2019-09-12

Page 1

Thursday September 12, 2019

Volume 106 Issue 6

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

Rape did not occur on campus Fullerton

campus, leaving the number of testimony that it occurred at the Police confirmed that the attack didn’t happen in the reported rapes on campus in 2019 parking structure. at two. University Police said she inNutwood structure. “After further investigation, it tentionally misled investigators, NOAH BIESIADA Asst. Editor

HOSAM ELATTAR Editor

University Police announced that the rape reported at the Nutwood Parking Structure on Monday night did not happen on

was discovered that the reported incident did not occur at Cal State Fullerton,” said University Police Chief Raymund Aguirre. Police previously reported that a CSUF student was raped in the elevators of the Nutwood Parking Structure, but an investigation by University Police led to the victim recanting her earlier

said Capt. Scot Willey. “(It) was intentional that she used Cal State Fullerton in her story for that night, and we’ve now clarified that,” Willey said. The victim will not be facing any charges for the initial report given to police in their investigation, Willey said. “I want to make it very clear to

anybody that’s wondering if our police department has any angst or this university has any angst toward this survivor, and that’s absolutely no. She is still one of our Titans,” Willey said. There are no cameras inside or outside the elevator where the incident was initially reported. However, police looked through surveillance footage from cameras near the Student Recreation Center and contacted the victim, before concluding that the incident occurred in Yorba Linda. “We were able to utilize those cameras and come up with the outcome that we did. Our investigators pored through hours and hours (of footage), and that’s how we were able to find some inconsistencies in the story, and that’s what led us to re-contacting the survivor,” Willey said. Police did not know that the victim was off-campus until they spoke to her, Willey said. “We treat every single one of them like its a true story. We are going to support them no matter what,” Willey said about reports of sexual assault. Willey said the victim went to the Student Recreation Center and parked in the Nutwood Parking Structure earlier than her original testimony. After the attack, she drove to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Orange, California, where hospital staff reported the incident to campus authorities.

NATHAN NGUYEN / DAILY TITAN

University police Capt. Scot Willey talks to the press with Police Chief Raymond Aguirre and Director of Strategic Communications for CSUF, Ellen Treanor behind him.

SEE CRIME

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ex-cop charged

Former resource officer accused of filming up a minor’s skirt on duty. KIM PHAM MADELINE GREY Editors

Jose Paez, Fullerton Union High School’s ex-resource officer, is being charged with a misdemeanor of disorderly conduct for secretly photographing and recording up a minor’s skirt while conducting a police investigation at the student’s campus. The Fullerton Police Department began investigating Paez during the summer of 2018 to evaluate accusations of misconduct while on duty. Paez’s body camera footage was the Fullerton Police Department’s primary mode of data collection. The Orange County District Attorney reviewed footage from the past five years as part of its investigation. The student’s allegations of Paez filming up her skirt were reported in November 2017. SEE POLICE

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9/11 victims mourned at Nixon library Civilians and public officials gathered to remember the lives lost 18 years ago. CELESTE SHARP DANIEL BRITO Staff Writers

DANIEL BRITO/ DAILY TITAN

Norman Mineta, former education secretary during the George W. Bush administration, spoke to the memorialization of 9/11 victims.

remembers exactly what they were doing the moment the first plane crashed into the World

Honor our heroes of Sep. 11, 2001, and the heroes that continue to protect our safety and essential freedoms.

Community members of Orange County and surrounding areas gathered at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library on the 18th anniversary of the country’s largest terrorist attack to commemorate and honor the lives of thousands of citizens and first responders. The Patriot Day Commemoration Ceremony took place in the library’s White House East Room, and began with a group prayer led by Pastor Phil Hotsenpiller, senior pastor from Influence Church in Anaheim Hills. The national anthem, sung by Micheal Ketterer, was performed before future soldiers took their reaffirming oaths. Marcus Ward, a 27-year-old staff sergeant who has served in the Army for nine years, attended the ceremony in uniform. He said that although he was only a child on the day of the terrorist attacks, he believes the day is an important day in American history worth remembering. “As Americans, we all know that it’s very emotional and a significant event in our history, so it’s important to us,” Ward said. “And as a soldier in our Army, it’s important to me.” Though some attendees were too young to clearly remember the day, others, such as Placentia resident Stan Leese,

CHRIS GORMITE Master of Ceremonies

Trade Center. “I turned on the radio and heard about the first plane crashing, and then I woke (my wife) up and we watched from then on,” he said. Leese expressed his appreciation for the emotion throughout the ceremony, noting the tears. Guest speakers took the stage to remember the day Americans will never forget, and thank those who walked into the burning towers to help save the

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Lifestyle

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lives of others, with no regard for their own. Todd Spitzer, Orange County District Attorney, spoke at the event first, looking back on the bravery he witnessed on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. “I watched thousands of people leave the structure fearing for their lives, and I watched thousands of first responders run in to save them,” Spitzer said. The speakers that followed,

including Brian Fennessy, chief of the Orange County Fire Department, also shared memories of that day. Fennessy expressed gratitude for the brave first responders who helped prevent even greater loss, such as the passengers on United Airlines Flight 93, and the firefighters on the upper levels who refused orders to evacuate the burning buildings. SEE 9/11 3

Social media influences body dissatisfaction Snapchat and Instagram filters act as a quick fix for a deeper issue and can often lead to mental disorders.

Opinion

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