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Police adopt new, simpler crime report

April 7, 2009 by Morgan A. Zalot  
Filed under Crime Report, News

The Temple News will no longer run its normal “Crime Report,” as Campus Safety Services changed the format to comply with Clery Act guidelines.

Campus Safety Services recently made the switch to a differently formatted daily crime log. Executive Director Carl Bittenbender said the change was made to better comply with college crime report regulations set forth in the Jeanne Clery Act and to parallel those of other local universities.
Now, instead of a detailed description of each incident, including affiliation to Temple and whether it was reported or perpetrated by a student, employee or non-student, each report includes the crime, time, date, location and information on whether an arrest or a University Disciplinary Committee referral has been made.

Bittenbender said the change was in the works for some time, and it will help make campus crime reporting more uniform and less tedious.

A link to the campus crime map will still be available weekly on temple-news.com.

Morgan Zalot can be reached at morgan.zalot@temple.edu.

Campus crimes get media attention

May 12, 2008 by Morgan A. Zalot  
Filed under News

Despite the media attention Temple received for the November assault in Anderson Hall and the February anti-Semitic hate crime, Campus Safety Services Executive Director Carl Bittenbender said the numbers for this year look good.

Part I offenses for 2007 on campus, including murder, manslaughter, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, theft, auto theft and arson, dropped from 367 in 2006 to 239, according to Campus Safety Services’ annual report.

Part II offenses on campus, including simple assault, forgery, fraud, vandalism, disorderly conduct and other offenses, however, rose in 2007 to 145, up from 73 in 2006.

Alcohol, drug and weapons arrests and referrals on and around campus also saw a drop of 77 offenses from last year to this year.

Even with some negative media attention in the cases of the assault and the hate crime, both of which are set to go to trial, Bittenbender said Temple received a lot of positive press this year.

“I think there’s always attention at universities for positive things and negative things. Has this been, in my 12 years, the most I remember media attention? I don’t believe so,” he said. “We had [the media] in here for a number of positive things.”

Positive press for Temple includes running stories about the radio room that Campus Safety redid this semester and also an upcoming U.S. News and World Report story about Rape Aggression Defense training on college campuses that features Temple.

Bittenbender said that the U.S. News and World Report reporter commented that students at Temple seem to have a very good relationship with the police.

“I have students who have studied at other institutions who say, ‘I didn’t find that at my other school.’ My question always was, ‘Why not?’ We’re not separate, we’re part of the university community,” Bittenbender said.

He said he is proud of the relationship the Temple police have with the students.

“We’re not perfect, trust me, nobody’s perfect,” Bittenbender said. “But overall, the comments of the ease of the students with the Campus Police, talking to them, interaction with them, has always been positive.”

Morgan A. Zalot can be reached at morgan.zalot@temple.edu.