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DRINKING AND DRIVING
CAN KILL A FRIENDSHIP
Crimes, arrests up from fall term 1985
By Greg Sutherland
Of the Eacrild
Crimes reported to campus
security during fall term of 1986
were up 26 percent from fall
term of 1985, according to
Eugene police Sgt. Chuck Tilby.
but he added that arrests rose
more than 150 percent in the
same time period.
Tilby. who supervises Eugene
police officers working full time
at the University Office of
Public Safety, said the rise in ar
rests is due to the nature of
crimes committed.
“There are two general types
of crimes we get called about.”
he said. "One is the altercation
type which calls for immediate
response from the officers and
ultimately more opportunity for
arrests. We've gotten more of
these types of crimes this fall
than last, which may account
for the increase in arrests.
“The other type of crime,”
Tilby continued, "is one which
calls for investigation, such as
theft or burglary. These are
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more difficult to pin down right
away and make an arrest,
although an increase in effort by
officers to follow up on those
cases which can be investigated
has also contributed to the rise
in arrests this fall."
Tilby suggested that some of
the increase in overall crime
and arrests on campus may be
attributed to the higher number
of non-students living near
campus, as most of the fall term
arrests in 1986 involved non
students. During the fall of
1985. only 28 arrests were
made.
One major reason for fewer
student arrests is a significant
decrease in alcohol abuse. Tilby
said.
"The police are getting less
involved in alcohol-related
crimes committed by students."
Tilby said. "This is due to a ma
jor effort by the University to
address alcohol abuse through
education; the problem sticks
out now — it is the exception
rather than the rule."
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The biggest problems on cam
pus are burglary (unlawful en
try into a building with intent to
commit a crime) and theft, Tilby
said. Neither crime made
significant gains in occurrence
in fall 1986 compared to fall
1985, but Tilby said they re
main difficult crimes to prevent
or investigate.
Following is a round-up of
crimes that occurred on campus
last term and how they compare
with fall 1985:
•There were 24 burglaries
and 209 thefts, both up less than
10 percent from last fall. Bicycle
thefts remained exactly the
same — 61 percent in both fall
1986 and 1985. Ten percent of
bicycles stolen eventually are
returned.
•There were 14 cases of
assault last term compared to
five a year ago. Most of these
end up as misdemeanors in
stead of arrests. Tilby said. Four
public safety officers were
assaulted last term, he added.
•Public indecency (exposure,
flashing) rose from three cases
in fall 1985 to nine in 1986.
Most offenders are male, Tilby
said, and the crimes are fre
quently “crimes of opportunity
— the victims are usually peo
ple they don’t know.”
•No rapes were reported last
term, and just one was reported
during fall 1985, but Tilby said
these statistics don’t reflect
what is really going on, as the
reporting rate for rapes is very
low — under 30 percent. He
believes most rape victims call
the Rape Crisis Network before
calling the police.
•Traffic citations were cut in
half when juxtaposing the falls
of 1985 and 1986, down from
701 to 298. Tilby cited mopeds
as the main reason for the
decrease.
“Mopeds were a significant
problem in 1985,” Tilby said.
“You wouldn’t believe what
people tried to do with those
things. However, they aren’t
such a novelty now, and the
riders are much more careful.
Ixjst year, people thought they
were toys.”
•Finally, there were five
bomb threats last term com
pared to only one a year ago.
Tilby said he hasn’t caught
anybody who issued a bomb
threat in two years. The offense
carries a possible jail sentence.
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