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Raleigh Police Probe Pre-Dawn Shooting Near Glenwood Avenue Parking Lot

Multiple rounds struck a car parked off Glenwood Avenue near Oak Park Road just before 1 a.m. Wednesday; Raleigh police are still working to determine if anyone was hit.

Lisa Park1 min read
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Raleigh Police Probe Pre-Dawn Shooting Near Glenwood Avenue Parking Lot
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Multiple rounds struck a parked car in a lot just off Glenwood Avenue near Oak Park Road at just before 1:00 a.m. Wednesday, sending Raleigh police units into one of the city's most active late-night corridors while bar and restaurant crowds were still dispersing.

The vehicle was left with visible bullet holes. Investigators said in early reporting they were still working to determine whether anyone inside the car had been injured. As of April 5, no arrests had been announced and police had not publicly identified a suspect or motive.

Detectives and patrol officers processed the scene and canvassed the surrounding blocks for witnesses. Raleigh police urged anyone who was in the Glenwood South area during those early morning hours to come forward, with a specific ask for residents and business owners holding doorbell or dash-camera footage to contact investigators. Anonymous tips can also be submitted through Crime Stoppers.

The parking lot sits within the Glenwood South district, a stretch of Raleigh dense with bars, restaurants, and foot traffic that routinely runs past midnight. A shooting timed to just before 1:00 a.m. means patrons were almost certainly nearby when the shots were fired, a detail that has sharpened concern among people who work and socialize along that corridor.

Incidents like this one, even when confirmed casualties are absent, tend to prompt longer conversations in Glenwood South about parking-lot lighting, private security cameras, and how closely individual businesses coordinate with Raleigh police on after-hours safety. The April 1 shooting arrived in that context and is now driving those questions again.

Investigators are continuing to process evidence. The Raleigh Police Department's non-emergency tip line and Crime Stoppers both remain open for anyone with information about the incident.

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