people walking on street during daytime

Two armed suspects are being sought after a pair of violent robberies and a carjacking in the Delaware Park Casino parking lot in Wilmington on March 8, 2026. The key point for casino patrons is specific: the reported crimes happened in the parking area, not on the gaming floor, and the immediate practical issue is late-night arrival and departure safety while the police investigation remains active.

What happened in the Delaware Park Casino parking lot

According to the reported timeline, the suspects arrived in a dark-colored Nissan sedan and first approached two people walking through the lot. They displayed handguns, demanded property, and left in the Nissan after the victims complied.

A short time later, the same suspects returned and targeted a 24-year-old man from Avondale, Pennsylvania. During that robbery, one of the suspects pistol-whipped the victim, took his car keys, and the pair fled using both their Nissan and the victim’s stolen vehicle. The victim was taken to a hospital with injuries described as non-life-threatening.

Where the investigation stands now

Delaware State Police and New Castle County Police are investigating. Later that night, officers found the stolen vehicle within Wilmington city limits, and a brief pursuit followed. The driver then abandoned the car near Bradford and B streets and ran off on foot.

No arrests have been announced, and public suspect descriptions had not been released in the source material. That matters for readers because it limits the usefulness of informal social media identification attempts and makes official updates the only reliable checkpoint for changes in risk or case status.

Why this matters differently from an inside-the-casino safety issue

The distinction should not be blurred: these incidents were reported in the parking lot, which is a known transition zone where patrons are exposed before entering or after leaving. That is different from evidence that the casino itself was unsafe or directly responsible for the crimes, and there is no basis here to claim that.

For casino-focused readers, the practical concern is the handoff between venue security, property layout, lighting, camera coverage, and public policing. Parking areas often create the highest vulnerability because people may be distracted, carrying cash or valuables, or walking alone to vehicles late at night.

IssueWhat is confirmedWhat should not be assumed
Location of incidentsParking lot at Delaware Park CasinoThat the gaming floor or internal operations were the crime scene
Suspect activityTwo armed suspects used a dark-colored Nissan sedan in two robberies and a carjackingThat they were caught after the vehicle recovery
Operator responsibilityNo evidence in the source packet directly assigns fault to the casinoThat the operator caused the crimes simply because they occurred on the property perimeter
Current risk signalSuspects remain at largeThat conditions have already changed without an official update

What patrons should do while suspects remain at large

Anyone visiting Delaware Park Casino in the near term should treat parking lot movement as the main risk point, especially during late hours. The realistic starting point is simple: avoid walking alone if possible, keep valuables out of sight before arriving, stay alert when approaching or leaving your vehicle, and report suspicious behavior immediately to security or police rather than waiting to see if it develops.

There is also a clear threshold for adjusting plans. If you would be arriving or leaving alone at night, feel forced to handle cash visibly in the lot, or notice poor visibility or unusual loitering near parked cars, that is a reasonable signal to pause, seek an escort if available, or change timing. Readers should also watch for official updates on arrests, any announced parking lot security changes, and any new guidance from police or the property.

Contacts, victim support, and the next official checkpoint

Police are asking anyone with information to contact Detective B. Timmons at (302) 365-8434 or Delaware Crime Stoppers at 1-800-847-3333. Because no arrests have been reported, public assistance may still be important to the case.

Victims can access support through the Delaware Victim Center’s 24/7 hotline at 1-800-VICTIM-1. For readers following this as a casino safety issue, the next meaningful checkpoint is not rumor or speculation but confirmed reporting on suspect arrests, any changes to parking lot patrols, lighting, or surveillance, and any updated safety guidance tied to Delaware Park Casino access points.