Crime

How a fight for police videos led to 2 attorneys being shot outside Wake courthouse

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.

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  • A 2021 Rolesville verbal altercation between neighbors spawned the lawsuit.
  • The two attorneys shot were from Fox Rothschild, per Rolesville's release.
  • Court orders and recovered body‑camera footage drove ongoing motions and appeals.

The lawsuit that led to two attorneys being shot outside the Wake County courthouse Friday started with a 2021 altercation between a Rolesville woman and her neighbors.

The attorneys were shot around 10:30 a.m. Friday, according to Raleigh police and the town of Rolesville.

The suspect, Gwendolyn White, became belligerent during a hearing that involved the attorneys. She left the courthouse and returned in her car and shot them, according to information provided by the municipalities. Police charged White with two counts of attempting to murder Jeffrey Whitley and Mary Harris.

A spokesperson for the town of Rolesville confirmed the hearing involved an ongoing civil suit filed by White against the town’s police department.

A Rolesville media release states the attorneys who were shot are from the private firm Fox Rothschild, which has represented the town for decades. The firm did not respond to messages from The News & Observer on Friday.

Raleigh police investigating the scene of a reported shooting on Fayetteville Street downtown May 22, 2026. Multiple suspects were in custody as of Friday morning, police said.
Raleigh police investigating the scene of a reported shooting on Fayetteville Street downtown May 22, 2026. Multiple suspects were in custody as of Friday morning, police said. Virginia Bridges vbridges@newsobserver.com

About the case White v. Rolesville Police Department

According to court documents, the court case goes back to a March 3, 2021, incident in which the Rolesville Police Department responded to a “verbal altercation” between White and her neighbors.

Nearly a year later, in February 2022, White filed a petition seeking law enforcement recordings from the police department in the town in northeastern Wake County, according to court records.

Police responded that they had deleted the footage after 30 days, under the town’s policy to dispose of footage that doesn’t have evidentiary value, isn’t made part of a case or hasn’t been requested to be burned to a CD, the town’s attorney wrote in court filings.

On Feb. 24, 2022, a judge presided over a hearing that police didn’t attend “due to technical difficulties,” according to a document filed by Harris, the Fox Rothschild attorney representing the town in the case.

The judge ordered at the 2022 hearing that all body-camera footage be released.

Rolesville police worked with information technology providers to recover the deleted footage. By the following April, officials had recovered three videos and given those to their attorney, who turned it over to the judge to review, Harris wrote in a court filing.

Police take photos of a vehicle on Fayetteville St. in downtown Raleigh Friday morning, May 22, 2026. According to Raleigh police, a suspect is in custody after allegedly shooting two individuals involved in a Wake County court case in downtown Raleigh.
Police take photos of a vehicle on Fayetteville St. in downtown Raleigh Friday morning, May 22, 2026. According to Raleigh police, a suspect is in custody after allegedly shooting two individuals involved in a Wake County court case in downtown Raleigh. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

Gwendolyn White seeks new trial, accuses judge of bias

Around August 2025, White filed a motion accusing the town of contempt of court, saying that Rolesville hadn’t provided her with all the videos.

On Jan. 12, a judge ordered the town to provide White with a jump drive with the videos it had found, an affidavit from the police chief and a related form stated.

White later reached out to the town and said the jump drive didn’t contain any footage, so the town shared the footage via a file-sharing platform, which White downloaded on Jan. 15, Harris said in court documents.

The next day, White filed an appeal for a new trial. The town objected, saying the police department had “acted with the best intentions in response” to her requests. White filed another motion accusing one of the town’s attorneys of improperly communicating with the judge before the January hearing. White asked Judge Jennifer Bedford to recuse herself from future hearings, alleging personal bias and other concerns.

A hearing on the motion for a new trial was scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Friday in the Wake County Courthouse, the court calendar states.

Read Next

This story was originally published May 22, 2026 at 5:34 PM.

Virginia Bridges
The News & Observer
Virginia Bridges covers what is and isn’t working in North Carolina’s criminal justice system for The News & Observer’s and The Charlotte Observer’s investigation team. She has worked for newspapers for more than 20 years. The N.C. State Bar Association awarded her the Media & Law Award for Best Series in 2018, 2020 and 2025.
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