Delaware
Police ID young woman killed in Delaware State University shooting Sunday
DSU commencement speaker: ‘Struggle not the same but equality still worth fighting for’
Former Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told graduates at Delaware State University’s 2022 commencement that each generation ‘has its battle to be fought.’
William Bretzger, Delaware News Journal
Dover police have identified the 18-year-old woman killed in a shooting on Delaware State University’s campus early Sunday morning.
Camay Mitchell DeSilva, of Wilmington, was rushed to Bayhealth Kent Campus following the incident, but it was too late. DSU said she didn’t attend the university but was visiting a student.
News of the shooting trickled out on Sunday, first with an alert to the school community followed by a message from James Overton, who serves as DSU’s police superintendent and vice president of student affairs.
Issued just before 8 a.m., the message said that DSU police received “an initial phone call” about the shooting at 1:40 a.m. It occurred just outside the north end of an underpass outside Warren Franklin Residential Hall.
BACKGROUND Woman shot dead at DSU was visiting a student. Multiple persons of interest are sought
When officers arrived, they found DeSilva unconscious. A preliminary investigation conducted in tandem with Dover police indicated that DeSilva and “possibly another non-student female” were visiting a student on campus, the message said.
Following the incident, the suspect(s) ran toward College Road, according to DSU.
A Dover Police Department news release published just after noon on Sunday gave few additional details, adding only that no one else was injured.
As news of the shooting became public, parents took to social media to share photos of their children who attend the university, assuring friends and family that their kids were safe.
“Thank God,” some comments said, while others expressed shock and dismay.
One woman wrote that her daughter was friends with DeSilva and was “really taking it hard.”
Sunday evening, DSU President Tony Allen issued a statement calling the shooting “tragic.”
ALLEN STATEMENT: Delaware State University president issues statement after deadly shooting on campus
“First, let me say that whoever believes that settling disagreements of any kind should be met with physicalviolence − including the threat of and eventual use of firearms − is simply not welcomed here,” the statement began.
“We should pray for better days and pray for the safety and well-being of our campus as a whole,” Allen continued.
The campus was closed Sunday and classes were canceled Monday, though business operations otherwise continued as normal.
On Tuesday, DSU plans to hold a forum for “students, staff, faculty and parents to share any updates and to remember a young person gone too soon,” Allen said.
Neither the school nor police have provided additional information about what led to the shooting.
Got a story tip or idea? Send to Isabel Hughes at ihughes@delawareonline.com. For all things breaking news, follow her on X at @izzihughes_
Delaware
Pa. man accused of stealing more than 100 skeletons from Delco cemetery
A Pennsylvania man is accused of stealing more than 100 skeletons from a cemetery in Delaware County.
Jonathan Gerlach, 34, of Ephrata, Pennsylvania, is charged with abuse of corpse, criminal mischief, burglary and other related offenses, Delaware County District Attorney Tanner Rouse revealed on Thursday, Jan. 8.
Léelo en español aquí
Between November 2025 and Jan. 6, 2026, 26 mausoleums and underground burial sites had been burglarized or desecrated at Mount Moriah Cemetery, which stretches from Yeadon Borough, Pennsylvania, to Philadelphia, investigators said.
As police investigated the thefts, they caught Gerlach desecrating a monument at the cemetery on Tuesday, Jan. 6, according to officials. Gerlach was taken into custody and investigators executed a search warrant at his home in Ephrata.
During the search, investigators recovered 100 human skeletons from Gerlach’s home as well as eight more human remains inside a storage locker, according to Rouse.
“Detectives walked into a horror movie come to life the other night guys,” Rouse said. “This is an unbelievable scene that no one involved – from myself to the detectives to the medical examiners that are now trying to piece together what they are looking at, quite literally – none of them have ever seen anything like this before.”
Rouse said some of the stolen skeletons are hundreds of years old.
“We are trying to figure out exactly what we are looking at,” Rouse said. “We quite simply at this juncture are not able to date and identify all of them.”
Rouse also said some of the skeletons are of infants and children.
“It is truly, in the most literal sense of the word, horrific,” Rouse said. “I grieve for those who are upset by this who are going through it who are trying to figure out if it is in fact their loved one or their child because we found remains that we believe to be months old infants among those that he had collected. Our hearts go out to every family that is impacted by this.”
Sources also told NBC10 the thefts are related to a similar case in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. Investigators said they are looking at Gerlach’s online community — including his social media groups and Facebook page — to determine if people were buying, selling, or trading the remains.
Gerlach is currently in custody at the Delaware County Prison after failing to post $1 million bail. Online court records don’t list an attorney who could speak on his behalf.
Delaware
Delaware woman charged in Jersey shore hit-and-run that injured 92-year-old man
VENTNOR, N.J. (WPVI) — A Delaware woman is behind bars in connection with a hit-and-run crash in November at the Jersey shore.
(The video in the player above is from previous coverage.)
The incident happened around 6:16 p.m. on Nov. 20 in Ventnor, New Jersey.
READ MORE | Video shows Jersey shore hit-and-run crash that left 92-year-old injured
Police said the 92-year-old victim was struck at Ventnor and Newport avenues. He sustained serious injuries and was transported to an area hospital.
Investigators said the driver, Leslie Myers, 51, of Weldin Park, Delaware, fled the scene after the crash.
She was arrested Wednesday on charges of assault by auto, leaving the scene of an accident and other related offenses.
Myers is being held in the Allegheny County Jail in Pennsylvania, awaiting extradition to New Jersey.
Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Delaware
Delaware announces plan to tackle climate warming emissions
This story is part of the WHYY News Climate Desk, bringing you news and solutions for our changing region.
From the Poconos to the Jersey Shore to the mouth of the Delaware Bay, what do you want to know about climate change? What would you like us to cover? Get in touch.
Delaware’s top environmental regulators have proposed steps to reduce climate-warming fossil fuel pollution, while protecting residents from threats like extreme heat and floods.
The state’s Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control on Wednesday released its 2025 Climate Action Plan. The nonbinding proposal outlines a path to achieve net zero emissions by 2050, as required by the state’s Climate Change Solutions Act.
Officials said Delaware residents continue to experience the impacts of climate change including severe storms like the 2021 Hurricane Ida, which forced people out of their homes, with some remaining unhoused a year later. In addition, sea level rise and beach erosion has flooded coastal communities and damaged critical infrastructure.
“Flooding, extreme storms and heat damage infrastructure that wasn’t built to withstand these conditions, including our energy systems,” said Susan Love, the agency’s climate and sustainability section administrator. “Sea level rise is drowning wetlands and uplands, and impacting water quality and availability. Damage from storms has increased costs for infrastructure and insurance coverage, and all of these impacts can negatively impact human health as well.”
Recommendations include strategies to reduce emissions from vehicles, industrial activities and electricity production — the source of the state’s top climate emissions.
The plan, which builds on similar goals set in 2021, comes as President Donald Trump’s administration has cut clean energy funding and prioritized U.S. reliance on fossil fuels.
“There is no doubt that the reduced funding in a lot of these areas from the federal government makes these goals and strategies harder to implement,” said DNREC Secretary Greg Patterson. “It is up to us to keep trying to work towards them, even knowing that it’s going to be a little harder to do without the federal resources that even a year ago we thought we could count on.”
Delaware officials plan to promote public transit, electric vehicles and clean hydrogen
The plan calls for increased bus and train ridership while improving access to electric vehicles and charging stations. Though lawmakers repealed a mandate that would have required manufacturers to produce a set number of electric vehicles, DNREC wants to expand programs that incentivize the optional sale of electric vehicles.
However, Love emphasized the state “can’t EV our way out of transportation emission.”
“A lot of work needs to be done as well to reduce the amount that we drive vehicles, by good land use choices, mass transit and making it easier for people to walk, bike and roll to their destinations,” she said.
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