A truck loading a burned Georgia Tech police vehicle. AP Photo/Kevin D. Liles Three people were arrested during a protest after a vigil for a Georgia Tech student who was fatally shot by campus police, a university spokesman said.

Police shot and killed Scout Schultz late Saturday night after the 21-year-old student called 911 to report an armed and possibly intoxicated suspicious person, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has said.

Georgia Tech issued alerts urging students to shelter indoors Monday night because of violent protests. Video posted on social media showed a police vehicle burning in the street and officers pinning people to the ground as onlookers shouted at them.

After Monday's peaceful vigil, about 50 protesters marched to the campus police department, the university spokesman, Lance Wallace, said. A police vehicle was damaged, and two officers suffered minor injuries, with one taken to a hospital for treatment. Wallace said police restored order relatively quickly, and three people were arrested and charged with inciting a riot and battery of an officer.

In a statement released through their attorney, Chris Stewart, Schultz's family urged protesters to remain peaceful.

"We ask that those who wish to protest Scout's death do so peacefully," the statement said. "Answering violence with violence is not the answer."

The GBI has said an officer responding to a 911 call about 11:17 p.m. Saturday shot Schultz as the student advanced on officers with a knife and refused commands to put it down. Stewart said Monday that the GBI confirmed to him that Schultz was holding a multipurpose tool and that the knife blade was not out.

Schultz was the one who called 911, a GBI spokeswoman, Nelly Miles, said in an emailed statement Monday.

"In the call, Shultz describes the person as a white male with long blonde hair, white T-shirt, and blue jeans who is possibly intoxicated, holding a knife and possibly armed with a gun on his hip," Miles said, adding that three suicide notes were found in Schultz's dorm room.

Investigators recovered a multipurpose tool at the scene but didn't find any guns, Miles said.

Flanked by Schultz's parents Monday morning, Stewart said the officer who shot Schultz overreacted. Schultz was having a breakdown and was suicidal, but if the officer had used nonlethal force, Schultz could have received treatment, Stewart said.

"The mentally ill are looking for a way out when they're having a full breakdown, and there's no way you should be able to use a police officer to take your life when that person isn't threatened," Stewart said.

Georgia Tech police don't carry stun guns but are equipped with pepper spray, a spokesman told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Stewart says he plans to sue over the shooting.

Authorities have not identified the officer who shot Schultz. Georgia Tech on Monday refused to release personnel or disciplinary reports involving the officers, saying such information is exempt from Georgia's open-records law.

Schultz was the president of Pride Alliance at Georgia Tech. The fourth-year computer-engineering student used the name Scout rather than their given name, Scott, and preferred the pronouns they and them.

"I'm bisexual, nonbinary, and intersex," Schultz wrote in a Pride Alliance profile.

William Schultz told reporters Monday that his child had a 3.9 grade point average and was on track to graduate early in December.

Lynne Schultz told The Journal-Constitution over the weekend that her oldest child had struggled with depression and attempted suicide two years ago.

After that, Scout went through counseling, William said. Scout spent this past summer at home, and there were no obvious problems when school resumed last month, the elder Schultz said.

The GBI, through its crisis-intervention team, has trained about 10,000 local, state, and federal law enforcement officers since it began in 2004, the Atlanta newspaper reported. Some agencies require that training while others don't. It wasn't immediately clear whether the officers who responded Saturday had undergone such training.

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Associated Press writer Jeff Martin contributed to this report.