These are pictures of the Google search result for the term "university of virginia police department" that also corresponds to the first page of that police department's website:
Results and titles turn purple when clicked.
These are pictures of the first page of the website:
"(The University of Virginia Police Department) participates in a mutual aid agreement with other local departments and a cooperative patrol agreement with the City of Charlottesville, which gives University officers jurisdiction in much of the city area surrounding the University. The mutual aid agreements do not apply to the investigation of most criminal cases. University officers are also assigned to local multi-jurisdiction drug task forces."
What are the "mutual aid agreements" for other than for other police departments to enlist the help of University police officers to investigate drug crime? Does that mean that the University, the University of Virginia's Police Department, and all the other police departments know that the school of "40,000 including students, faculty, staff and visitors" is a profitable market for drug dealers, a market that has thousands of new customers every year? What do the "mutual aid agreements" do, help the other police departments to do a few drug busts of the suppliers while protecting the customers who are part of the University from getting arrested?
Does that have something to do with how the University was ranked 1st of 100 schools in the country for partying by Playboy on September 26, 2012, two days before Jackie was raped?
How do all the police departments interpret the "mutual aid agreements"? Is that how police departments have evaded helping sexual assault victims for decades, by telling the victims that one police department or another has or doesn't have jurisdiction to investigate or prosecute, according to whatever the police officer talking to a victim feels like saying? How many times do people expect someone who's been raped to talk about what happened to one person after another who then tells her "You're at the wrong office" before she gets the message that she's supposed to think that she's the problem and that nobody's going to help her?
Is at-will police interpretation of jurisdiction also how students who commit crime off-campus are not arrested or prosecuted? Is what happens that if a victim can be persuaded by police officers from wherever that no crime took place, then the incident is said by the police not to be a crime and that concludes the questioning, without a formal investigation by anyone?
The only people who should be personally approaching and asking accused perpetrators of violent, sexual crime if they did what they're accused of are female reporters, while the alleged perpetrators and the alleged victims continue to be at school together? Is that the University's protocol for sexual assault investigation?
When I first read the Charlottesville Police Department's March 23, 2015 statement about the department's investigation of the Rolling Stone article, I was struck by the department's use of a written questionnaire, which it sent to fraternity members. Some of the fraternity members returned the questionnaire, and some didn't. Is that the Charlottesville Police Department's idea of an investigation that will get answers? Is that what everyone who has attacked the Rolling Stone article thinks Ms. Erdely should have done before the article was published? Do people think that Ms. Erdely should have been more aggressive than that, no matter what retaliation ensued for her, for Jackie, for Rolling Stone, and for everyone at the University of Virginia who tried to help Ms. Erdely's investigation? Ms. Erdely should have done what the University of Virginia and the police departments of the University of Virginia and the City of Charlottesville were too afraid to do at all before the article was published?
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What sort of questions does the police questionnaire that gets sent to fraternity members following a gang rape allegation ask? Are they questions like:
Do you want to be thrown out of your fraternity?
Do you want the crap kicked out of you by fraternity members whom you incriminate?
Do you want to be the target of a campaign of rumor-mongering, harassment and bullying that will prevent you from having a social life and that will stalk you online to any school to which you might transfer?
Do you want to have no professional network when you graduate?
Do you want everyone to whom you apply for work to be threatened not to hire you?
Do you want to spend the rest of your life in tortured isolation because you helped some girl whom you don't know and who doesn't know who you are, and who should have known better than to get raped identify one or more of her rapists, who will not be expelled, arrested or prosecuted and who will be treated by the media as if they are the falsely accused victims of a crazy, evil attention-seeker and a few ugly, old femiNazis who are mad because they can't get laid?
Perhaps the questions are not all Yes or No questions. What happens to the arguably brave souls who are horrified by having heard about, witnessed or participated in a fraternity-organized sexual assault or other hazing and who write honest responses to the questionnaire? Do the police then intimidate them into retracting what they wrote, or take them to the University administration where the admission of their individual guilt is accepted as enough penance and also as the end of any need for investigation or public disclosure about the assault?
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Mr. Shapiro told 20/20 that he couldn't find any rapists, but nobody's suing him for it; when he says it, it's treated as evidence that Jackie lied.
These are pictures of the Daily Crime Log page:
"Victim refuses to prosecute." How often is that the goal toward which victims of crime at the University of Virginia are encouraged or intimidated?
Not knowing if changing browsers would also change the page, I tried to get Google Chrome and couldn't. When I went to the app for Firefox, I had to look at code that's been used for a few years to promote voyeurism and involuntary pornography committed against me, despite all of my verbal protests, suicidality, in-patient psychiatric hospitalizations due to the social and emotional trauma of being involuntarily naked, urinating, defecating, menstruating and having to live every part of my life recorded by hidden cameras. Even instances of unfinished but obvious suicidal ideation in my last apartment were witnessed without remorse by the conglomerate, as is everything that I do to try to protect myself against the threat of voyeurism everywhere. If I am ever blinded, I will have had years of living in the dark to prepare me for it.
This is a picture of the first part of the Firefox app:
"9:41." That number is in ads all over the world. I hate seeing it.
I got the Firefox app so that I could read the page if the app were necessary, which it wasn't.
It seems as if you have to already know something about an incident to be able to read about it. You at least have to know in which month and year it was recorded as a reported incident.
These are pictures of everything that I could get from my phone for the month of November 2014:
What does "Provided Medical Assistance" mean? What does "Active" Case Status mean when it's about an incident for which the police "provided medical assistance"? Are all of those incidents of the need for "medical assistance" the results of assault and/or hazing-induced intoxication and injury?
This is the address for the "About the University of Virginia Police Department" page:
This is the address for the Daily Crime Log page:
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, November 5, 2016 @ 7:07 p.m.