ANTLERS, OK-- One teen is dead and another is in jail after police say a fight over a girl went terribly wrong last night. It happened in Pushmataha County in the small town of Antlers.









Friends and family gathered this morning in the parking lot where it happened. Hoping to find answers to what really happened during Thursday's shooting.









S chool officials in Antlers said Thursday night around 11 two teens got into an argument that turned violent when friends stepped in to stop the fight. 19-year-old, Wesley Long, was one of those friends who tried to stop it.









"He came up here to help a friend out and ended up dying over it," cousin Tarron Horner said.









The shooting happened behind the Antler's school gym in the back parking lot, and friends and cousins of Long said Long came up here to risk his life defending another friend.









The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation has taken over the case and said a Hugo teen has been arrested. Friends of the teen who was killed said the bullet went through his collar bone and came out through his back.









"He was a good kid, he'd help anybody out and he lived life to the fullest," Horner said.









Friends said Long didn't deserve to be killed and the shooter was blinded by his jealousy.









"Rage or jealousy would get into hands and blind you from what's really in front of you when it's a human being living his life, and when you pull the trigger and take someone's life you're only doing it to yourself. You're taking your own life as well," best friend Anthony Aguero said.









Antlers superintendent, Cary Ammons, said neither Long nor his shooter were students at the high school. He believes the teens chose to meet in this parking lot just as a "meet up location”.









"One party used to be here but is no longer here. But the other party is not from Antlers so just a location is why the school is involved," Ammons said.









Friends said they do not have all the answers but want justice for Long. They say they're

frustrated they cannot get any calls back from law enforcement, but the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation said they are still investigating.



