Friday, October 23, 2015

preventing campus shootings

Aran Mull, Deputy Chief of the UAlbany Police Department, said that campus shootings have a “profound impact on community and national psyche,” which is why prevention is key.

UPD is credited with creating the first New York State Division of Criminal Justice certified active shooter response training course.

"Navigating Through the Campus Shooting Crisis." Albany Student Press. October 20, 2015. http://www.albanystudentpress.net/navigating-through-the-campus-shooting-crisis/

When UAlbany Police have undermined the integrity of firearms audits, one has to wonder how effective UAlbany active shooter response training might be.

When UAlbany Police have testified for court that they're inadequately trained, once again one has to wonder.

"In a sworn statement given to State Police on May 19, a fellow SUNY investigator, Matthew A. Griffin, said that Knoebel had called him on May 17 and asked him to remove two pistols from her locker at the UAlbany police headquarters.

"He said Knoebel was comfortable storing her departmental weapon in a police armory safe but she asked him to take another gun, a .25-caliber Ravens Arms pistol, to his private residence for safekeeping.

"Griffin said he did not know at the time that Knoebel was facing imminent arrest on federal drug charges. He told State Police that he only learned of those charges the following day, May 18, after he had already returned Knoebel's unregistered handgun to the police station and logged it in as evidence. [...]

Griffin, 39, has been with SUNY police since March 1997 and was promoted to investigator in 2003. He said Knoebel told him in April that she was considering filing for divorce from her husband, Kenneth, who also was arrested on marijuana charges. Griffin said at that time he advised her to bring any guns she had at home to the police station for safekeeping because a divorce could trigger "emotional" reactions.

Lyons, Brendan J. "SUNY police officer also faces gun charge; Cop arrested on drug charge allegedly asked colleague to move gun." Albany Times Union. July 23, 2011: B1. http://albarchive.merlinone.net/mweb/wmsql.wm.request?oneimage&imageid=15255123

In that May 2011 incident, two UAlbany officers committed serious violations of firearms policies. Griffin, in particular, was grossly irresponsible in advising Knoebel - who he believed to be potentially emotionally unstable - to bring all of her personal firearms onto campus. And why did UAlbany Police apparently not notify the system administration office of university police about the incident (a FOIL request for the notification turned up nothing)?

Griffin, a man who clearly lacked the most basic common sense with respect to firearms, was UAlbany's "Chief Firearms Instructor"! Among other things I wonder: do UAlbany Police continue to illegally store unregistered junk guns in their lockers on campus?

"A University at Albany student was assaulted on campus by two men, one of whom appeared to have a handgun. [...] The victim knew the assailants, who are not UAlbany students. Police said no shots were fired and that the assailants fled in a red Honda Civic. [...] University police said there was no danger to UAlbany community and that police agencies have been notified to look out for the Honda."

Waldman, Scott. "UAlbany student assaulted on campus." Albany Times Union. December 13, 2012. http://www.timesunion.com/default/article/UAlbany-student-assaulted-on-campus-4116702.php

If the identity of the men was known, why not identify them; if the red Honda Civic was not a stolen one, why not list the year and license plate number; if they were presumed armed, why were they not considered a danger to the community? If it was that the men were presumed innocent until proven guilty, then why run the article at all; why note that the red Honda Civic was something people were trying to locate?

"No official word on why the law enforcement officer felt it necessary to wear a weapon while moving his child out of the dorm. Although it's apparently legal for an off-duty officer to carry a weapon, Luntta said he was not sure if the man's possession of the gun on campus was a violation of school policy"

Waldman, Scott. "Campus Notebook: Tense moments for UAlbany students." Albany Times Union. May 16, 2013. http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Campus-Notebook-Tense-moments-for-UAlbany-4523960.php

It's not hard to learn what the school policies are about weapons on campus. There's a multitude of rules, all saying more or less the same thing: it's not allowed.
"The rules of the State University Board of Trustees (8 NYCRR §535.3 (j)) prohibit the possession of air guns, firearms, rifles, shotguns or other weapons on a state-operated campus of the University without the written authorization of the campus president."

"No air gun, firearm, rifle, shotgun or weapon may be possessed, stored, discharged, loaded or used on property owned or leased by the University unless the person in possession of said device meets the requirements set forth in these administrative procedures. The president of each state-operated campus may, in accordance with the provisions of section 590.3 of the rules of the University Board of Trustees (8 NYCRR § 590.3), grant written authorization to students, faculty, staff or other persons to permit the possession and storage of air guns, firearms, rifles, shotguns and weapons on campus only where such possession is required or permitted for the purposes specified in said section. When authorized, they will be stored unloaded in an appropriately secured area within or under the control of the University police department of each state-operated campus."

"When authorization is given to University police officers to carry firearms on duty, the weapon to be carried shall be state-owned and approved by the campus president. Only an officially issued firearm will be carried at any time on duty."

"Firearms on State-operated Campuses" policy item http://www.suny.edu/sunypp/documents.cfm?doc_id=367

Evidently Mr. Luntta's paid over $100,000! http://new-york-employees.findthebest.com/l/323009/Karl-Luntta If only we were all so well paid for our own ill-advised or ignorant statements....

One of the best ways to make UAlbany safer might be to replace UAlbany Police and other officials and administrators with better men and women!

On the topic of preventing UAlbany shootings... fraternities at UAlbany are at least as dangerous as UAlbany Police and UAlbany athletics. The student who drank about 60 ounces of vodka in a hazing incident, died from approximately 40 shots to the head (supposing them 1.5 each, a fairly standard shot glass size). A healthy number of shots for someone who is of age, not an alcoholic, etc. is just two shots.

How many hazing deaths have there been at UAlbany? It's difficult to say. There was a particularly nasty case involving a wide receiver on the SUNY Albany football team stripping to his underwear and entering the cold, murky, polluted body of runoff water filled with metal debris called "Indian Pond" wherein he was ">electrocuted to death in front of twelve other pledges and ten fraternity brothers. Because it supposedly did not involve coercion, it wasn't held to be hazing. You know, because guys are always eager to strip to their underwear in front of a bunch of other guys in public and enter a cold, murky, polluted body of runoff water filled with metal debris....

Questions about how the pond had become electrified and why the university hadn't done anything about it being electrified after having been warned by a student about it seem to have gone unresolved, as questions about deaths at UAlbany often seem to do.

It doesn't help matters that the campus judicial administrator at UAlbany, Clarence McNeill, had been a member of a fraternity at UAlbany. Not necessarily damning in and of itself (there are good fraternities), but McNeill's a nasty piece of work as this blog has repeatedly indicated. Also, consider how some of the usual suspects at UAlbany have handled hazing and drinking in the past:

Photographs suggesting hazing and underage drinking by members of the University at Albany women’s lacrosse team have surfaced on the Internet, the second time in two weeks a local college team is facing questions about the off-the-field behavior of its athletes. […] However, all of the images had been removed by 3 p.m. Wednesday, after Times Union reporters started contacting team members for comment.

Singelais, Mark. "Web ensnares UAlbany team." Albany Times Union. June 1, 2006: C1.

Photographs documenting athletic team hazing at UAlbany disappeared (*poof*) after the Albany Times Union, which regularly covers UAlbany sports and which is published by the President of the Board of Directors of the UAlbany Foundation and which is (or historically has been) available free of charge on campus, started contacting team members… fancy that.
There is no evidence to support hazing allegations against the University at Albany women’s lacrosse team, the school announced Wednesday after a three-week investigation prompted by photographs posted on the Internet. […]

The investigation was run by university counsel John Reilly and associate vice president for student success John Murphy, who interviewed women's lacrosse head coach Lindsey Hart and assorted players. University police chief Frank Wiley assisted the inquiry.

Singelais, Mark. “School says no hazing at party; But UAlbany investigation did find alcohol use.” Albany Times Union. June 22, 2006: C1.

Three men employed by UAlbany interview a group of women students, and reportedly none of the women report hazing. Not exactly surprising.

Did the three men interview the women individually - which could be intimidating and inappropriate - or did the three men interview the team of women all at once, in which case there might be strong peer pressure not to say anything? And if any women did say anything, might not they have been threatened by Reilly, Murphy, and/or Wiley not to speak up about it again, considering the type of men Reilly, Murphy, and Wiley are?

With respect to last year's hazing death:

UAlbany sent NEWS10 ABC a list of hazing prevention tips but declined a request for an interview. The school said “We don’t want to get involved.”

Yonkunas, Rachel. "UAlbany students call for harsher penalties after hazing death." News10 ABC. October 23, 2015. http://news10.com/2015/10/23/ualbany-students-call-for-harsher-penalties-after-hazing-death/

That certainly sounds like something the school would say.

Friday, October 16, 2015

State Government "Accountability" & the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act

http://osc.state.ny.us/audits/allaudits/093014/13s70.pdf

http://osc.state.ny.us/audits/90day/13s70r.pdf

The above 2014 Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act compliance audit does not appear to have addressed the issues brought to the NYS Office of the State Comptroller’s attention in an e-mail which OSC acknowledged (see below October 2012 e-mails). One of the serious issues: the State University of New York at Albany had not been properly maintaining its sexual offender registry for years.

• Sexual Offender Registry #1 "© 2009 University at Albany"

"There are currently three (4) [sic] registered sex offenders enrolled or working at the University. The following Information has been released:" was followed by a list of six (6) offenders. Accessed: October 19, 2012 Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/6BXAjbUOP Accessed: February 19, 2013 Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/6EZ55k2vF (it still read © 2009 at that time)

• Sexual Offender Registry #2 No date (probably circa 2007-2008?)

"There are currently two (2) registered sex offenders enrolled at the University. The following Information has been released:" was followed by a list of three (3) offenders. Accessed: October 19, 2012 Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/6BXAsiiOT http://police.albany.edu/2ColPage.asp?PageSName=SOR2 now redirects to UPD's homepage

Obviously two sexual offender registries should not have been online at the same time, listing different people, both of them with obvious basic mathematical issues (e.g. three does not equal 4 and does not equal six), and both obviously years out of date. On a campus where there are two unsolved disappearances of female students, Karen Wilson and Suzanne Lyall, that is appalling. Are such issues consistent with the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act or the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act?

The registry I think now may have html code that automatically updates the year on bottom of the page http://police.albany.edu/SOR2.shtml “© 2015 University at Albany” regardless of whether the registry has actually been updated. The simple suggestion to various parties of an explicit statement on the registry regarding when it was last updated and by whom was not implemented.

It all does raise some concerns…

Unfortunately, it’s hard finding someone in a position to do something about it who also would see the need to do something about it. SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher and SUNY Police Commissioner Paul Berger (who had been a member of the command staff of the UAlbany Police while the UAlbany Police were failing to maintain their sexual offender registry) seem to prefer that campuses not be secure, that students, faculty, staff, and visitors to campuses not be safe. One hopes better people will be appointed someday!

From: MVEDDER@osc.state.ny.us

Date: October 22, 2012 at 10:23:19 AM EDT

Cc: ABROOKS@osc.state.ny.us

Subject: Addressing SUNY Sexual Offender Registry and Clery Act Issues

This is to thank you for your email of October 13, 2012, which raised certain concerns regarding compliance with Clery Act reporting requirements, and other matters, at the State University of New York. We have provided the information you supplied with your email to staff in our State Government Accountability for their consideration with respect to future audit planning.

We would also suggest that you contact officials of the SUNY Central Administration offices with respect to the concerns you have raised regarding the State University of New York at Albany. They can be reached at www.suny.edu, or at

SUNY System Administration

State University Plaza

353 Broadway

Albany, NY 12246

Phone: 518.320.1100

Mary Vedder

Secretary II

mvedder@osc.state.ny.us

OSC, Division of Legal Services

State Government Accountability

(518) 474-5748


From: [Me]

Date: October 13, 2012 at 5:26:00 PM EDT

To: contactus@osc.state.ny.us

Subject: addressing SUNY Sexual Offender Registry and Clery Act issues?

Albany County Comptroller Mike Conners wrote me on September 27, 2012 5:36:37 AM that he'd forwarded an e-mail of mine (it is included below) to the NYS Comptroller, but I have not heard back from the NYS Comptroller's Office at all. I had tried sending it to the Comptroller's Office myself originally, but perhaps the e-mail address is not one that is working.

I reported it to the Office of Sex Offender Management / Sex Offender Registry at infodcjs@dcjs.ny.gov but they did not respond. The Albany County Sheriff's Office indicated it's not their jurisdiction, if I understood them. The Albany County Comptroller wrote it's not within his purview. The City of Albany Police haven't responded.

I'm not quite sure where else to try. [...]

From: [me]

Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2012 1:04 AM

To: InfoDCJS@dcjs.ny.gov; investigations@osc.state.ny.us; Comptroller Investigations Web Mail; Conners, Michael

Subject: Sex Offender Registry and Clery Act issues?

I'm not quite sure of the relevant offices, so I'm e-mailing several offices that seem relevant. DCJS because of the sex offenders, NYS Comptroller because of past Clery Act violation investigations, Albany County Comptroller as seemingly relevant jurisdiction.

There's a couple of seemingly-Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act-related issues I wished to raise: (1) contradictory and possibly outdated information regarding sex offenders at the University at Albany and (2) contradictory information regarding who the Campus Security Authorities at the University at Albany are for the purposes of the Clery Act.

1) University at Albany Sexual Offender Registry

"There are currently three (4) registered sex offenders enrolled or working at the University. The following Information has been released:"

http://police.albany.edu/SOR2.shtml

Typically, when one types a number as a word and then follows it by a digit in parentheses, they'll match.

Following the colon on that page are not three (3), or four (4), but six (6) registered sex offenders.

[Other apparent specific issues regarding the above]

2) University at Albany Campus Security Authorities for the purposes of the Clery Act

The Annual Safety Report/Clery Act Report http://police.albany.edu/ASR.shtml on page 58 states "The DCJS Sex Offender Registry site may be found on the web (See the link to the right)". Since there's no link to the right within the PDF that I can see, it seems to be cut and paste from elsewhere, perhaps from the website. Possibly more care should be taken in writing the Clery Act Report, since the NYS Comptroller has after all found that UAlbany has had a number of Clery Act violations in the past.

Another issue regarding problems in relation to the Clery Act: page 21 of that report and also http://police.albany.edu/CSA.shtml (c) 2009 identify the Campus Security Authorities under the Clery Act as:

• Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education

• Professional staff in Student Success except Student Health Center and Counseling Center staff

• Senior staff in the Office of Human Resource Management

• Academic Advisors in Advisement Services Center Undergraduate Studies (ASC/US) and Educational Opportunity Program (EOP)

• Professional staff in Athletics, including coaches

The Coordinated Response for Sexual Assault on page 5 at http://www.albany.edu/counseling_center/sarc/docs/SA%20PROTOCOL%20ammended%2012-10-09.pdf (evidently dated October 9, 2012) identifies CSAs as staff in

• Residential Life

• Student Life

• University Police

• Conflict Resolution and Civic Responsibility

• Athletics

• Undergraduate Studies

• Affirmative Action

The Student Code of Conduct Appendix J at http://www.albany.edu/studentconduct/27173.php (c) 2012 and page 32 of http://www.albany.edu/studentconduct/assets/Community_Rights_FINAL_10-28-11.pdf (evidently dated October 28, 2011) identifies CSAs as staff in:

• Residential Life

• Student Involvement & Leadership

• University Police

• Conflict Resolution and Civic Responsibility

• Athletics

• Undergraduate Studies and Diversity and Inclusion

Residential Life, Student Involvement & Leadership, and Conflict Resolution and Civic Responsibility fall under Student Success http://www.albany.edu/studentsuccess/docs/OrgChart2010.pdf but Appendix J and the Coordinated Response for Sexual Assault identify other offices within Student Success. The Coordinated Response for Sexual Assault and the Student Code of Conduct Appendix J thus seemingly leave out the rest of the professional staff in Student Success that the annual Clery Act report includes. The annual Clery Act report leaves out Diversity and Inclusion http://www.albany.edu/diversityandinclusion/

Which of the three different lists of Campus Security Authorities is the correct one?

It's not clear to me why the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education (who is also the Dean for Undergraduate Education) would be a CSA while the Dean for Graduate Studies does not appear to be a CSA.

It would be nice if the previous annual reports were available online as well?

---

“Make you the world a bit better or more beautiful because you have lived in it.” - Edward W. Bok

Monday, October 12, 2015

Hearst's dirty cop Paul Berger appointed SUNY-wide Police Commissioner

A retirement ceremony for Bruce McBride, commissioner of the State University of New York Campus Police, was held Wednesday at the SUNY Plaza.

Paul Berger will replace McBride as head of campus police for SUNY.

"SUNY police commissioner McBride retires." Albany Times Union. July 2, 2015. http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/SUNY-police-commissioner-McBride-retires-6361432.php

Naturally, the Times Union did not mention that Paul Berger had been a SUNY Albany police officer, or that the SUNY Albany Police had been paid extra to do security for the NY Giants summer football training camp that the Times Union helped lure to and kept at SUNY Albany (while the Times Union published a defense of hazing by the NY Giants), or that the Times Union publisher George Randolph Hearst III is the President of the Board of Directors of the University at Albany Foundation. The Times Union isn't exactly known for being scrupulous about their potential (or actual) conflicts of interest.
Because the Times Union covers the University at Albany, its sports programs and the Giants summer camp, there's a possibility for conflict of interest […] "We simply talk about this a lot and do our darndest to prevent it"

Bryce, Jill. "Giants camp gets new backers." Daily Gazette [Schenectady, NY]. July 19, 1997: B6.

Sure you are.

Dirty SUNY Albany cop Paul Berger appointed as SUNY-wide Police Commissioner. Had he ever dreamed incompetence and corruption would take him so far? Whether it be fudging his resume or providing false court testimony, he's come a long way!

While at SUNY Albany, Berger failed to solve the disappearances of Karen Wilson and Suzanne Lyall. (Wilson disappeared in 1985; Berger joined the SUNY Albany Police in 1988.) With Berger now as SUNY Police Commissioner, imagine how many more disappearances there will be that he'll fail to solve! With the shining example of incompetence and corruption that is Paul Berger, think of how many more incompetent and corrupt SUNY Police officers the public has to look forward to for years to come!

It makes one quite ill. The public deserves better than this. Victims deserve better than this.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Casey Rapetorium

Oh, somewhere in this favoured land the sun is shining bright,

The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light;

And somewhere men are laughing, and somewhere children shout,

But there is no joy in Minerva—education has struck out.

The man who established the charity that on Wednesday was revealed to have donated $25 million to Albany Medical Center, William Duker, was a high-flying Manhattan attorney before being convicted for defrauding the federal government in the late 1990s. Duker then resurfaced in the Capital Region about a decade ago as a successful venture capitalist. [...]

No information about William Duker's current professional activities was released by Albany Med Wednesday. Neither Albany Med nor Duker responded to requests for comment.

No financial information could be found for the Bernard and Millie Foundation. A filing for the Bernard and Millie Children's Foundation, which includes Duker, his wife, Sharon, and son, West, as directors, listed its assets as just under $31,000 at the end of 2012. [...]

Duker reportedly earned millions as a Manhattan attorney in the 1990s. He was part of the legal team hired by the federal government to seek damages from junk-bond king Michael Milken, according to previous Times Union reporting. Duker was later charged with defrauding the government by inflating his bills by $1.4 million. In 1997, he pleaded guilty and was disbarred. He served 16 months of a 33-month sentence that was handed down by then-federal Judge Sonia Sotomayor (now a U.S. Supreme Court justice).

Judge Sotomayor claimed to struggle with his sentence at the time, given the benefits of his work to the government, according to a story in the New York Times. But she was swayed by the gravity of his offense and Duker's attempts to cover up his crime, the newspaper reported.

Hughes, Claire. "Albany Med donor's wayward path." Albany Times Union. May 28, 2014. http://www.timesunion.com/business/article/Albany-Med-donor-s-wayward-path-5511202.php
Criminal: What do I have to do in order for the newspaper to downplay my known crimes and not to investigate further?

Newspaper: Well, our publisher is trying to undermine the safety and academic integrity of a certain university he's involved with while also fueling his desire (common among filthy rich white men) to feel like he owns several sports teams and their players, giving our sports section more to cover, and potentially driving more business to the arena we own downtown.

UAlbany announced its athletic program received a $10 million donation from The Bernard and Millie Children's Foundation, set up by 1975 graduate William Duker, his wife, Sharon (Casey) Duker, and their son William "West" Duker. [...]

"This is a great day for UAlbany athletics," said UAlbany Foundation president George R. Hearst III, who is also publisher of the Times Union. [...]

A Times Union story in May 2014 reported William Duker earned millions as a Manhattan attorney in the 1990s. Hired by the federal government to seek damages from junk-bond king Michael Milken, Duker was later charged with defrauding the government by inflating his bills by $1.4 million. He pleaded guilty and was disbarred in 1997. He served 16 months of a 33-month sentence.

The Dukers declined an interview request through a UAlbany spokesman after Thursday's ceremony.

Singelais, Mark. "After $10 million gift, UAlbany names facility 'Tom and Mary Casey Stadium'; Athletic department receives $10 million gift from Bernard and Millie Childrens Foundation." Albany Times Union. October 8, 2015. http://www.timesunion.com/sports/article/UAlbany-names-athletic-facility-Tom-and-Mary-6559019.php

Five paragraphs by the Times Union on Duker's crimes and the lack of financial info for the Bernard and Millie Foundation following a major donation to Albany Medical Center. One paragraph by the Times Union on Duker's crimes and no mention of the lack of financial information for the Bernard and Millie Foundation following a major donation to the university for which Times Union publisher George Randolph Hearst III is the president of the Foundation. Funny thing that. No potential conflicts of interest involved at all there, nope.

Also, as mentioned here previously, UAlbany football coach Greg Gattuso (mentioned in the above article) is a former Penn State football player for Coach Joe Paterno and Assistant Coach Jerry Sandusky, a former assistant coach for Joe Paterno alongside fellow assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, and someone who continues to carry water for Joe Paterno even after his death. Former UAlbany football coach Bob Ford after whom UAlbany's football field is named (also mentioned in the above article), had been an acolyte of Joe Paterno and continued to worship Joe Paterno even after Paterno's support of sexual assault and pedophila became more publicly recognized.

Summers, Nick. "Joe Paterno’s Troubling Attitude Toward Sex Charges." The Daily Beast. November 12, 2011. http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/11/12/joe-paterno-s-troubling-attitude-toward-sex-charges.html

How does a $10,000,000 donation to the University at Albany's athletic department benefit education at the university - education being the very reason for its existence? It doesn't.

This, at a university which is notorious for cutting academic departments and losing a whole college.

This, at a university where there's been numerous issues with the athletic department? Issues from NCAA violations...

McGuire, Mark. "UAlbany suspends longtime softball coach; Self-reports NCAA Level III violations." Daily Gazette. September 16, 2015. http://www.dailygazette.com/news/2015/sep/16/ualbany-suspends-longtime-softball-coach/

... to at least one gang-rape by UAlbany football players which UAlbany "Police Chief" J. "Frank" Wiley (an ex-athlete, ex-coach, football fan) chose not to report to the Albany County District Attorney until the media forced him to report it and about which he gloated "there is no protocol." It is revolting.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

A Moment of Silence for the Umpqua Community College Victims - and the victims of SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher

“College campuses are meant to provide students, faculty, and staff with a safe haven where they can teach, learn, and grow,” said SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher in a news release. “It is unbearably saddening when a peaceful campus community like Umpqua Community College is disrupted by violence. As those affected by this devastating tragedy continue to heal, the entire State University of New York family will keep them in our thoughts.”

Bump, Bethany. "SUNY to observe national moment of silence Thursday for UCC victims." Albany Times Union. October 8, 2015. http://blog.timesunion.com/schools/suny-to-observe-national-moment-of-silence-thursday-for-ucc-victims/3291/

Nancy Zimpher, hypocrite, has done much to ensure that SUNY campuses are not a safe haven. How about a moment of silence also for those at SUNY for whose deaths she is more or less responsible?

"SUNY police chiefs serve at the pleasure of the campus president, thus are motivated to keep crime stats down by any means […] SUNY can no longer afford to staff, or overstaff, a body, or overstaff, a body which is subject to inefficiencies, manipulation, cronyism, ill motivation and mismanagement."

Peter Barry, VP & Legislative Director of NYS University Police Officers Union Local 1792 of the American Federation of State County & Municipal Employees AFSCME, Council 82 & AFL-CIO. (127-128). http://webcitation.org/6Sz9DNrcH

How much has Nancy Zimpher done to eliminate the known corruption and incompetence among SUNY Police that endanger students, faculty, staff, and visitors to SUNY campuses? Nothing, AFAIK. The problems have grown worse under her, as she pockets more and more of the salary and perks she never earns.

In this small upstate college town, there were many who tried to comprehend how a popular 77-year-old professor who championed antiwar philosophies would have come to such a violent end: stabbed to death in his office on Friday, by, the police said, a graduate student whom he knew.

Then there were those who said they had noticed signs of erratic behavior by the suspect, a graduate student at Binghamton University, who, they said, was becoming increasingly fearful — so much so that his roommate said he had warned university officials of his concerns.

Schmidt, Michael S. and Michael D. Regan." "Binghamton Student Says He Warned Officials." N. Y. Times. December 6, 2009. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/07/nyregion/07binghamton.html


The family of Alexandra Kogut is considering whether to sue New York state and The College at Brockport for failing to provide enough security that might have prevented the freshman’s death, according to court records.

A notice of claim filed two months after 18-year-old Kogut was beaten to death on Sept. 29, 2012, inside her dorm room by her boyfriend, Clayton Whittemore, alleges that “campus police/security fell below the standard of ordinary care” expected of an entity that legally takes on some of the responsibilities of a parent.

"Koguts consider legal action against SUNY Brockport; The family of Alexandra Kogut is considering whether to sue New York state and The College at Brockport for failing to provide enough security that might have prevented the freshman’s death, according to court records."

LaDuca, Rocco. Utica Observer-Dispatch. June 3, 2014. http://www.uticaod.com/article/20140603/News/140609762

How many students, faculty, staff, and visitors to SUNY campuses might still be alive if there were a Chancellor who genuinely cared about and who actually did something about making those campuses "a safe haven where they can teach, learn, and grow"? How many murders, overdoses, suicides, accidents, etc. might have been prevented?

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Clarence L. McNeil & USED on cease and desist orders issued to victims and witnesses

Witness Interview Statement

State University at Albany Case Number: 02-12-2157

[Leading question from USED:]

"The Code of Conduct grants you 'express authority' to enforce decisions, which would include the ability to issue cease and desist notification/orders. Is that correct?

"The witness [Clarence McNeill] stated, 'Yes.' [...]

[USED:] "Have you issued other cease and desist orders to other students?

"The witness [Clarence McNeill] said, 'Yes, of course.'"

Actual definition of a cease and desist order suggests it is something that cannot be issued by a single individual, or outside of a trial of some kind. USED knew no trial to have occurred when they posed their leading question, and did not (could not?) point to any part of the Code of Conduct that grants Clarence McNeill to issue cease and desist orders at all - much less to victims or witnesses.

cease-and-de·sist order

[sēs-ənd-di-zist-, -sist-]

: an order from a court or quasi-judicial tribunal to stop engaging in a particular activity or practice (as an unfair labor practice) compare injunction , mandamus , stay

http://dictionary.findlaw.com/definition/order.html