Friday, February 29, 2008

UCF student experiences worst in student housing

Last fall, when UCF sophomore Luis Ramos first moved into his apartment in Phase Two of the Pegasus Connection student housing complex off Alafaya Trail he never got the feeling he was unsafe.

He had heard of incidents in the past but as far as Ramos was concerned the area didn’t seem prone to crime.

“From my experience everything was pretty calm,” he said.

Ramos' outlook turned drastically in the following months.

Around Halloween a friend visiting from the University of Florida who stepped outside to make a phone call was beaten and robbed outside of Ramos' apartment.

After Thanksgiving vacation Ramos’ neighbors returned to find that the front window of their apartment was broken and their T.V. and other valuables were missing.

About a month later Ramos’ apartment door was kicked down and his roommates’ game systems as well as a guitar were stolen.

Ramos’ room, at the very back of the apartment was untouched, but the incident was the final straw.

After talking with Orange County Sheriff’s Department officers and Pegasus Connection officials he felt that the blame was being placed on him, he said.

“They said it was weird that the incidents centered around on person, that I must be hanging out with the wrong people,” Ramos said.

He and his roommates rarely had parties or people over at their place, he said.

Still Ramos fell subject to a string of larceny, theft and robbery cases that drove him out of his apartment at the beginning of this year.

Ramos’ experiences aren’t singular, either.

According to 2006 UCF Police Department crime statistics, the most recent available, the number of robbery, burglary and motor vehicle theft cases reported on the UCF main campus and at affiliated housing complexes, Pegasus Landing and Pegasus Pointe, soared to 149 incidents that year, up 34 percent from 2005.

Already this year 24 larceny and thefts have been reported in an approximate 2 mile radius around UCF.

Cases of theft and burglary are common crimes in most university areas, said Cpl. James Roop, Community Relations Supervisor for the UCFPD.

“People let their guard down because they think the campus is safe and secure, and it is, to an extent,” Roop said.

Most of the thefts that drive crime rates up on campus are because students leave valuable items for brief periods of time in places like the Student Union and the library.

“They say they’ll be back in a minute, well someone can steal something in a minute,” he said.

In cases such as Ramos’ students’ apartments are often burglarized when students leave their apartments, and the valuables inside them, for an extended period of time, such as over Christmas break, Roop said.

In most UCF burglary cases non-students take advantage of the student populous surrounding the university, he said.

When students return to their apartments after breaks, car burglaries then go up, he said.

Noticing these trends, the UCFPD conducts surveys of on-campus and affiliated housing areas, hoping to improve lighting and other environmental factors that will keep students safe.

UCF affiliated housing communities are in the process of building gates around the property because of the analysis conducted, Roop said. The gates will also be maintained by security guards.

Ramos’ old neighborhood, Pegasus Connection is not under the jurisdiction of the UCFPD and therefore does not go under their surveying.

Ramos thinks it should.

Ramos, his mother and relatives of his roommates called on Pegasus Connection offices to improve safety standards for the area but saw very little response to their complaints, he said.

“They said the best they could do was move me to Phase One for a $350 fee,” said Ramos, who always noticed that Phase One was much better lit and that the complex’s single security guard tended to patrol that area more often.

Ramos decided to take the hit in paying two leases and move to an Oviedo apartment where he feels is safer.

Even though Ramos still has friends living in the community he rarely stops by, especially not after nightfall, he said.

“I feel bad, but I don’t like that place anymore.”

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Maybe try going to the actual library?

Not that I've ever understood why owners of the Knight Library decided to call it that but the title is even less accurate after this past Monday when a bullet went through the front window of the club, injuring a cashier.

The Central Florida Future reported the incident as having followed the ejection of two rowdy men from the club although who exactly fired the bullet is unknown. No one was killed but the gunshot raised eyebrows about what is being done about security in and outside of the Knight Library.

The owner of the Knight Library insists that things are getting done to improve conditions around the club, nestled in a shopping plaza at the intersection of University Blvd. and Alafaya Trail, but this isn't the first run in the nightclub has had with criminal activity.

According to the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation records the Knight Library, LLC has had a multitude of complaints filed against its beverage and tobacco license. The last three complaints filed have been of a "criminal activity" class; the most recent of those complaints having been filed just over a month ago on January 25.

The Knight Library can improve security measures now but will they hold up? If history, or at least state government records, tell us anything I get the feeling they won't.

For more information on Monday's gunshot at the Knight Library nightclub check out The Central Florida Future




Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Register That Laptop w/ Cops...All In The Comfort Of Your Own Home

In light of the fact that larceny and theft are prevalent on a campus where at least 40,000 people are coming and going daily it's probably a good idea to make sure that you do what you can to make sure that if your things do get stolen they can be recovered.

This used to mean property registration drives sponsored by the University of Central Florida Police Department where you would have your license number engraved on valuable items such as laptops and bikes. These days you don't even have to get up out of your seat.

The UCFPD offers online personal property registration on their Web site for all students.

What is required for registration:
  • First name
  • Last name
  • Telephone number
  • Make (manufacturer) of property
  • Serial number on property
  • Model of property
  • Color of property
  • Description of property
These are the basic things that are needed when you are working to recover a stolen item, so having them registered in the UCFPD server isn't a bad idea, said Cpl. James Roop Media Relations Supervisor for the UCFPD.

The information you provide in the registration process will remain in the UCFPD server for four years.

Another interesting aspect about this system is that the if another law enforcement agency in the nation discovers stolen property on someone they arrested or with a search warrant they publish serial numbers online with the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC).

All you need is a serial number to search that nationwide database, said Cpl. Roop.

SPOC Comes to Campus


In an interesting, not to mention eye-grabbing, new effort to involve the community in reporting suspicious activities the UCF Police Department hopes to include posters with a rendered version of the Star Trek character, Spock, with instruction as to how UCF students, faculty and staff can recognize suspicious activity and report it to authorities.

The brainchild of UCFPD Community Relations Supervisor, Cpl. James Roop, the presence of the Star Trek character is not deviod of meaning.

The green character with pointy ears and the signature hand sign, will be named SPOC, an acronym for the program name Suspicious Persons On Campus, Roop said.

Visible plaques with the character as well as bulleted information defining suspicious activity and listing contact procedure and information for all on campus will be placed on all UCF main campus buildings.

"It's catchy enough to get noticed and encourage people to report suspicious persons," he said.

The program is one of many responses geared toward preventing mass killings on campus, much like the recent one at Northern Illinois University last week and Virginia Tech last year.

The UCFPD has 60 officers to protect 40,000 students, Roop said.

"We want to get the community involved to help prevent crime."

A parting word from Roop's muse: "In any case, were I to invoke logic, logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few." -- Spock, Star Trek: The Film Series

Crime Stats Cover Wider Area Than Written

Just a brief correction for the previous post: the crime stats provided by the UCFPD that I mentioned in the previous post included crimes reported in a 2 mile radius surrounding UCF. The message is still the same, even more so if you live in non-UCF affiliated housing.

Here's the link again if you're interesting in reviewing stats for crimes beside larceny and theft.

UCFPD Crime Stats

Friday, February 8, 2008

Lock Your Doors



Though this is old news to some, recent crime statistics released by the UCF Police Department warn that to all UCF students living on campus, at Pegasus Point and at Pegasus Connection to lock your doors. According to crime statistics updated on January 28, 2008, there have already been 24 reported larceny and/or theft related crimes this year.

In what seems to be a growing trend the number of reported larceny/theft crimes rocketed to 366 last year, jumping up 34 percent since 2006. If the steady rise of reported larceny and theft continues UCF students should expect even more reports of thefts and larceny in 2008.

Another interesting point to last year's stats: a majority of the thefts were reported around the time the Fall 2007 semester began. I get a feeling a lot of freshmen new to the UCF area and distracted by adjusting to college life are being targeted for theft.

For more crime statistics pertaining to the UCF area visit the UCF Police Department Web site.