QUChronicle.com October 8, 2014 Volume 84 Issue 7
ARTS & LIFE Pumpkin coffee reviews, page 10
2013 Clery Act statistics released
SPORTS
OPINION The dangers of overseas reporting, page 6
Peca’s consistency key for Bobcats, page 16
JOEY MULLANEY STRUGGLES WITH RARE GENETIC DISORDER, PAGE 6
University ticketing, towing cars with fake decals By TARA O’NEILL
By JULIA PERKINS
Contributing Writer
Managing Editor
The number of reported liquor-law violations, forcible sex offenses, drug-related arrests and hate crimes increased on campus in 2013, according to Clery Act crime statistics released last week. Burglaries and drugrelated referrals decreased. The Jeanne Clery Act is a federal law requiring colleges to release annual crime reports and keep a public crime log. “We’re a greater population than we’ve ever been, so crime goes along with the amount of people,” Chief of Public Safety David Barger said. “So one could argue, we’ve been pretty much the same for years, but as the population grows [an increase in crime] is just taking into account the population.” Liquor-law violations Associate Dean of Student Affairs Seann Kalagher said alcohol is related to many of the crimes that occur on campus. “Alcohol impacts a lot of other incidents we deal with, particularly if you’re looking at incidents of assault issues, even some of the bias-related issues we deal with,” he said. Kalagher said most liquor-law violations come from freshmen and sophomores. There were 663 reported liquor-law violations on campus in 2013, according to the statistics. The university reported that 593 of these violations occurred in student housing, while the other 70 violations occurred in areas other than residential housing. See CLERY ACT Page 4
AMANDA HOSKINS/CHRONICLE
Sophomore Joey Mullaney navigates the campus in his own motorized scooter as he fights Friedreich’s Ataxia.
Student hit by car on Sherman Ave. Senior suffers non-life threatening injuries A student was struck by a car at 4:30 a.m. on Oct. 5 near the entrance to the York Hill campus, according to a Hamden police report. Junior Peter Lanwes was crossing Sherman Avenue when he was hit by a 39-year-old New Haven resident, according to the report. Police investigations show Lanwes was not using the crosswalk. The question of what he was doing at that time is still under investigation. Both Lanwes and the driver of the vehicle were immediately transported to Yale-New Haven Hospital, with non life-threatening injuries. Lanwes remained in the hospital Monday night. He has several bruises and cuts on his body as well as stitches in his chest. He currently cannot walk on his own because of the
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bruising on his left leg; however, he has been able to move using a walker, according to a post on Lanwes’ Facebook page. Lanwes suffered a small skull fracture, but no nerve or spinal damage was found. Lanwes remained in the hospital until the doctors were sure no other issues would arise, but was scheduled to be released Tuesday morning. “Despite all the injuries I am very very lucky,” Lanwes wrote in a Facebook post. “This accident could have gone so much worse and I don’t even have a broken bone to show for it.” Lanwes is back at his home in Long Island. He is hoping to be back to classes on Monday, if things go as planned. The investigation is still underway as to what led to the incident.
AMANDA HOSKINS/CHRONICLE
The accident occurred near the entrance to the York Hill campus on Sherman Avenue.
See PARKING PASSES Page 3
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News Editor
POLL
By AMANDA HOSKINS
Forging an authorized parking decal would be a felony out in the real world. But this school year, students are forging university-issued parking decals without hesitation or fear of punishment. Public Safety is currently ticketing and towing cars with fake decals, according to Chief of Public Safety David Barger. Though he said each case is handled in its own manner, the risk of permanently losing parking privileges is possible. “Students should be aware of the ramifications of their actions before carrying them out”, Barger said. Sophomore students have been forging parking decals in the Hilltop parking lot on the Mount Carmel campus, according to Barger. “The greatest problem we have is with the Hilltop lot,” Barger said. “It’s primarily sophomores doing it [making unauthorized parking decals]. But Barger said it isn’t just the sophomores making the passes; freshmen students have been making fake decals as well. The parking system is based on a random lottery, according to Shannon Grasso, parking and transportation coordinator at Public Safety. Freshmen are not allowed to have any cars on campus. However, sophomore students can either get a parking decal for the Hilltop parking lot or the Westwoods parking lot, which is off campus. Grasso said students contact her on a daily basis claiming to see open parking spaces in the Hilltop lot and ask to be granted a decal allowing them to park there, not realizing the impossibility behind their requests. There are many students who register vehicles they won’t bring to campus until after Thanksgiving or winter break, according to Grasso. Though there appear to be open parking spaces, Grasso said there are never unassigned parking spots in the Hilltop lot. “When you look at the Hilltop lot, there are open spaces,” Grasso said. “It paints a picture that there’s space available that we’re not giving to someone. Those spaces really belong to someone who registered a vehicle and, by lottery, was given a Hilltop decal.” Still, this doesn’t stop students from finding ways to get access to Hilltop parking, according to Grasso. Sophomore Toni Santillo thinks the sophomore class should be given more parking spaces since they are one of the biggest classes on campus, but she doesn’t agree that students should be making fake ones and selling them. “The fact that people are making fake decals and are selling them is crazy and the fact that people are actually buying them,
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