Police were conducting a traffic stop just before 10 p.m. when they heard shots fired nearby.
Officers responded to the 400 block of Gardner Street where they found a woman outside suffering from a gunshot wound.
The incident began as an altercation between two men, but the woman ended up being struck by at least one bullet in her upper torso, according to Shelby Police.
The woman was taken to Atrium Health in Charlotte and was in stable condition Thursday afternoon, police said.
Shell casings at the scene showed that at least 10 shots were fired.
Investigators have taken out warrants against Kuama Deondre Moore. Already being sought on a probation violation, the 20-year-old Mooresboro man will be charged with assault with a deadly weapon inflicting injury with intent to kill and possession of a firearm by a felon.
WADESBORO A person was transported to Atrium Health in Charlotte after an accident on 74 on the morning of April 7.
Colby Lance Guyton of Chadbourn, N.C. was driving a 2016 commercial truck which was loaded with logs. Guyton was traveling westbound, when a Wadesboro resident, Minnie Lou Huntley, attempted to make a left turn into the Anson Station PVA.
Huntley, in a 2000 Chevrolet passenger car, pulled into the travel lane of the commercial truck, causing the accident, according to Wadesboro Chief of Police Thedis Spencer.
Anson Rescue and the Wadesboro Fire Department was called on to the scene. One person was transported to Charlotte.
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Major Milestone: N.C.âs COVID-19 vaccine eligibility reaches everyone 16+ quicker than expected
Major milestone: Vaccines opening to everyone 16 and older By Caroline Hicks and Adam Thompson | April 6, 2021 at 7:28 PM EDT - Updated April 6 at 7:29 PM
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (WBTV) - In mid-December, North Carolina hospitals and healthcare providers received the first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.
It was the first vaccine approved by the FDA, and a big push toward fighting and slowing the virus that made it to North Carolina, and the nation, nine months sooner.
Currently, more than 5.2 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in North Carolina.