to the response — and to the broader conversation about what communities owe their youngest members in terms of safety and protection.
Roads Closed, Park Shut Down
Several roads surrounding the park were closed following the shooting, including Norman Road at Robinhood Road and Sally Kirk Road at Norman Road. Leinbach Park itself was closed until further notice, while Robinhood Road remained open but experienced heavy traffic.
Law enforcement presence blanketed the area throughout the morning as investigators worked to piece together the full timeline of events.
A Community Left Grieving
Leinbach Park sits in a residential stretch northwest of downtown Winston-Salem, a city of roughly 250,000 long associated with the legacy of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. It is the kind of neighborhood where families walk dogs and kids ride bikes — not the kind of place anyone expects to become the site of a mass casualty event.
The shooting adds Winston-Salem to a growing list of cities confronting a painful reality — that gun violence does not confine itself to any particular zip code, and that the youngest members of a community are increasingly at the center of it.
Two lives were lost before noon on a Monday. The investigation remains active, and the full scope of injuries has yet to be confirmed. What is already clear is that this community, like so many others before it, will carry the weight of this day for a long time to come.
This is a developing story. Details may be updated as new information becomes available.
Source: The Associated Press

