"We're pleased to have arrived at an agreement with the [U.S. Department of Education] and we appreciate their recognition of the progress and improvements that EMU has made during the past year in regards to Clery Act Compliance," said university provost and executive vice president Don Loppnow in a press release issued Friday.
The $350,000 is slightly less than the original $357,500 fine proposed by the DOE in a Dec. 14 letter to the university. Within the letter, the DOE called the university's conduct an "egregious violation, which endangered the entire EMU campus community."
EMU was cited for 13 violations stemming from the investigation that followed the death of Laura Dickinson in her Hill Residence Hall room in December 2006. The violations range from failing to issue a timely warning to the campus community in the
In addition to the DOE fines, the university agreed to settle a civil lawsuit with the
On Dec. 15, 2006, custodian Michelle Lockwood found
The EMU police department "immediately determined the death to be suspicious in nature," the DOE said. But a day after
In addition, the June 2007 DOE report concluded that the university did not provide "relevant information to the campus community that would alert it of a potential safety threat." The report cites this failing as a clear violation of the Clery Act.
The Clery Act is a federal law that requires any university taking federal money to disclose information about crime on campus, including annual statistics and "timely warnings" to the campus community about serious ongoing threats.
The misleading public report in the
By Rob Arcamona, SPLC staff writer
1 comment:
Well written article.
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