News and Media
Relations contact: Jimmy Hart, 615-898-5131 or Jimmy.Hart@mtsu.edu
MTSU Police contact: Chief
Buddy Peaster, 615-898-2426 or Buddy.Peaster@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — The
latest MTSU campus crime statistics from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation
show noticeable year-over-year drops in some categories and an overall crime
rate that remains low.
The TBI released the 2012 statistics for the annual report
today. MTSU officials attribute campus safety successes to community policing
efforts that take a comprehensive approach to crime prevention for a campus
community of 27,000-plus people.
For 2012, MTSU reported no homicides, one sexual assault and
three robberies, as well as significant drops in thefts, weapon law violations,
DUIs and liquor law violations.
“For a campus of roughly 30,000 people, crime remains
relatively low,” said Chief Buddy Peaster, director of the MTSU Department of
Public Safety.
“Over the last several years, the university has done two
important things regarding campus safety: continuously provided support toward
programs that help make our campus safer and responded to situations that could
show additional resources and programming were needed.”
MTSU’s overall crime rate in 2012 is comparable to other
Tennessee Board of Regents campuses, though Peaster again noted that
comparisons must account for factors such as the surrounding neighborhoods and
the number of dorms on a particular campus.
Here’s a summary of decreases in other crime categories for
2012 with the percent decrease from 2011 in parentheses:
• Thefts — 186 (down 29 percent)
• Burglary — 29 (down 12 percent)
• Vandalism — 81 (down 19 percent)
• Weapon law violations — 4 (down 56 percent)
• DUI — 50 (down 43 percent)
• Liquor law violations — 65 (down 49 percent)
“Theft remains the No. 1 crime,” said campus police Sgt.
Broede Stucky, while noting that 2012 saw a significant year-over-year drop in
such crimes.
And while the number of reported assaults showed a spike
overall — from 52 in 2011 to 80 in 2012 — most of the jump came in the assault
subcategory of “intimidation” — from six reported in 2011 to 35 in 2012. Campus
police encourages people to report threatening situations before they escalate.
Aggravated and simple assaults remained basically flat
year-over-year, the report shows.
In assessing the year-over-year changes in drug violations
and DUIs, the chief noted that his department partnered with the Governor’s
Highway Safety Office to do checkpoints and targeted patrols to crack down on
driving under the influence and underage drinking on campus.
DUI offenses were down from 88 in 2011 to 50 in 2012;
drunkenness offenses were up from 10 in 2011 to 23 last year; and
drug/narcotics violations were up from 43 in 2011 to 62 in 2012.
Peaster cautioned against reading too much into a single
year of crime statistics, stressing that his office looks at trends over time
to gauge whether prevention and enforcement efforts are effective in keeping
students, faculty and staff safer.
Reducing crime often involves a combination of enforcement
activities and changes in student behavior as well as preventive actions, such
as a Campus Planning project that improved lighting across campus, increased
police foot patrols after the new Student Union opened last year and public
awareness campaigns through Student Health Services and MTSU Housing and
Residential Life.
“Housing talks with students about crime prevention and
campus safety being a shared responsibility,” said Andrew Bickers, Housing and
Residential Life director.
Housing security measures include around-the-clock front
desk coverage in dormitories, card-swipe access systems and locked entry doors.
“We ask students to keep their windows and doors locked, not
to prop open locked access doors and to report suspicious behavior to housing
staff and MTSU police,” Bickers said, adding that his department collaborates
with campus police on an Adopt-A-Cop program that assigns a specific officer to
each residence hall.
Lisa Schrader, director of the MTSU Health Promotion Office
for Student Health Services, said Health Services and Health Promotion educate
students on risk reduction techniques for substance use and violence
prevention.
“We utilize social norms campaigns to demonstrate that,
unlike common stereotypes, the majority of our students make responsible
decisions most of the time when it comes to risky behaviors,” Schrader said.
“We partner with other campus offices to offer free, late-night activities for
students to give them a safe environment to interact with other students.
“We also implement wellness programs in first-year seminars
and other courses around topics such as alcohol, drugs and sexual
responsibility, which provide health information to students as well as
information on the campus resources available to them on these issues.”
The MTSU Department of Public Safety currently employs 35
full-time police officers, five full-time dispatchers and about 20 part-time
student workers. It operates around the clock to protect the 500-plus-acre
university campus.
To view the full TBI Crime on Campus Report, visit http://tinyurl.com/TBICampusCrime2012.
The MTSU statistics are featured on pages 67 and 152 of the 241-page report.
About MTSU
Founded in 1911 as
one of three state normal schools for teacher training, MTSU is now the oldest
and largest public university in Middle Tennessee. With an enrollment of more
than 25,000 students, MTSU is the largest undergraduate university in
Tennessee.
MTSU remains
committed to providing individualized service in an exciting and nurturing
atmosphere where student success is the top priority. With a wide variety of
nationally recognized academic degree programs at the baccalaureate, master's
and doctoral levels, MTSU takes pride in educating the best and the brightest
students from Tennessee and around the world.
###
Media welcomed
A printable campus
map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTParkingMap12-13.
MTSU is committed to
developing a community devoted to learning, growth, and service. We hold these
values dear, and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them: “I am True
Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue.
For MTSU news anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment