THE CAMERON COLLEGIAN, NOV. 15, 1989 eel The toll: 31 who died Most colleges fail to report violent crimes Student raped at Las Cruces man launts Trojan Hall; plans arrested in campus rape 1 town not to prosecute By JENNY STRASBURG pound Up Repcrtc* swdcm worn io ibc Music Build , u\ 0 m Fnday to pratu at around P 1,1 ha musical msirumcni. Denise Kalerte 1 today Bv Roger I etft Assistant C.tv Pditor pended, however after the district attorney s office ri .^r.nld Las Cruces man m._1 ■ _ n ^ The victim said she spoVc wit ; uoon enter bv Professor Mary Koss of the l' of Arizona School ot Medicine in 1988, indicated that approximately one in four college women will he the victim of rape or attempted rape in a six-month period. In another Koss survey, 15.6 percent of college women surveyed said they had been the victim of rape since age 1 1, and 12.1 percent said they had been the victim of an attempted rape. Other studies indicates that only about 10 percent of all rape victims report the assaults to law enforcement authorities "The problem is that victims are denied basic rights and protections when they do report. Abarbanel says •‘We’ve heard a lot of horror stories where the rights of the victim were treated as secondary to the rights of t he accused." Cindv, a graduate of UCLA who asked that her real name be withheld, was the victim ot an aquaintance rape in a university dormitory in 1986 The insensitivity of university udministra tors following the incident, she says, resulted m further emotional strain The incident occurred when Cindy, along with other dormitory students, moved back into the dorms the Thursday before second quarter class es started. Only a small fraction ot the students on her floor were back. Following a beer drinking game, Cindy was escorted back to her room by a male she had befriended the previous quarter. She passed out with the man in her room, and then woke up to find him turning her over to face him. He already had part of my clothes off. He had both of mv wrists, and 1 was pinned I’d say 'No’ and he (i say W hy over and over Finally I said T don’t have a choice, do 1. and he said No 1 froze, and he raped me ” The bureacrnctic sluggishness that followed, she says, increased her trau ma and prevented justice from being served. Despite Cindy's several requests, her assailant was not transferred toanoth er dorm Jean Clery Killed lit Lehigh l', 19Ht) One day she was told he would be moving, and to stay away from the dorm for the day She returned to find him still there. After going through approximately 40 hours of interviews with the' univer sity's legal counsel, she and the assailant were brought together with the university's ombudsman, whom she says “was untrained about rape.’ Following the discussion, the ombuds man had the two shake hands "The biggest problem for me was a lack of system People didn't understand what to do," Cindy says Don Hartsock, the university’s ombudsman, refused to comment or discuss the procedures by which such a Michael Smith, criminal justice professor at Southern Mississippi U suggests several ways colleges can improve campus safety: ✓ Increase lighting ✓ Issue elevator, lobby and room keys ✓ Create security checkpoints in dorms ✓ Change locks when residents lose keys ✓ Publicize crime reports ✓ Implement escort services GRAPHIC fl> U THE RATIONAL COLLEGE REWSPAPIR cast' would he handled All ombudsman services are completely confident ial, he said. Later, i’indy was called before a university panel developing a rape protocol. She says the policy the panel ultimately developed incorporated her views about what the university should have done "1’hey rewrote my agenda for what should have hap pened and basically turned it into uni versity policy." Today, UCLA is praised by experts such as Abarbanel for its comprehen sive rape protocol Hut the experts also emphasize that at main institutions, both a policy and a sense of how to aid victims are sorely lacking "Awareness is growing, but it's not where I'd like it to be,' Koss says “We need more awareness at the higher lev els of administration, where the money is Otherwise, programs won't be put into effect." large knife and threatened pea pie 10 to 15 minutes before stabbing Northeastern l' student Ignacio St Ruse Campus security was informed, and they had the power of arrest and dul not use it describing the incident that resulted in the death of Ignacio St Rose at a Massachusetts Institute of Technology party in February 1987 Today, a suit is pending in Massachusetts court against MIL charging that the murder of St Rose, an 18 year-old from New York City, was preventable and th.it the university failed to ensure his safety. It's one of a number of suits being filed against institutions by violent crime victims and their parents. "People are now realizing one of their rights is to take the school to court," attorney Newman says. “It should be said up front that not all crimes on cam pus are preventable. Hut if you could have gotten information or you could have fixed the locks or made sure peo ple are checking IDs and you didn’t, that’s what allows crime to happen That’s where liability comes in." According to David Stormer. assis tant vice president of Safety and Environmental Health at the U of Pennsylvania and 1st vice president of the International Association of Law Enforcement Administrators IACLEA that lawsuits are being filed and won is having some impact on uni versity acceptance of their rosponsibil ity to protect Before the 1960s, Stormer notes, universities almost invariably used in loco parentis poli cies. which saw the university as a sur Attornev -Jeffrey Newman, rognte parental guardian, and kept a tight rein on campus activities 1'hr various movements of the '60s helped open up campuses considerably and gave students more freedom "Since then, with that great freedom came some of the court actions and civil litigation which gave rise to the con ceptsofwhat is in the contract between the student and the institution. Stormer says. "It's been established that the university has some obligation to protect the st udent and third parties on campus." How far this obligation goes has not yet been firmly established However, campus crime victims have demon strated that they can win suits that charge universities with failing to pro tect them Newman says he knows of approximately 15 campus crime suits settled last year The lack of student awareness of campus crime is being addressed by legislators on the state and federal levels In fall 198‘j, a lull was introduced m Congress known as the Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act CS Hep Bill doodling (R-Pa), the sponsor, formulated the measure after being approached by Howard and ('onstance dlery The bill attempts to obtain crime information from the 90 percent of col leges and universities nationwide that provide no information to the FBI’s uni form crime report. Because so few institutions report, the true level of violent crime remains a mystery. Some experts like Michael Smith, a criminal justice professor at the V of Southern Mississippi, argue that crime is rampant. Some campus law enforcement officials, however, say campuses are often far safer than the surrounding neighborhoods Others say that while the absence of statistics makes an accurate assess ment impossible, it is precisely this lack of information which makes stu dents open to threats, doodling and others note that unless an accurate assessment of campus crime is provid ed, many students will continue to view campuses as sanctuaries from crime. "()ur concern is let’s be careful about generalizing that crime is out of hand We don’t know that because only 10 percent of institutions are reporting," says -Jim Caswell, vice president foi st udent affairs at Southern Methodist University, and chair of a task force on safety of the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators f NASPA i. (ioodling's legislation would require colleges and universities to provide students and employees with an annual report on crime statistics and university security measures This