Friday, 15 April 2016

UT homicide: How an ’86 murder case likely helped police catch suspect

UT homicide: How an ’86 murder case likely helped police catch suspect

The Clery case prompted a backlash against undisclosed crime on U.S. campuses. Believing that Lehigh University had failed to share vital information with its students regarding campus safety, Howard and Connie Clery campaigned for legislative reform for several years following their daughter’s death. Numerous institutions have been found noncompliant and fined heavily since the Clery Act went into effect in 1991.
“I don’t think you can deny that the Clery Act has been transformational around issues of transparency and reporting in higher education,” said Alison Kiss, the executive director of The Clery Center for Security on Campus.
Weiser’s death was UT’s first on-campus homicide since sniper Charles Whitman gunned down 14 people from the UT Tower nearly 50 years ago.
Because of the Clery Act, UT students and faculty received an “urgent” email from campus police 41 minutes after Weiser’s body was discovered.
“UTPD responded to reports of a deceased person in a creek on campus west of the Alumni Center,” the notification warned. “The death is being investigated as a homicide by UTPD.”
Jeanne Clery with her parents and brothers six years before she was murdered at Lehigh University. (Clery Center)
UT published its “2015 Annual Security Report” last September. The 47-page document provides crime statistics for the past three years, outlines various programs available for crime victims and prevention, and lists security features like the school’s 177 emergency call boxes. The phones, which go directly to 911, are mounted to yellow poles topped by blue lights.
A map of UT’s call boxes indicates there were emergency phones at both ends of a 500-foot footpath where Weiser was killed. Citing the ongoing investigation, university police would not disclose if Weiser attempted to use the panic boxes.
In the days since Weiser’s slaying, nearly 800 people have signed an online petition requesting more emergency call boxes be added at the school of about 50,000 students.
“Because my sophomore son attends UT and I’m nine hours away and the times I've been on campus I don't like how the homeless roam near campus,” wrote petition supporter Angeline Martinez of Amarillo, Texas. “They’ve approached my son before and he didn't know what to do but walk away. I don’t feel safe and something really needs to be done to make campus safer for the students. This was a preventable murder and a shame that it took this for UT to consider better safety improvements.”

In the wake of Weiser’s death, the university promises a first-ever campus-wide security assessment with the help of outside crime experts. UT police Chief David Carter said the review would scrutinize four key areas: electronic security equipment, environmental design, video monitoring and security personnel.
“Our students deserve and expect to be safe,” Carter told Yahoo News. “The [state] assessment and our continued work with [Austin police] and the city are a good start to making safety improvements on and around campus.”
The heavily wooded trail in the heart of campus where Weiser was killed is currently closed and may remain so.
“We expect these kinds of recommendations to come from the assessment,” Carter said.
Jeanne Clery’s father passed away in 2008, but her mother gave the keynote address in November on the 25th anniversary of the Clery Act.
“In the beginning they were met with resistance from institutions of higher education, and she’s really seen a paradigm shift where there has been more awareness around safety and security,” Kiss said of Connie Clery’s remarks.
The Clerys, Kiss recalled, often said “to be forewarned is to be forearmed.”

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