Updated at 5:50 p.m. Sunday: Revised to include the suspect's identity and details of his criminal history.

An argument over child custody ended in a shooting Saturday night at the UNT Dallas campus, with a student wounded and a suspect in custody.

The shooting occurred shortly before 7 p.m. at the school off Camp Wisdom Road and University Hills Boulevard in southeast Oak Cliff.

Police identified the suspect Sunday as Chartle Burns Jones, 42, who was booked into the Dallas County Jail late Saturday night. He is charged with aggravated robbery and two counts of aggravated assault.

Chartle Burns Jones (Dallas County Jail)

Jones remained in jail Sunday in lieu of $300,000 bail.

According to Dallas police, Jones and another man were arguing about child custody when the argument escalated. Jones drew a gun and shot the other man, a 41-year-old UNT Dallas student, police said.

Jones then got into the victim's vehicle and fled on Camp Wisdom Road, only to crash into a car that was driven by the mother of the child, police said.

Neither the mother nor the child were hurt, police said.

The victim, whose name was not released, was taken to a hospital. He was in serious but stable condition, police said Sunday.

UNT Dallas President Bob Mong thanked first responders in a written statement for quickly arriving at the scene of the shooting.

Counselors were available to students since the shooting and would continue to be available Monday, Mong wrote in the statement.

Jones is not a student at UNT Dallas, according to the statement.

He pleaded guilty to two charges of family violence assault stemming from two incidents in October 2013. According to a police report, he grabbed his wife by the neck during an argument over her cell phone and threw her against a door, then impeded her breath.

Two days later, he approached her again and threatened her to drop the charges against him, according to a police report.

"You are not leaving here today. Do you want your kids to see you die here, or do you want to die somewhere else?" he asked her before slapping her in the face twice, according to the police report.

He was sentenced to 10 years of deferred community supervision and ordered to pay a $2,000 fine in a plea agreement in 2015, according to court records.