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Tag: Queens University of Charlotte

  • Hit-and-run claims life of former Queens University student athlete, CMPD says

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    Queens University Facebook screengrab

    A former student athlete at Queens University of Charlotte was killed in a hit-and-run while walking along The Plaza in Charlotte, investigators say.

    Lance Andreas Jesus Sotelo, 25, died at the scene, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said in a Jan. 15 news release.

    Sotelo was a past member of the Men’s Cross Country and Track and Field teams at Queens University, and had competed as recently as 2025, the university reports.

    The deadly crash occurred around 5:45 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14, in the 3300 block of The Plaza, which is largely commercial, maps show.

    “Upon arrival, officers located a severely injured pedestrian … in the roadway. MEDIC responded and pronounced Mr. Sotelo deceased on the scene,” CMPD said.

    “The preliminary investigation indicates that the vehicle that struck Mr. Sotelo was a white Chevrolet Impala. The Impala was traveling southwest on The Plaza at East 36th Street when the vehicle ran a red light at the intersection and struck Mr. Sotelo, before fleeing the scene.”

    On Thursday, Jan. 15, Q’Laundra Kadri Hood, 28, was identified as the driver, CMPD said. Hood turned herself in at the Hickory Grove Division office, officials said.

    She has been charged with:

    • Felony hit-and-run
    • Involuntary manslaughter
    • No operator’s license
    • Failing to stop at a red light

    A 2023 Facebook post by Queens University of Charlotte noted Sotelo was a student-athlete, resident assistant and student body president at the time. He graduated in 2023, then began work on an MBA from the McColl School of Business, the university reported. His is originally from Dalton, Georgia, where he earned Cross Country MVP honors in high school, according to the Cross Country team roster.

    “I would never want to be at a school where I am just a number. I love being somewhere where I am ‘somebody.’ Somebody that people know, somebody that people say ‘hi’ to across campus, and somebody who is able to have an impact,” Sotelo was quoted saying in a 2023 article published by the university.

    A GoFundMe campaign is raising money for funeral expenses. “He had no life insurance and had just landed a nice job the day he was struck,” the campaign reports. “He loved to run, and that is what he was doing when he was killed.”

    Among those posting tributes to Sotelo on social media was Juan Diego “JD” Mazuera Arias, councilman for Charlotte’s District 5.

    “I knew Lance. We weren’t close, but we attended Queens University of Charlotte together. I last saw him at an event last December. He should still be here,” Arias wrote in a Facebook post.

    “It was preventable. … Lance was killed on a street that is part of Charlotte’s High Injury Network — roads we already know are dangerous. That is a failure of design and a failure of urgency.”

    Mark Price

    The Charlotte Observer

    Mark Price is a National Reporter for McClatchy News. He joined the network of newspapers in 1991 at The Charlotte Observer, covering beats including schools, crime, immigration, LGBTQ issues, homelessness and nonprofits. He graduated from the University of Memphis with majors in journalism and art history, and a minor in geology.

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    Mark Price

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  • See the Charlotte wildlife captured on college student’s motion-triggered cameras

    See the Charlotte wildlife captured on college student’s motion-triggered cameras

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    I’ve studied conservation biology for the last four years in the middle of Charlotte, on a university campus shared with thousands of birds and animals. Learning more about their lives was one of my goals in this last semester before I leave these tiny classmates behind.

    Environmental organizations describe how, after a big moment during the beginning of the pandemic, birding continues to surge in popularity among millennial 30- and 40-somethings. What I discovered during a month-long, garden-variety experiment explains why watching birds and wildlife continues as a simple, joyful activity for more than a third of adult Americans.

    Six motion-triggered wildlife cameras

    As the spring equinox approached on March 19, I acquired six wildlife cameras from our biology department and placed them in locations around four academic buildings at Queens University of Charlotte. They were strapped to small trees near the building foundations, only a couple of inches above the ground.

    My educated guess was that these locations would capture movement along what biologists call a habitat corridor or what one professor calls the “squirrel highway.”

    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a squirrel as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University.
    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a squirrel as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University. Finian Curran

    If you weighed less than a pound and shared an environment populated by creatures between five and 200 times your size, several of which would like to eat you, where would you hang out? The margins between building foundations and bushes provide mostly quiet pathways, access to food sources, shelter from weather and cover from predators such as hawks and owls.

    As it turns out, I was right, and my motion-triggered cameras shot 4,600 images, a little less than half of which displayed wildlife. They captured raccoons, squirrels, rabbits, stray cats, pet dogs and two humans playing what looked like hide-and-seek. Among bird species, the cameras spotted brown thrashers, northern cardinals (male), dark-eyed juncos, mourning doves, bluejays, Carolina wrens and many American robins.

    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a male Northern cardinal as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University.
    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a male Northern cardinal as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University. Finian Curran

    This is clearly not an exotic list nor an exhaustive academic study. If you live or work in Mecklenburg County, you’ll easily spot all of these and many more. I was surprised and disappointed not to have photographed any images of chipmunks because I frequently spot them on campus. Although we often see hawks and owls, I didn’t capture any because these paths were low and hidden.

    Animal and bird behavior at night

    But what I discovered provided a joyful reminder of Thoreau’s Walden, and it reinforces why I want to do environmental field research as a career.

    Raccoons are nocturnal; our cameras captured them only in the wee hours between midnight and 4 a.m. They have excellent hearing and night vision, and they patrol the wildlife corridor. Our infrared cameras showed their keen eyes wide open.

    Squirrels are especially tame on university campuses. They didn’t provide much news, but they have a hammy knack for photobombing our cameras.

    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a squirrel as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University.
    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a squirrel as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University. Finian Curran

    Songbirds are mostly diurnal, so their images were captured during the day, with a few extending into early evening. I use a bird identification app called Merlin Bird ID, developed by the ornithology lab at Cornell University. Bluejays are among my favorites, although I don’t spot them as much as I would like in Charlotte.

    I captured two bluejay images at around noon on a Monday and a Friday. This bluejay appeared to be gathering twigs and materials to build a nest. Based on information from Cornell, I assume it was a male. Although both sexes look about the same, males tend to gather materials, and females construct the material into nests.

    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a bluejay as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University.
    Biologist Finian Curran captured a photo of a bluejay as part of an urban wildlife photography experiment at Queens University. Finian Curran

    Of my sample of 4,600 wildlife images, 70 displayed wildlife clearly. Most of these images were captured by a single camera at the corner of an academic building on the edge of the campus. All our cameras were operating properly, so my theory is that this location is popular because it’s less frequented by human foot traffic and because it’s close to sources of food and water.

    Future environmental experiments

    I am excited about how artificial intelligence-based archival and identification programs will support experiments in the future. AI programs will log times, dates, and species identification and correlate patterns and behaviors across a topographic landscape of wildlife cameras.

    My graduation ceremony was Saturday, May 4, and I look forward to a career in the outdoors. On your visits to university and high school campuses in this season of graduations, take a moment to thank the tiny creatures who cohabitate with us. I appreciate their unsung contributions to my education.

    Finian Curran is a 2024 graduate of Queens University of Charlotte, which provides the news service in support of local community news.

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    Finian Curran/Queens University News Service

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