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University of Colorado dorm room double murder suspect was student, victim’s roommate: cops

The suspect in the grisly double slaying of two University of Colorado students and his gal pal inside a campus dorm room was also a student at the school — and the roommate of one of the victims, police said Tuesday.

Nicholas Jordan, 25, of Detroit, was a senior at the Colorado Springs university when he allegedly shot roomie Samuel Knopp, 24, and 26-year-old Celie Rain Montgomery on Friday, with both victims found with a single gunshot wound to the head, according to police.

Colorado Springs cops tracked down Jordan and charged him with two counts of first-degree murder on Monday — and revealed that the accused killer was Knopp’s college roommate and both lived in the Crestone House dorm where the bodies were found, the Denver Post said.

Jordan was in court on Tuesday and ordered held on $5 million cash bail by El Paso County Court Judge Shannon Gerhart, the outlet reported.

Nicholas Jordan, 25, charged in a double murder at the University of Colorado, was a student at the school and roommates with one of the victims.
Students at the University of Colorado mourn the Friday double slaying of a student and his friend in a campus dorm. Denver Post via Getty Images

Prosecutor Robert Willett said the hefty bail was warranted because “there are indications he tried to flee the state” after the dual killings.

Police responded to the dorm on reports of shots fired around 6 a.m. Friday and found the two bodies, the Colorado Springs Police Department said in a press release.

The university went into lockdown for about one hour, but cops quickly identified Jordan as the suspect, obtaining an arrest warrant for him on two counts of murder by the end of the day Friday.

On Monday, police spotted Jordan sitting in his car shortly before 8 a.m. and arrested him.

Police have not released details regarding a possible motive for the grisly shootings or the circumstances that led to them.

Initial reports were that the Friday morning double slayings were the result of a murder-suicide, but police denied those reports after identifying Jordan as the suspect.

In a Facebook post on Monday, university Chancellor Jennifer Sobanet said the school had scheduled two forums for students and faculty on Tuesday to provide more information about the incident.

Celie Rain Montgomery, 26, was found dead from a gunshot wound at the University of Colorado on Friday, police said. Colorado Springs Police Department
University of Colorado student Sam Knopp, 24, was found dead from a gunshot wound in his dorm room. Instagram/Haden Gillespie

“CSPD has reiterated that investigative efforts so far continue to indicate this is an isolated incident between parties that were known to one another and not a random attack against the school or other students at the university,” she said. “The university will continue to share information as we are able.”

In a follow-up Facebook post, the school said the shootings of Knopp and Montgomery were among three recent deaths on the Colorado Springs campus.

What do we know about the University of Colorado dorm shooting?

  • Two students were found dead in their dorm room on Feb. 16, 2024, after campus police received calls of shots fired.
  • Police say university students Samuel Knopp, 24, and Celie Rain Montgomery, 26, were each found with a single gunshot wound to the head at Crestone House, a campus dormitory.
  • Nicholas Jordan, 25, has been identified and charged by the police as the suspect in the violent incident. Jordan was a senior at the university and was Knopp’s roommate.
  • Jordan appeared in court on Feb. 20 and was ordered held on $5 million cash bail by El Paso County Judge Shannon Gerhart, according to reports.

Follow along with the New York Post for more information.

“Earlier in the week, the UCCS community also lost Mia Brown, a senior in our nursing program, due to a personal medical emergency in the UCCS Recreation Center,” the school said.

“All three of these lives lost will live on in the hearts of our Mountain Lion community as we all collectively work together to process these losses and move forward in healing.”