Disclosure of Campus Security Policy, Campus Crime Statistics Act and Annual Fire Safety Report
In compliance with the Clery Act, designated Campus Security Authorities (CSA) are located throughout campus. These are individuals who have significant responsibility for student and campus activities. Their primary function as a campus security authority is to report to the Rogers State University Campus Police Department all allegations of Clery Act crimes that he or she receives.
Campus Security Authority (CSA) Incident Report Form
Who Should Use This Form?
This form should be used by Campus Security Authorities to report crimes under the Clery Act that they know of but were not formally reported or investigated by the Rogers State University Police Department.
This is an anonymous form that allows RSUPD to track crimes for required Clery reporting purposes accurately. It is essential to the RSU Police Department that the public’s crime statistic information is clear and accurate.
The following crimes should be reported using this form:
- Murder/Non-Negligent Manslaughter – The willful killing of one human being by another.
- Negligent Manslaughter – The killing of another person through gross negligence.
- Sexual Assault:
- Rape: Penetration, no matter how slight, of the vagina or anus with any body part or object, or oral penetration by a sex organ of another person, without the victim’s consent.
- Fondling: The touching of the private body parts of another person for the purpose of sexual gratification, forcibly and/or against that person’s will; or not forcibly or against that person’s will where the victim is incapable of giving consent because of his/her youth or because of his/her temporary or permanent mental incapacity.
- Incest: Non-forcible sexual intercourse between persons who are related to each other within the degrees wherein marriage is prohibited by law.
- Statutory Rape: Non-forcible sexual intercourse with a person who is under the statutory age of consent.
- Robbery – Taking or attempting to take anything of value from the care, custody, or control of a person or persons by force or threat of violence and/or by putting the victim in fear.
- Aggravated Assault – Unlawful attack by one person upon another for the purpose of inflicting severe or aggravated bodily injury. Usually accompanied by the use of a weapon or by means likely to produce death or bodily harm.
- Burglary – Unlawful entry of a structure to commit a felony or a theft.
- Motor Vehicle Theft – The theft or attempted theft of a motor vehicle. There are three classes of motor vehicles (1) autos, (2) trucks and buses, (3) and other vehicles.
- Arson – Willful or malicious burning or attempt to burn with or without intent to defraud a dwelling house, public building, motor vehicle or aircraft, or the personal property of another.
- Relationship/Dating Violence – Conduct arising out of a personal, intimate relationship that: (a) Inflicts physical injury upon another person; or (b) Places another in fear of, or at risk of, physical injury or danger.
- Stalking – Engaging in a course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to:
- Fear for the persons safety or the safety of others; or
- Suffer substantial emotional distress.
- Hate Crime – Any of the above offenses (in addition to damage to property, larceny, simple assault, and intimidation) that manifest evidence that the victim was intentionally selected because of the perpetrator’s bias or perpetrator perceived the person to be in one of the protected group categories.