Andre Green cause of death linked to murder

Publish date: 2024-02-22

Andre Green’s cause of death has been linked to murder. Green was discovered dead inside the Rolling Hills Apartments on John Knox Road, the institution said on Tuesday. TPD originally classified this death as suspicious, but it is currently being classified as a homicide. TPD reports that no arrests have been made thus far.

Green spent more than 17 years working at FAMU. He served as the associate dean of students and welcomed many FAMU students to the university. He oversaw orientations for incoming pupils. Whether it was through orientation or mentoring them over the course of four years, Green had a profound impact on the lives of numerous students.

FAMU senior Hayley Giannuzzi told WCTV that she first met Green when she was a freshman. She claimed that he gave her the confidence to speak out for the causes she believed in.

Andre Green cause of death linked to murder

Meanwhile, emerging reports from some quarters suggest that Andre Green‘s death is linked to a murder. Many of his students and colleagues at FAMU remember him as a leader, mentor, brother, and father figure. According to authorities, he was slain in his Northside apartment on Tuesday afternoon.

The 41-year-old Green’s 17 years of service to the university as director of Student Union Activities & New Student Orientation had a lasting impression on the HBCU campus in Tallahassee.

As she reflected on the lengthy hours she and Green used to put on Homecoming initiatives together, FAMU’s Assistant Vice President of Alumni Affairs and University Advancement Carmen Cummings said that Green “sacrificed himself a whole lot to make others happy.”

“He was like a brother, and we looked out for each other. That’s why it hurts so bad, and the pain cuts like a knife,” Cummings told the Tallahassee Democrat with a trembling voice. “Not all colleagues touch your heart like Dre did.”

Tuesday afternoon, FAMU President Larry Robinson and Vice President for Student Affairs William E. Hudson Jr. issued a statement on behalf of the university expressing their sincere sympathies to Andre Green’s family, students, and friends. Hudson, a native of Jackson County who worked at FSU’s Center for Academic Retention and Enhancement program while Green was an undergraduate student there, claimed to have known Green for over 15 years and been good friends with him.

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