Univ. of Colorado murder suspect Nicholas Jordan threatened to ‘kill’ roommate before

The Colorado college student charged with killing his roommate and another person in their dorm threatened to “kill” one of the victims weeks ago in a dispute about trash, court documents alleged.

New details emerged Friday in the Feb. 16 slayings of Samuel Knopp, 24, and Delie Rain Montgomery, 26, at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs.

Nicholas Trevon Jordan threatened to kill Knopp on Jan. 9 as the two bickered over garbage, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by The Post.

“Mr. Jordan threatened Mr. Knopp and told him that he would ‘kill him’ and there would be consequences if Mr. Jordan was asked to take out the trash again,” the document said.

Samuel Knopp (right) was gunned down in his dorm last week. Facebook/Amy Elswick Knopp

The unsettling dispute was reported to campus authorities and housing officials, though there is no evidence that the school tried to mediate the issue or remove Jordan from the dorm despite repeated reports about conflicts, the document indicated.

Prosecutors on Friday also revealed that Jordan, 25, had a fully loaded, AK-47-style assault rifle and a handgun in his car when he was taken into custody on Monday.

Jordan, of Detroit, is facing two first-degree murder charges.

Celie Rain Montgomery, 26, was also found dead at the scene. Linkedin/Celie Montgomery

In the days after Knopp and Montgomery were killed, a third roommate told police that they had reported Jordan’s living conditions and marijuana use to the university multiple times.

UCCS declined to comment on the alleged reports.

Jordan – a junior who was studying accounting – filed to withdraw from the school completely about 14 hours before the shootings.

Nicholas Jordan was arrested on Monday. Colorado Springs Police Department

He was arrested in a residential part of Colorado Springs on Monday.

Knopp and Montgomery’s bodies were found in Crestone House, a dorm complex with apartment-style facilities for both graduate and undergraduate students. 

Police later clarified that the tragedy was an “isolated incident” and that no one else on campus was in danger.

During Friday’s proceedings, Jordan’s attorney, public defense Nick Rogers, objected to the unsealing of the arrest affidavit and other documents on the grounds that his client would be “prosecuted in the media.”

Rogers also tried unsuccessfully to have Jordan released without paying his $5 million bail.

Jordan’s next court date is set for March 15.

With Post wires

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