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this says it all about where values lie and whether schools and law enforcement officials give a damn
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- Subject: this says it all about where values lie and whether schools and law enforcement officials give a damn
- Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2011 13:45:27 -0500 (EST)
12/7/11 Richmond Times-Dispatch (Pg. Unavail. Online)
2011 WLNR 25300718
Richmond Times Dispatch (VA)
Copyright 2011 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
December 7, 2011
Section: Virginia News
Panel rejects campus crimes notification requirements
Mark Bowes
Two measures that would have required campus police departments to
notify outside law enforcement and the local commonwealth's attorney when a
death or rape is reported failed in votes taken Tuesday by the Virginia
State Crime Commission.
However, the commission supported a requirement that mutual aid
agreements be established between local law enforcement and campus police in
investigating such crimes.
The commission's actions on the failed measures will result in no
recommendations about those proposals being forwarded to the upcoming session
of the General Assembly.
They were part of amended legislation originally proposed by Del.
Paula J. Miller, D-Norfolk, that would require greater collaboration between local
and campus police.
Specifically, a measure that would have required campus police to
notify local law-enforcement agencies within 24 hours of all deaths and
reported felony sexual assaults on campus - with the same requirement for local
police if they first took a report - failed on a 5-5 vote.
Then, the commission voted down a measure 7-3 that would have
required campus police to notify the local commonwealth's attorney's office
within 24 hours after receiving a report of a death or felony sexual assault.
Some commission members expressed concern that campus police
agencies were being unfairly singled out, or that the measures had a built-in
assumption that campus police were incapable of investigating such crimes
independently.
"My issue with this is not so much the notice. Typically I
get notice of these things far earlier than 24 hours," said Commissioner
Jim Plowman, who serves as Loudoun County commonwealth's attorney. "My
issue here is singling out campus police departments. Why are we doing that? We
received no information, no evidence, that these campus police departments are
somehow inferior, inadequately trained or poorly staffed."
Plowman questioned why "the smallest counties with the
tiniest sheriff's offices" also shouldn't be required to have mutual aid
agreements. Those agencies "may actually need support from a neighboring
jurisdiction or state police."
On the issue of requiring campus police to notify commonwealth's
attorneys, Plowman said "you'd see a slew of them here today" if
prosecutors truly felt like they were being kept in the dark. "If we truly
wanted to enshrine this with a 24-hour notice, I'd say it should be for all law
enforcement - not just campus police.
Commissioner Richard Trodden, who will soon step down as Arlington
County commonwealth's attorney, held similar views.
"Commonwealth's attorneys always want information, but to be
perfectly honest, I don't think this is a problem that needs to be"
legislated, he said. "I think we have good relationships with law
enforcement."
Commission member W. Gerald Massengill, a retired Virginia State
Police superintendent, seemed generally supportive of the measures but urged
caution.
"My concern with requiring college police departments to do
these type things was not because of the quality of investigations that might
or might not be done," he said. "I think my support is trying to get
more eyes, if you will, onto these type crimes."
Kathryn Russell, who testified last month that University of
Virginia police mishandled the investigation when she reported she had been
raped in her dorm room seven years ago, was so infuriated by the commission's
rejection of the notification measures that she made an obscene gesture to the
panel while leaving the meeting room.
Miller, the Norfolk delegate who originally proposed the
legislation, called the commission's actions "a mixed bag."
"We have the mutual aid agreements, which is certainly a
start. (I'm) a little disappointed that the mandatory notification failed on a
5-5 vote. Had there been more committee members here, who knows what would have
happened."
Three commissioners were absent.
"Of course, this is the first step in the process," she
added. "It goes to the General Assembly with the mutual aid agreements,
and we can add to it."
Miller said she and other bill supporters will be lobbying
commonwealth's attorneys across the state between now and the start of the
assembly. She said she has already obtained support from the commonwealth's
attorneys in Norfolk, Radford and Albemarle County.
Russell, who had testified about her U.Va. experience, said:
"I do wish that some of these individuals in the room today were better
informed. I felt that they came with agendas ahead of time. I don't understand
why there would be a problem for mandatory notification, especially if it
involves a student."
"To hear repeatedly that they feel police departments and
campus police departments are professional enough, and will automatically
report (crimes to one another), that's a very nice thought," she added.
"But it simply is not reality."
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COMPANY: UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA; RECTOR AND VISITORS OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
NEWS SUBJECT: (Social Issues (1SO05); Violent Crime (1VI27);
Criminal Law (1CR79); Legal (1LE33); Crime (1CR87); Assault & Battery
(1AS33); Government (1GO80); Legislation (1LE97); Police (1PO98); Regulatory
Affairs (1RE51); Judicial (1JU36))
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- this says it all about where values lie and whether schools and law enforcement officials give a damn, wmurphylaw, 12/08/2011
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