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Timely warning covers two stalking reports on consecutive days by the same suspect

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CAstalkingtimely warninghigh confidence
Under Investigation

The UC Santa Barbara Police Department issued a timely warning on May 16, 2024 covering two reported stalking incidents on consecutive days: one outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB) on May 13, 2024 at approximately 7:00 PM PDT, and one outside Theater and Dance West on May 14, 2024 at approximately 4:00 PM PDT. In each, the suspect approached a victim, asked for their phone number, and then contacted them offering to pay them to meet and talk. The suspect was described as an Asian or Indian adult male, approximately 25-30 years old, 6 feet tall, thin build, around 175 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes.

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University of California, Santa Barbara
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Read when and how UCSB says it will use UCSB Alert: summarized, quoted, and analyzed.
Documented Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Content Warning: This timely warning includes descriptions of stalking. In an effort to promote campus safety and provide timely information to our campus community, the following information is being provided so that you can make informed decisions about your safety. We encourage all community members to care for their needs and well-being while reading this message, especially those who have been impacted by similar forms of violence. CARE provides free and confidential support and advocacy to students, staff, and faculty who have experienced sexual violence, including sexual assault, relationship violence, and stalking. Please call the 24/7 confidential phone line (805) 893-4613 any time to explore your rights, options, and support. CARE website: care.ucsb.edu Stalking is a form of Sexual Violence under University policies. Information about UCSB’s policies and support resources for sexual violence can be found at: titleix.ucsb.edu Report This is a Timely Warning regarding a crime that occurred on campus property. On Tuesday, May 14, 2024, the UCSB Police Department received a report of stalking that occurred outside Theater and Dance West on May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m. The suspect approached the victim, asked for their phone number, and then contacted them, offering to pay them to meet and talk. On May 15, 2024 the UCSB Police Department received a similar report where the suspect approached the victim, asked them for their phone number, and then texted them, offering them money to meet and talk. This incident occurred outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB) on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m. The suspect is described as an Asian or Indian adult male, approximately 25-30 years old, 6 feet tall, thin, around 175 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. During the incident on May 14th he was described as wearing a grey sweatshirt, black pants, and a backpack. UCPD is investigating this crime. If you have information that might assist in the investigation, please contact the UCSB Police Department at (805) 893-3446, or report crime information anonymously at www.police.ucsb.edu/report-crime. UCPD reminds the campus community of the following safety tips: • If you start to feel concerns about a person, phone call or message, trust your instincts and try to remove yourself as quickly as possible from the potential threat, even if it feels awkward to do so. • If you feel you are being followed, try to get the attention of people nearby, run/walk to a well-lit or more populated area, and call 911 to ask for help. • You are not obligated to provide your personal or sensitive information to anyone if you don't feel comfortable doing so. • Do not hesitate to contact UCPD to report any concerning persons, messages, or activities. • If you are in fear for your safety or the safety of others, call 911 immediately. UCPD shares these Safety Tips while recognizing that perpetrators, and not the victims or survivors, are solely responsible for their actions. Additional Resources • Counseling & Psychological Services (CAPS) provides individual counseling, group counseling, and wellness opportunities to students. Call (805) 893-4411 or submit a CAPS Services Request Form. 24/7 phone counseling is available by calling (805) 893-4411. CAPS website: caps.sa.ucsb.edu. • The Academic & Staff Assistance Program (ASAP) offers short-term counseling, consultation, wellness workshops, and assistance with threat management to faculty and staff. Call (805) 893-3318 to schedule an appointment. ASAP website: www.hr.ucsb.edu/hr-units/employee-services/asap. • The UCSB Police Department's CSO Safety Escort Program is a free service provided to members of the UCSB community as a safe alternative to walking alone at night. Call (805)893-2000 to request a CSO escort. For more information: https://www.police.ucsb.edu/cso/cso-safety-escorts. **UCPD encourages printing and posting of this Timely Warning for further community notification.**
The alert includes a content warning for stalking descriptions, a practice that has become increasingly common at UC campuses and reflects trauma-informed communication practices
Unlike many stalking timely warnings which omit suspect details to protect the victim, this alert provides a detailed physical description because the suspect was unknown to the victim
The behavior described, offering to pay someone to meet after unsolicited contact, represents a non-traditional stalking pattern that differs from the repeated following behavior more commonly associated with campus stalking cases
The timely warning was issued May 16, 2024, covering two reported stalking incidents on consecutive days (May 13 outside HSSB and May 14 outside Theater and Dance West) by the same suspect
Aggregating multiple incidents into a single timely warning is standard practice when a single perpetrator is implicated in a course of conduct
Message elements

How the first alert is built

To check this alert, Claude (an AI) read it in full 25 separate times, independently. Each read decided whether the message answers each of the six questions and gave a short reason. A final reviewer then weighed all 25 and wrote the plain-English verdict you see when you open a row. The score (for example 22/25) is how many reads agreed; the 25 individual reads are tucked underneath if you want to check them.

Content Warning: This timely warning includes descriptions of stalking. In an effort to promote campus safety and provide timely information to our campus community, the following information is being provided so that you can make informed decisions about your safety. We encourage all community members to care for their needs and well-being while reading this message, especially those who have been impacted by similar forms of violence. CARE provides free and confidential support and advocacy to students, staff, and faculty who have experienced sexual violence, including sexual assault, relationship violence, and stalking. Please call the 24/7 confidential phone line (805) 893-4613 any time to explore your rights, options, and support. CARE website: care.ucsb.edu Stalking is a form of Sexual Violence under University policies. Information about UCSB’s policies and support resources for sexual violence can be found at: titleix.ucsb.edu Report This is a Timely Warning regarding a crime that occurred on campus property. On Tuesday, May 14, 2024, the UCSB Police Department received a report of stalking that occurred outside Theater and Dance West on May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m. The suspect approached the victim, asked for their phone number, and then contacted them, offering to pay them to meet and talk. On May 15, 2024 the UCSB Police Department received a similar report where the suspect approached the victim, asked them for their phone number, and then texted them, offering them money to meet and talk. This incident occurred outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB) on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m. The suspect is described as an Asian or Indian adult male, approximately 25-30 years old, 6 feet tall, thin, around 175 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. During the incident on May 14th he was described as wearing a grey sweatshirt, black pants, and a backpack. UCPD is investigating this crime. If you have information that might assist in the investigation, please contact the UCSB Police Department at (805) 893-3446, or report crime information anonymously at www.police.ucsb.edu/report-crime. UCPD reminds the campus community of the following safety tips: • If you start to feel concerns about a person, phone call or message, trust your instincts and try to remove yourself as quickly as possible from the potential threat, even if it feels awkward to do so. • If you feel you are being followed, try to get the attention of people nearby, run/walk to a well-lit or more populated area, and call 911 to ask for help. • You are not obligated to provide your personal or sensitive information to anyone if you don't feel comfortable doing so. • Do not hesitate to contact UCPD to report any concerning persons, messages, or activities. • If you are in fear for your safety or the safety of others, call 911 immediately. UCPD shares these Safety Tips while recognizing that perpetrators, and not the victims or survivors, are solely responsible for their actions. Additional Resources • Counseling & Psychological Services (CAPS) provides individual counseling, group counseling, and wellness opportunities to students. Call (805) 893-4411 or submit a CAPS Services Request Form. 24/7 phone counseling is available by calling (805) 893-4411. CAPS website: caps.sa.ucsb.edu. • The Academic & Staff Assistance Program (ASAP) offers short-term counseling, consultation, wellness workshops, and assistance with threat management to faculty and staff. Call (805) 893-3318 to schedule an appointment. ASAP website: www.hr.ucsb.edu/hr-units/employee-services/asap. • The UCSB Police Department's CSO Safety Escort Program is a free service provided to members of the UCSB community as a safe alternative to walking alone at night. Call (805)893-2000 to request a CSO escort. For more information: https://www.police.ucsb.edu/cso/cso-safety-escorts. **UCPD encourages printing and posting of this Timely Warning for further community notification.**

  • Sourcepresent25/25

    Final assessment

    All 25 reads agree the sender is present: the alert names "the UCSB Police Department" issuing a Timely Warning.

    Who is sending the alert and who is responding. People act faster on a message from a clearly identifiable, credible sender, such as a named department, the police, or a branded alert system, than on an anonymous notice. A branded signature counts.

    See all 25 individual reads
    1. present: Identifies sender "the UCSB Police Department".
    2. present: Identifies sender, "the UCSB Police Department".
    3. present: Opens "Timely Warning" and names "the UCSB Police Department", identifying the sender.
    4. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" issuing a "Timely Warning".
    5. present: Opens with "Timely Warning" and names "the UCSB Police Department" as receiving authority.
    6. present: Branded "Timely Warning" from "the UCSB Police Department".
    7. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" and opens "Timely Warning", identifying the sender.
    8. present: Headed "Timely Warning" from "the UCSB Police Department", the named sender.
    9. present: Opens with "Timely Warning" and names "the UCSB Police Department" as the source.
    10. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuer.
    11. present: Branded "Timely Warning" plus "the UCSB Police Department" identify the source.
    12. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuer of the "Timely Warning".
    13. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuing authority.
    14. present: Opens with "Timely Warning" and names "the UCSB Police Department", identifying the sender.
    15. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department", identifying the issuing authority.
    16. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuing authority.
    17. present: Identifies sender as "the UCSB Police Department" issuing a Timely Warning.
    18. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuer.
    19. present: Names "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuing authority.
    20. present: Identifies "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuing authority.
    21. present: Identifies "the UCSB Police Department" as the issuing authority.
    22. present: Headed "Timely Warning" and references "the UCSB Police Department".
    23. present: The message names "the UCSB Police Department", the issuing authority.
    24. present: It names "the UCSB Police Department", identifying the issuer.
    25. present: Opens with "Timely Warning" and names "the UCSB Police Department", identifying the sender.
  • Hazardpresent25/25

    Final assessment

    Unanimous that the hazard is named, "stalking", a specific threat.

    What the threat actually is. A complete warning names the specific danger, such as a shooter, a fire, a tornado, or a gas leak, rather than a vague emergency, because people decide what to do based on what they are facing.

    See all 25 individual reads
    1. present: Names the specific hazard "stalking".
    2. present: Names the hazard, "stalking".
    3. present: It names "stalking", a specific threat.
    4. present: It names "stalking", a specific hazard.
    5. present: Names "stalking" where a suspect approached victims, a specific crime.
    6. present: Names the specific crime "stalking".
    7. present: Names "stalking", a specific crime.
    8. present: Names "stalking", a specific threat.
    9. present: Names the specific hazard "stalking".
    10. present: Names the specific threat "stalking".
    11. present: Names the hazard "stalking".
    12. present: Names the hazard as "stalking".
    13. present: Names the specific hazard "stalking".
    14. present: Names the hazard specifically as "stalking".
    15. present: Names the hazard specifically as "stalking".
    16. present: Names the hazard as "stalking".
    17. present: Names the hazard specifically as "stalking".
    18. present: Names "stalking", a specific crime threat.
    19. present: Names "stalking", a specific threat.
    20. present: Names the specific hazard, "stalking".
    21. present: Names the hazard as "stalking".
    22. present: Names "stalking", a specific crime threat.
    23. present: It names a specific threat, "stalking".
    24. present: It names "stalking" incidents, a specific threat.
    25. present: Names the hazard, "stalking", with a described suspect approaching victims.
  • Locationpresent25/25

    Final assessment

    All 25 reads find specific locations, outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building and Theater and Dance West.

    Where the threat is. Saying whether danger is in a specific building, a part of campus, or area-wide lets people judge their own proximity and choose a safe direction. Without a where, a warning is hard to act on precisely.

    See all 25 individual reads
    1. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    2. present: Gives location, "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    3. present: It locates incidents "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West", specific places.
    4. present: It specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    5. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    6. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    7. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    8. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and Theater and Dance West, locations.
    9. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    10. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    11. present: Locates it "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    12. present: Locates it "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    13. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    14. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    15. present: Locates it "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    16. present: States locations: "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    17. present: Gives location "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    18. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    19. present: Locates it "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    20. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    21. present: Locates it "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    22. present: Specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)".
    23. present: It locates it "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    24. present: It specifies "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "Theater and Dance West".
    25. present: States the locations, "outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB)" and "outside Theater and Dance West".
  • Guidancepresent13/25

    Final assessment

    A narrow majority, 13 of 12, finds guidance present in the request to contact police; dissenters note it offers no protective action to recipients, only an information request.

    The protective action to take. A clear, specific instruction, such as shelter in place, evacuate, avoid the area, or run-hide-fight, drives faster and more correct protective behavior than describing the threat alone.

    See all 25 individual reads
    1. absent: No protective action directed to recipients; only asks those with info to contact police.
    2. absent: Gives only a contact-with-information request, no protective action to recipients.
    3. present: It directs "If you have information regarding these incidents, please contact the UCSB Police Department", the directed action provided.
    4. absent: It is an informational warning with only a request for information, no protective action to recipients.
    5. absent: Asks only those with information to contact police; no protective action for recipients.
    6. absent: Only asks those with information to contact police; no protective action to recipients.
    7. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", an instruction.
    8. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", an action to take.
    9. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", the instructed action.
    10. present: Advises that those with information should "contact the UCSB Police Department", a directed action.
    11. present: Asks anyone with information "to contact the UCSB Police Department", an action.
    12. absent: Asks for information but gives no protective action instruction to recipients.
    13. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department".
    14. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", a reporting action.
    15. absent: Only asks those with information to contact police, no protective action for recipients.
    16. present: Instructs those with information "to contact the UCSB Police Department".
    17. absent: No protective action to recipients beyond reporting; only asks those with information to call police.
    18. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", a protective action.
    19. present: Asks anyone with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", a reporting action to recipients.
    20. present: Instructs those with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department".
    21. absent: No protective action is directed to recipients; it only asks for information.
    22. absent: Asks those with information to call police but gives no protective action.
    23. present: It instructs those with information to "contact the UCSB Police Department", a protective action.
    24. absent: It only asks for information and gives no protective action instruction.
    25. absent: The text asks those with information to contact police but gives no protective safety action.
  • Timepresent25/25

    Final assessment

    Unanimous that timing is present: the alert gives dates and times such as "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m."

    When the message applies. A timestamp, the word now or immediately, or a phrase like until further notice tells the reader whether the danger is current and how quickly to act.

    See all 25 individual reads
    1. present: Gives the time "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m.".
    2. present: Gives times, "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and another "on May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    3. present: It gives dates and times like "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    4. present: It gives dates and times like "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m."
    5. present: States "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.", clock times and dates.
    6. present: States "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and other dated times.
    7. present: Gives "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and other dated times.
    8. present: Says incidents occurred "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and May 14, clock times and dates.
    9. present: Gives times "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    10. present: Gives "On May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and other dates and times.
    11. present: Gives times and dates "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and others.
    12. present: Gives "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    13. present: Gives the time "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m.".
    14. present: Gives clock times and dates, "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    15. present: Gives "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and other dated times.
    16. present: Gives dates and times: "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    17. present: Gives times "On May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    18. present: Gives "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m.", a specific time.
    19. present: Gives "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.", dates and times.
    20. present: Gives dates and times, the incident "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m.".
    21. present: Gives time the incident "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and another "on May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    22. present: Says "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m.", a specific time.
    23. present: It gives specific times and dates, "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "on May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    24. present: It gives times "on May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
    25. present: Gives dates and times, "May 13, 2024 around 7:00 p.m." and "May 14, 2024 around 4:00 p.m.".
  • Impactabsent4/25

    Final assessment

    Absent. With 21 of 25 agreeing, the majority find the stalking conduct, approaching and texting victims, states no physical harm or danger; four read the conduct itself as a stated harm.

    What the hazard could do to the people in its path. Beyond naming the threat, a complete warning conveys its potential consequences or severity, such as that a tornado can level buildings or that a leak could be explosive, so recipients grasp how much danger they are in. Research on warning message content finds that a concrete impact statement helps people personalize their risk and act sooner.

    See all 25 individual reads
    1. absent: Reports stalking incidents involving phone-number requests and texts with no stated injury or danger.
    2. absent: Describes stalking incidents involving requests for a phone number with no stated physical harm or danger.
    3. absent: Describes stalking incidents of approaching and texting victims with no stated injury or danger beyond the conduct.
    4. present: It reports stalking incidents where a suspect approached victims and offered money to meet, a stated harm and ongoing danger.
    5. absent: Describes stalking incidents involving phone-number requests and texts without stating any physical harm or danger.
    6. absent: Describes stalking where a suspect asked for a phone number and offered money but states no physical harm or danger.
    7. absent: It describes a stalking suspect seeking phone numbers and offering money with no stated physical harm.
    8. absent: A stalking report describing being approached and texted states no explicit harm or danger consequence.
    9. absent: Describes a stalking suspect approaching and texting victims without stating injury or explicit danger.
    10. absent: Describes stalking through unwanted approaches and texts without stating physical harm or danger.
    11. absent: It describes a stalking incident of unwanted approaches and texts but states no physical harm or explicit danger.
    12. absent: It describes a stalking suspect asking for phone numbers and offering money but states no physical harm or explicit danger.
    13. present: It reports stalking incidents where a suspect approached victims, a stated harm, though the conduct described is non-violent.
    14. absent: It describes stalking where a suspect asked for phone numbers and offered money with no stated physical harm.
    15. absent: Describes a stalking suspect approaching victims for phone numbers but states no physical harm or injury.
    16. absent: Describes stalking involving approaches and texts but states no physical harm or injury.
    17. absent: It describes stalking incidents involving approaches and texts but states no physical harm or explicit danger consequence.
    18. absent: It describes stalking incidents involving phone-number requests and money offers but states no physical harm or danger.
    19. absent: It describes a stalking incident involving requests for a phone number with no stated physical harm.
    20. absent: Describes a stalking suspect approaching and texting victims but states no physical harm or injury.
    21. present: It reports stalking incidents where a suspect approached and texted victims offering money, a stated harm to victims.
    22. present: It describes stalking where a suspect approached victims and offered money to meet, a harmful predatory act against victims.
    23. absent: Describes stalking incidents involving requests for a phone number without stating physical harm or danger.
    24. absent: It describes a stalking suspect approaching and texting a victim but states no physical harm or danger.
    25. absent: It describes stalking incidents where the suspect asked for phone numbers and texted offering money but states no physical harm or stated danger.

Systematic AI judgments with visible reasoning, not human-validated codings.

About this analysis
Context

Background

UCSB's stalking timely warning of May 16, 2024 is notable for including a content warning at the top of the message, a practice that emerged at UC campuses following student advocacy for trauma-informed communication. The warning bundled two reported incidents on consecutive days: May 13 outside the Humanities and Social Sciences Building (HSSB) at approximately 7:00 PM PDT and May 14 outside Theater and Dance West at approximately 4:00 PM PDT, both by the same described suspect who asked victims for their phone number and then offered money to meet. HSSB is a central academic building on the UCSB campus and is frequently occupied during evening hours. This incident occurred less than a month after a separate attempted abduction and sexual assault was reported near the campus Labyrinth on April 20, 2024, heightening campus safety concerns during the spring quarter. Stalking was added to the list of Clery-reportable offenses by the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013, and UCSB's alert reflects the evolving practices for communicating these incidents.
Analysis

Key Findings

Content warnings on timely warning notifications represent an emerging practice at UC campuses that balances Clery compliance with trauma-informed communication
Stalking timely warnings for incidents involving unknown suspects can include detailed physical descriptions, unlike those involving known individuals where victim privacy is the priority
The offering-to-pay behavior pattern illustrates how stalking under the Clery Act encompasses a broader range of conduct than the popular conception of following or surveillance
UCSB's May 16, 2024 timely warning aggregated two stalking reports on consecutive days (May 13 HSSB and May 14 Theater and Dance West) into a single notification, standard practice when a single suspect is implicated in a course of conduct
Outcome
Under investigation by UCSB Police Department.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Student Paper
  3. News
Cite this case

Campus Alert Archive. "University of California, Santa Barbara: Timely warning covers two stalking reports on consecutive days by the same suspect." Incident of May 13, 2024. Added April 2026; last updated July 2026. https://campusalertarchive.com/case/ucsb-stalking-2024-05-13/

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Alert text quoted on this page remains the work of the issuing institution; the archive is a secondary source.

Tags
stalkingtimely-warningcontent-warningvawacaliforniauc-systemUnder Investigation
Added April 2026Updated July 2026Via ingestion