09-19-2018

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Wednesday, Sept. 19 - Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2018 Weekly Print Edition

Vol. 105, Issue 6 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

Choral professor drops Burglaries, robberies up; against former vehicle thefts down at SDSU suit student alleging affair Report shows the number of burglary, robbery and vehicle theft cases around SDSU have experienced changes from previous years.

Graphic by Katherine Cooke

The numbers of robbery, burglary and vehicle theft cases in the SDSU area have all seen changes from previous year, a report states.

by Bella Ross NEWS EDITOR

The San Diego State University Police Department has reported significant changes in the prevalence of certain kinds of crimes on campus when compared with previous years’, according to the 2018 Annual Security Report. One of the largest changes occured in cases of burglary. Between campus and noncampus locations, there were just five cases of burglary in 2015. The number then increased to 14 in 2016 and to 17 for 2017, signifying a continued increase of burglary cases in the area for the second year in a row.

Robbery was on the rise as well. It also had 17 reported cases in 2017, according to the report. In 2016, this number sat at 14 cases, up from only five cases in 2015. While burglary deals with the intrusion of somebody’s home with the intention of committing theft or another crime, robbery involves a person-to-person interacting that results in a theft. Robbery in the College Area has been in the spotlight in recent weeks as a result of three incidents of the crime in a two-week span. The most recent incident on Sept. 8 involved an armed suspect who snatched a woman’s purse in a neighborhood near SDSU. Unlike previous incidents that occured in the later hours of the day, the

Sept. 8 crime happened in broad daylight around 11 a.m. While cases of robbery and burglary saw increases in 2017, the reported showed that vehicle theft has decreased for the second year in a row. 2015 saw the highest number of incidents in recent years with 30 cases of vehicle theft. In 2016, the number decreased to 26 cases and then to 20 cases in 2017. This report is released yearly in support of the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policies and Campus Crime Statistics Act. The report said this act requires universities to issue timely warnings of situations that could pose a threat to the campus community and to collect and report crime data.

by David Santillan ASST. NEWS EDITOR

San Diego State music professor Patrick Walders has dropped his defamation lawsuit against a former student. Walders had filed a lawsuit in April, accusing his former students Michael Sakell and Jess Barrera of defamation, claiming they had spread misinformation to his colleagues and other professionals regarding an alleged sexual relationship he had with one of his female students. While Walders remains on administrative leave from his post as an associate professor and director of choral studies at SDSU, he filed a motion to drop the lawsuit against Sakell without “prejudice,” which means he could still potentially pursue the lawsuit in the future. Walders is seeking a default judgment against Barrera, who did not respond to his original motion. Walders was accused of sexual misconduct in February of last year, after his then-teaching assistant Sakell claimed to have walked in on him and another female student kissing during a university-sponsored trip to Austria. He was placed on paid administrative leave shortly thereafter while officials investigated the matter. Soon after being placed on administrative leave from SDSU, the executive director of the La Jolla Symphony & Chorus announced that they were also placing Walders on leave until further notice. According to public court files, Sakell submitted a copy of the university’s investigation,

File photo

SDSU Music Professor Patrick Walders.

revealing that the alleged affair began between the student and the married Walders on fall of 2016. At the time, the student had been a graduate assistant for Walders and was in four of his classes. It wasn’t until 2017, when Sakell walked in on an intimate encounter between the pair, that the affair ended. The student cut her trip short and immediately returned to the United States after the incident. Sakell’s lawyer Nicholas Moore issued a statement that said Walder’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit demonstrated that Sakell is an honest person “who spoke truth to power.” In a statement made to the San Diego Union Tribune, Walders’ attorney Matthew English said his client had dropped the lawsuit in order to focus on administrative proceedings at SDSU. The proceedings will determine what course of disciplinary action the university will take, if any. Neither the status of the investigation, which falls under SEE LAWSUIT, PAGE 2

Despite numerous cases, the meningitis vaccine is not required. Why? by Gian Matteo CONTRIBUTOR

Sacchetti

Despite the prevalence of meningitis cases on college campuses, freshmen at San Diego State have never been required to be vaccinated for what can often be a deadly disease. SDSU, like many other universities, has seen plenty of these cases. On Sept. 5, university officials warned students of a meningitis case that resulted from participation in sorority rush events. Last year, the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency reported three

cases of the illness on campus. In 2014, a student died after contracting meningitis. In an effort to combat this issue, institutions such as the University of California system require that the meningococcal conjugate vaccine be taken by students aged 21 and younger upon enrollment. According to Eric McDonald, medical director of the Epidemiology and Immunization Services Branch of the County of San Diego, the commonality of meningitis at universities is due to young adults from all over the country and the world being in close proximity to one another.

The close contact can expose students to bacteria they were never exposed to before. This makes students who live in campus residence halls especially at risk for contracting meningitis, according to a campus-wide email from SDSU Medical Director Cynthia Cornelius. A current California State University executive order says it’s required that all incoming freshmen who will live in campus housing be notified of the availability of the vaccine, but SEE MENINGITIS, PAGE 2

Photo by David Pradel

Despite numerous cases of meningitis on campus in recent years, SDSU does not require students to be vaccinated.


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