Ahmed Khan detained in Guilford County on fugitive charges
Ahmed Khan was logged at a Greensboro address on fugitive charges, with Guilford County records showing a resist, delay or obstruct charge tied to a June 28 arrest.

Guilford County records show Ahmed Khan, 28, was detained June 28 at 1212 Bridford Pkwy in Greensboro on a misdemeanor charge of resisting, delaying or obstructing a public officer and a fugitive from justice hold. The fugitive label means local authorities were dealing with a person wanted outside Guilford County, with the record indicating the outside case was tied to another state.
The Guilford County Sheriff’s Office event map lists Khan at the Bridford Parkway address, and the county’s online arrest listing also gives June 28, 2026, as the arrest date. No prior local record was found in the county’s public system, which suggests the case entered Guilford County’s books as a new arrest rather than part of an existing local history.

Guilford County’s public inmate and arrest portal makes clear that the people shown there have been arrested but not convicted. That distinction matters in a case like Khan’s, where the county is publicizing the booking while the underlying fugitive matter remains tied to an outside jurisdiction’s warrant process.
The sheriff’s office says its mission is to improve residents’ safety and reduce crime and the fear of crime, and it describes the primary concern of the office as the well-being and safety of county residents. In practice, that means deputies and jail staff have to document arrests, post them publicly, and process people who are located in Guilford County even when the underlying allegation originated elsewhere.
Khan’s arrest also fits into a much larger stream of routine enforcement activity. The sheriff’s office recent-arrests catalog was actively maintained and showed 576 entries, underscoring that the county processes a steady flow of bookings rather than treating any single arrest as an isolated event. In a county that sits at the center of Greensboro traffic and daily travel across North Carolina, cross-jurisdiction cases like this are part of the regular public-safety workload.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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