Threatening emails started to arrive at educational institutions around the Kirklees area at some point on Thursday, May 7, 2026, about the time that students on Manchester Road in Huddersfield were getting ready for the first lessons of the day at Kirklees College.
The college’s Executive Leadership team acted swiftly, releasing a statement before 11 o’clock that placed all of its facilities under precautionary lockdown: stay where you are, a staff member will give you more instructions, and if you haven’t arrived yet, don’t make the trip. Students waited in classrooms spread across many college buildings. West Yorkshire Police set up high-visibility patrols outside and started looking for the messages’ origin.

Three schools were impacted that morning, including Kirklees College. After receiving similar threatening communications, West Yorkshire’s Holmfirth High School went into lockdown and ensured that every kid was secure. In response to a different but essentially identical threat, Cedar Mount Academy in Gorton, Greater Manchester, was also placed under temporary lockdown.
Instead of a particular, localized danger, the pattern—many institutions, similar-sounding emails, and simultaneous disruption—was consistent with a coordinated harassment campaign. In their original statement, West Yorkshire Police stated that they were treating the issue seriously enough to justify the cautious approach, even though they had no intelligence indicating a significant danger.
The police confirmed what they had clearly assumed from the beginning of the investigation at around 12:00 BST: the threats were hoaxes. Kirklees College praised staff and students for their cooperation during the lockdown time, reopened its centers, and resumed lessons for the rest of the day.
A 20-year-old male from Huddersfield was arrested on suspicion of sending harmful communications, according to a separate announcement made by West Yorkshire Police that same morning. The rapidity of that arrest—from a threatening email to a suspect in prison in a matter of hours—indicates that once the pattern across several institutions became apparent, the investigation proceeded swiftly. The courts will decide in the coming months whether the case is prosecuted and what punishment, if any, results from a malicious communications allegation.
The statistics don’t adequately convey the unique experience of being a student sitting in a classroom for two hours while your phone buzzes with messages from concerned parents, the school’s regular routines cease, and teachers attempt to balance the practical lockdown instructions with the anxiety of thirty teenagers in a room waiting to hear whether the threat is real.
The May 7 event was effectively handled by the institution and police, and the result—no harm, prompt arrest, verified hoax—is the greatest possible ending. However, the disruption itself and the fact that a single 20-year-old with an email account can put thousands of people in a precautionary lockdown across several institutions at once are aspects of the current threat landscape that educational institutions in the UK are having to deal with more frequently.
As of right now, Kirklees College is running smoothly. There is no continuous lockdown, no active threat, and no intelligence indicating a present danger. In the wake of the May event, Kirklees Council has stated that it will keep collaborating with schools to offer assistance as required.
As of the most recent information available, the 20-year-old man who was arrested that morning is in the criminal justice system for the malicious communications charge related to what he sent that Thursday morning. The college’s centers on Manchester Road and throughout Huddersfield are open, and classes are in session.
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