The Arrest That Prevented a Potential Tragedy
On November 24, 2025, a routine traffic stop in Canby Park West, Wilmington, Delaware, uncovered a chilling plot targeting the University of Delaware Police Department. New Castle County police officers approached a white Toyota Tacoma parked unlawfully after park hours. The driver, 25-year-old University of Delaware undergraduate Luqmaan Khan, appeared nervous and refused to exit the vehicle, leading to a struggle before his arrest.
A search revealed a loaded Glock .357 handgun modified for rapid fire, extended magazines holding 27 rounds each, 9mm ammunition, body armor plates, binoculars, and a laptop. Most alarmingly, a notebook detailed 'urban warfare' tactics, a sketched diagram of the UD Police Department with entry and exit points, and phrases like 'kill all - martyrdom.' Khan reportedly told investigators that achieving martyrdom was 'one of the greatest things you can do.'
A subsequent warrant at Khan's Wilmington home yielded more: a scoped .556 rifle with red dot sight, another modified Glock with an illegal 'switch' device turning it into a machine gun capable of 1,200 rounds per minute, hollow-point ammo, and additional tactical gear. These findings elevated the case to federal level, with charges including illegal machine gun possession.
Charges and Legal Proceedings
Khan faces multiple felony counts: state charges for machine gun possession, large-capacity magazines, concealed deadly weapon, and resisting arrest; federal for unlawful machine gun ownership. Arraigned with $107,200 bail, he remains in custody. A detention hearing was set for December 11, 2025, but as of early 2026, the case continues without public plea or sentencing details.
FBI Special Agent in Charge Jimmy Paul praised the officers: 'Their exceptional actions led to Khan’s arrest before anyone was harmed.' Acting U.S. Attorney Julianne Murray highlighted the manifesto targeting a specific UD officer, underscoring the plot's specificity.
Khan, born in Pakistan and immigrated young, had no prior arrests. The University confirmed his enrollment but temporarily separated him, banning him from all campuses pending resolution.
University Response and Campus Reassurance
Interim UD President Laura Carlson communicated directly: the university cooperated fully with law enforcement, identified no ongoing threat, and prioritized safety. 'Campus safety remains our top priority,' officials reiterated, emphasizing proactive measures. No lockdowns or disruptions occurred, but the incident prompted internal reviews.
UD's University of Delaware Police Department (UDPD), responsible for the 1,000+ acre Newark campus serving 24,000 students, maintains 24/7 patrols, emergency notifications via RAVE Alert, and Clery Act compliance. The targeted building houses administrative and operational functions, making the plot particularly concerning for higher education security protocols.
The Critical Role of Threat Assessment Teams in Higher Education
Post-2007 Virginia Tech tragedy, U.S. colleges adopted behavioral threat assessment teams (TATs)—multidisciplinary groups including counselors, faculty, police, and deans. UD employs such a team to evaluate concerning behaviors early. Nationally, surveys show two-thirds of campuses have TATs, conducting thousands of assessments yearly; most (over 50%) involve self-harm risks, few escalate to violence.
These teams follow models like the FBI's Campus Attacks study, focusing on 'leakage'—suspects revealing plans via notes or statements. Khan's notebook exemplifies this. Effective TATs intervene via counseling referrals or LE notifications, preventing 80-90% of high-risk cases per studies.
In this off-campus arrest, inter-agency coordination shone, highlighting TATs' need for external partnerships.
Mental Health Challenges Fueling Campus Threats
College students face escalating mental health crises: 2025 surveys report half rating their well-being 'fair to terrible,' with depression and suicidal ideation surging post-pandemic. Negative campus experiences exacerbate risks, especially for marginalized groups.
Grievance-driven violence, where personal frustrations target institutions like police, rises. Experts link untreated issues to threats; universities expand counseling, yet demand outpaces supply. UD offers Center for Counseling and Student Development with 24/7 crisis lines, but stigma persists.
Preventive strategies include mandatory training, peer support, and AI monitoring for at-risk language—balancing privacy with safety.
UD's Campus Safety Record Under Clery Act Scrutiny
The Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act mandates annual reports. UD's latest shows low violent crime: zero murders, few aggravated assaults (under 10/year), aligning with national trends where campuses are safer than surrounding areas.
However, threats like this underscore non-Clery reportable 'plots.' UD reports fires, VAWA offenses (domestic violence, stalking), and liquor violations, promoting transparency via daily logs and Timely Warnings.
Lessons from Foiled Plots Across U.S. Colleges
This incident joins dozens foiled annually. In 2017-18, K-12/college TATs handled 14,869 cases; higher ed sees similar via proactive policing. Examples: 2019 arrests at three colleges for threats; ongoing disruptions of 640+ terror plots in 2025 per FBI.
- Traffic stops/anonymous tips key in 60% interventions.
- Notebook 'manifestos' common in 40% cases.
- Off-campus planning evades campus detection.
Universities like UD refine TATs, integrating mental health pros for holistic responses.
Best Practices for Bolstering Higher Ed Security
Experts recommend:
- Multidisciplinary TATs: Train all staff on 'See Something, Say Something.'
- Tech Integration: AI sentiment analysis, surveillance drones (2026 trend).
- Mental Health Expansion: 1 counselor per 1,000 students goal.
- Clery Enhancements: Include threat logs.
- Inter-Agency Ties: MOUs with local PD/FBI.
UD exemplifies via Blue Light phones, escort services, and active shooter drills.
Implications for U.S. Higher Education Landscape
This plot spotlights vulnerabilities in open campuses housing 20 million students. With rising grievances amid mental health epidemics, colleges invest $1B+ annually in safety. Federal grants via STOP School Violence aid TATs.
Stakeholders—administrators, faculty, students—push for policy: destigmatize help-seeking, fund wellness. For UD's 24,000 students, it reinforces resilience.
Photo by Ravi Sharma on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Building Safer Campuses
2026 trends: drone threats, active-shooter tech like pull stations. Solutions: predictive analytics, community policing. Resources like FBI Campus Attacks guide offer blueprints.
By fostering trust, early intervention, universities mitigate risks, ensuring learning environments thrive. Explore careers in campus safety via higher ed job boards.





