The following information was taken from incident reports filed by officers at UCAPD. The reports are made available by university police after they are approved by a supervisor. That process takes a few days, which delays our report. This is a complete report of incidents filed for October 22-28.
October 22
- No reports filed.
October 23
- Student Christina Ausler, 21, reported a hit-and-run in the north overflow parking lot at about 1:42 p.m. Ausler said she parked her car at about 9:15 a.m., and returned at 1:30 p.m. to find it had been hit. A note was left on the windshield from student Jackie Rankin, 18. Rankin was contacted and gave his insurance information over the phone. Rankin was told by police that he wouldn’t receive a citation because he left the note, but he should stay at the scene and call UCAPD if it happened again. Ausler had a dent on the driver side front bumper, with an estimated damage of $250. Rankin said he only had a flat tire.
- Student Allison Doolin, 18, reported at about 3:40 p.m. she had hit another vehicle while parking in the Farris Center lot. The student of the other car, Maison Mitchell, was unable to be contacted. Doolin’s passenger side front bumper had an estimated $200 of damage. Mitchell’s driver side rear bumper had an estimated damage of $200.
- Stars Residental College Resident Master Kondwani Phwandaphwanda reported illegal parking on the east side of Snow Fine Arts at about 8:20 p.m. A silver Jeep SUV was illegally parked in the Resident Master’s reserved parking space. The vehicle’s owner could not be contacted, and it was towed.
October 24
- Student Sarah Polk, 24, reported a hit-and-run at about 12:04 p.m. in the small parking lot east of the softball complex. Polk said she parked her Jeep in the lot on October 23 around 7:45 a.m. She returned to her vehicle at 9 a.m. and drove to a gas station, where she noticed white scratches and a dent on the front passenger side bumper. The damage is worth an estimated $200.
- Student Allison Doolin, 18, reported a hit-and-run at 12:41 p.m. in the Farris Center parking lot. Doolin said she parked her Dodge Challenger on October 23 around 3:40 p.m., and returned on October 24 to find damage on the driver side rear quarter panel and rear rim. The damage was estimated to be worth $300.
- Student Kelly Vanlandingham, 20, reported at about 3:27 p.m. a parking lot accident north of New Hall. Vanlandingham said at 3 p.m. she was backing out of her parking spot while another car was doing the same, and they hit each other. Vanlandingham and the other driver didn’t see damage on their vehicles, so they parted ways. Vanlandingham went to run errands, and when she returned to campus she took a closer look at her car and noticed some damage. She had a small dent above the rear driver side tire and the quarter panel had scratches on it. The damage was estimated to be worth $100.
- Nonstudent Raashun Allison, 33, was arrested at about 9:20 p.m. for public intoxication and criminal trespass because he was interfering with the Homecoming Step Show. Around 8:15 p.m. staff members complained Allison was in the Farris Center getting in the way of performers in the Greek show. Officers told Allison to stay in his seat and out of the way. Allison had slurred speech and glassy eyes, appearing to be intoxicated. At 8:40 p.m. Allison was on the performance floor, so officers took him out of the building and said not to return. At 9:20 p.m. officers were standing in the lobby when Allison entered through the front door. The officers approached him, and Allison tried to walk back out, but he was told to stop and place his hands behind his back. Allison said he was only trying to get a lighter to smoke a cigarette, but the officer said he didn’t care and that Allison had be told not to return. Allison again said that he was just trying to get a lighter. The officer said he wouldn’t ask Allison again to place his hands behind his back, so Allison did. Allison was arrested for public intoxication and criminal trespass, and Allison was also found to have a warrant from Benton Police Department for Contempt of Court. Allison was banned from campus.
- Students Garrett Bennett, 18, Hunter Tarkington, 18, and David Paul, 19, were issued Judicial Board citations for smoking marijuana in Baridon Hall at about 10:53 p.m., after a fire alarm was set off. There were no signs of a fire in the hallway, so an officer and the Resident Coordinator began to enter rooms to look for the source of the alarm. When the officer entered the students’ room, he smelled marijuana, so he waited for the occupants to return. The officer confiscated and destroyed their marijuana and glass pipe.
- Students Evan Yocham, 18, and Jonathan King, 18, were cited for possessing alcohol in Baridon Hall after a fire alarm was set off at about 11 p.m. Officers and the Resident Coordinator began entering rooms to try to find the alarm’s source, and saw a bottle of Crown Royal atop the microwave and several bottles on the window sill. After the fire alarm issue was resolved, officers tried to contact the residents but couldn’t, and J-Board citations were slid under the students’ door.
- Eight students, four nonstudents and one nonstudent minor were cited for alcohol violations after a Bear Village RA informed officers at about 11:11 p.m. that people were drinking in one of the apartments. The officers knocked on the door and the Resident Coordinator let them in. Three Smirnoff bottles were on the counter. When asked to turn in any other alcohol, the occupants handed over an empty bottle of Peach Amsterdam, a bottle of Smirnoff wine cooler and one half-full bottle of clear fluid. The students were Jasmine Smith, 19, Elizabeth Fowler, 20, Kristen Jackson, 20, Lakebia Taylor, 19, Otisdrevius Richardson, 19, Kameron Chatman, 19, Kreshawna Mills, 19, and Alexander Vann, 21. The nonstudents were Destiny Boyland, 19, Kasmonique Jackson, 21, Jaterius Montaque, 18, and a 17-year-old. All students were issued Judicial Board citations and the nonstudents were told to leave. All people under 21 were issued warnings for being minors in possession of alcohol and the people over 21 were issued warnings for contributing to the delinquency of minors.
October 25
- Nonstudent Mark Stripling, 25, was arrested for a DWI at 1:35 a.m. after an officer saw him drive left of center several times. Stripling was going north on Donaghey when he drove left of center near the intersection of Donaghey Avenue and Dave Ward Drive. The truck was swerving and drove left of center again near the intersection of Erbach Street and Donaghey for about seven seconds. The officer turned on his lights at the intersection of Bruce and Donaghey, and the truck took about 23 seconds to stop. Stripling had red, glassy, watery, bloodshot eyes and smelled of alcohol. Stripling said he had two beers at Old Chicago over the course of an hour. The officer asked Stripling for his license, registration and insurance, and gave him a divided attention test by also asking him where he had come from and where he lived. Stripling stopped searching to answer these questions. By the timer on the video, Stripling took two minutes and 48 seconds to look through his stack of documents for the registration. The officer returned to his car to run Stripling’s identification, and after he returned to Stripling’s car, Stripling been asked for his registration five minutes and 48 seconds ago but still couldn’t find it. After failing the field sobriety tests, Stripling was taken to UCAPD, where a breathalyzer test read he had a Breath Alcohol Content of .11. Stripling was charged with carless driving, driving left of center and a DWI.
- Students Alexander Harvey, 20, and Min-Chueh Yin, 20, were cited at 2:13 a.m. for disrespecting a university official after Yin wouldn’t let the Conway Hall Resident Coordinator in the second floor female wing study room. The RC tried to open the door and immediately felt someone pushing against the other side, and Yin said, “Wait a minute, just give me a minute.” The RC kept trying to open the door and kept meeting resistance, so the RC said she would call the police. After a few minutes Yin opened the door, saying, “I’m sorry.” The RC said when the door opened completely she saw Harvey sitting on the study room couch. Harvey was made to leave campus to return to his residence and Yin was made to return to her room.
- Student Nadia Akins, 21, reported a hit-and-run at 2:22 a.m. near Stadium Park Apartments. Akins said she was driving west the wrong way down the one-way, and when she went to pull into a spot a car hit her. Akins said the vehicle was an older model of Honda, dark in color. Akins said she finished pulling into the spot and stepped out of her car, and saw the Honda heading south in Stadium Park for the exit, continuing west onto Bruce Street.
- Student Lance Nail, 22, fled police at 5:57 p.m. after nearly hitting an officer’s car. Nail was in the parking lot north of the baseball field when he pulled out in front of the patrol car, making the officer have to rapidly stop to avoid hitting him. The officer turned on his lights as Nail drove past his patrol car. The officer yelled through his open window for Nail to stop, but Nail continued, accelerating to about 35 miles per hour in the crowded lot, which had pedestrians about. The officer tried to catch up, but Nail made a right turn out of his sight, and the officer couldn’t find him. The officer told the Communications Center about what happened, and a short while later another officer said he found a car matching the description in the same parking lot. The officer who had pursued Nail confirmed it was the same car and was able to learn from the license plate and student permit that Nail was the driver. On October 30 at 5:30 p.m., the officer who chased Nail was contacted by Nail in the UCAPD lobby. Nail spoke to the officer with a lawyer present, saying he had gotten scared about being stopped because he’ll graduate soon and was worried it might hurt his chances on getting a job. The officer gave Nail a municipal citation for Careless/Unsafe Driving instead of obtaining warrants for his arrest.
- Northwestern State football player Imoan Claiborne, 22, was injured during the football game at 7:51 p.m. after being tackled and hit in the abdomen with a helmet. Medical professionals thought he might have a ruptured spleen. Claiborne was taken to Conway Regional Medical Center.
- Nonstudent Tykeasha Anderson, 20, experienced respiratory distress in her boyfriend’s Bear Village apartment at 9:01 p.m. Anderson was found by officers lying on her side in one of the apartment’s bedrooms, apparently having a seizure. Her eyes were open, she was drooling and her breathing was shallow and rapid. Anderson was unresponsive. Her boyfriend, Student Antuan George, 22, said she had been sitting on the bed when the behavior started. An ambulance took Anderson to Conway Regional Medical Center.
- Nonstudent Terrell Moses, 19, was arrested as part of a warrant assist at 10:37 p.m. near Stadium Park Apartments. Moses was driving the wrong direction in the one-way drive around the apartments, and an officer rolled down his window and told him he was going the wrong way. Moses pulled into a parking space, and the officer initiated a stop when he realized Moses’ plates were expired. Moses couldn’t provide his license, registration or insurance. Moses said he had a learner’s permit, but it wasn’t with him. The passenger didn’t have his license either. Moses said he bought the car from a friend, but couldn’t tell the friend’s name and could only call the friend’s mother to verify. The vehicle contained a piece of paper with the registered owner’s name on it, but there were no other legal documents tying Moses to the car. The officer ran Moses’ name through the database and learned his license was suspended and he had a warrant from Conway PD. The officer had also smelled marijuana in the car, so he called for other officers to assist in a probably cause search. The officer arrested Moses for driving on a suspended license and as part of the warrant assist. A search revealed an unusable amount of marijuana shake. Moses was cited for Driving on a Suspended License, Failure to Pay Registration Fees, No Proof of Insurance and Fictitious Tags.
October 26
- Student Laura Pipkins, 18, was arrested for public intoxication at 3:30 a.m. when she was found passed out next to a puddle of vomit on a couch in Carmichael Hall. She was awoken and told she would be arrested. Pipkins asked the officer to follow her to her room to get her underage friends, saying she had been drinking with her high school friends at the Kappa Sig house. Her friends weren’t in the room. Pipkins was taken to UCAPD and her mother came to get her.
- Arkansas Hall Resident Assistant Ladasia McCullough, 20, reported at 4:33 a.m. that her wallet was missing. McCullough said she had been in front of Short-Denney Hall with friends when one of them tripped and fell to the ground. A group of men walked up and asked if her friend was OK. McCullough said she thinks she set her wallet, a dark blue Vera Bradley Ribbons Zip ID Case with her Student ID, driver’s license and room key down on the ground or her friend’s car during the incident. After returning to her room in Arkansas Hall, McCullough realized her wallet was missing. She returned to the area but couldn’t find it. The men were still in the area but said they hadn’t seen it, then quickly left the area.
- Student Kendra Marbley, 18, reported at 10:37 a.m. that somebody had turned her bike upside down. Marbley said she parked her purple Next bike at the rack on the southwest corner of Denny Hall on October 25 around 4:30 p.m. The bike rack had several bikes in disarray. Marbley’s bike had damage to the right grip and shifter, with an estimated damage of $40.
- Student Creshunna Scott, 18, reported at 10:39 p.m. that she had been taking out her trash earlier at the dumpsters north of Hughes Hall when an unknown man grabbed her arm and said, “Hey, come with me.” Scott immediately jerked her arm away and ran directly to UCAPD. She described the man as about six feet tall, black, wearing dark basketball shorts with a dark shirt. Police drove through the area looking for a suspect, but couldn’t find anyone matching the description. Scott was escorted to her room.
October 27
- Student Whitney Cobb, 24, reported at 12:52 p.m. that she was being harassed by her ex-boyfriend, nonstudent Glenn Robinson, 24. Cobb said Robinson followed her as she drove from the Baldridge Street parking lot to the Wal-Mart on Skyline Drive. Robinson didn’t make any verbal contact, but Cobb said she felt anxious because of the following.
- A 26-year-old nonstudent was arrested after going to Harrin Hall around 2:59 p.m. and telling staff that he was Jesus Christ and his stepmother was trying to kill him. Officers asked Counts his name and he said, “Jesus Christ,” and didn’t have any identification on him. Eventually he gave the name “Dasmien Counts,” and mentioned he had walked to campus from Mayflower, AR. He repeatedly told police that he was Jesus Christ and that it was on his birth certificate. He also said his stepmother was trying to kill him by “destroying his mind” and that his stepmother’s boyfriend was “the devil and she is the devil incarnate.” He said he was drawing in her energy to make him stronger. Counts said that he was adopted when his stepmother found him in the trash when he was a baby. When asked why he would tell people that his stepmother was trying to kill him, Counts said, “Because it’s the truth.” During questioning, as police asked why he was on campus, he began to act nervous and started to move away from officers more, so they took him into custody and held him for evaluation by Counseling Associates. Counts was banned from campus.
October 28
- No reports filed.
October 23
- Student Christina Ausler, 21, reported a hit-and-run in the north overflow parking lot at 1:42 p.m. Ausler said she parked her car around 9:15 a.m., and returned at 1:30 p.m. to find it had been it. A note with was left on the windshield from student Jackie Rankin, 18. Rankin was contacted and gave his insurance information over the phone. Rankin was told by police that he wouldn’t receive a citation because he left the note, but he should stay at the scene and call UCAPD if it happened again. Ausler had a dent on the driver side front bumper, with an estimated damage of $250. Rankin said he only had a flat tire.
- Student Allison Doolin, 18, reported at 3:40 p.m. she had hit another vehicle while parking in the Farris Center lot. The student of the other car, Maison Mitchell, was unable to be contacted. Doolin’s passenger side front bumper had an estimated $200 of damage. Mitchell’s driver side rear bumper had an estimated damage of $200.
- Stars Residental College Resident Master Kondwani Phwandaphwanda reported illegal parking on the east side of Snow Fine Arts at 8:20 p.m. A silver Jeep SUV was illegally parked in the Resident Master’s reserved parking space. The vehicle’s owner could not be contacted, and it was towed.
October 24
- Student Sarah Polk, 24, reported a hit-and-run at 12:04 p.m. in the small parking lot east of the softball complex. Polk said she parked her Jeep in the lot on October 23 around 7:45 a.m. She returned to her vehicle at 9 a.m. and drove to a gas station, where she noticed white scratches and a dent on the front passenger side bumper. The damage is worth an estimated $200.
- Student Allison Doolin, 18, reported a hit-and-run at 12:41 p.m. in the Farris Center parking lot. Doolin said she parked her Dodge Challenger on October 23 around 3:40 p.m., and returned on October 24 to find damage on the driver side rear quarter panel and rear rim. The damage was estimated to be worth $300.
- Student Kelly Vanlandingham, 20, reported at 3:27 p.m. a parking lot accident north of New Hall. Vanlandingham said at 3 p.m. she was backing out of her parking spot while another car was doing the same, and they hit each other. Vanlandingham and the other driver didn’t see damage on their vehicles, so they parted ways. Vanlandingham went to run errands, and when she returned to campus she took a closer look at her car and noticed some damage. She had a small dent above the rear driver side tire and the quarter panel had scratches on it. The damage was estimated to be worth $100.
- Nonstudent Raashun Allison, 33, was arrested at 9:20 p.m. for public intoxication and criminal trespass because he was interfering with the Homecoming Step Show. Around 8:15 p.m. staff members complained Allison was in the Farris Center getting in the way of performers in the Greek show. Officers told Allison to stay in his seat and out of the way. Allison had slurred speech and glassy eyes, appearing to be intoxicated. At 8:40 p.m. Allison was on the performance floor, so officers took him out of the building and said not to return. At 9:20 p.m. officers were standing in the lobby when Allison entered through the front door. The officers approached him, and Allison tried to walk back out, but he was told to stop and place his hands behind his back. Allison said he was only trying to get a lighter to smoke a Black and Mild, but the officer said he didn’t care and that Allison had be told not to return. Allison again said that he was just trying to get a lighter. The officer said he wouldn’t ask Allison again to place his hands behind his back, so Allison did. Allison was arrested for public intoxication and criminal trespass, and Allison was also found to have a warrant from Benton Police Department for Contempt of Court. Allison was banned from campus.
- Students Garrett Bennett, 18, Hunter Tarkington, 18, and David Paul, 19, were issued Judicial Board citations for smoking marijuana in Baridon Hall around 10:53 p.m., after a fire alarm was set off. There were no signs of a fire in the hallway, so an officer and the Resident Coordinator began to enter rooms to look for the source of the alarm. When the officer entered the students’ room, he smelled marijuana, so he waited for the occupants to return. The officer confiscated and destroyed their marijuana and glass pipe.
- Students Evan Yocham, 18, and Jonathan King, 18, were cited for possessing alcohol in Baridon Hall after a fire alarm was set off around 11 p.m. Officers and the Resident Coordinator began entering rooms to try to find the alarm’s source, and saw a bottle of Crown Royal atop the microwave and several bottles on the window sill. After the fire alarm issue was resolved, officers tried to contact the residents but couldn’t, and J-Board citations were slid under the students’ door.
- Eight students, four nonstudents and one nonstudent minor were cited for alcohol violations after a Bear Village RA informed officers around 11:11 p.m. that people were drinking in one of the apartments. The officers knocked on the door and the Resident Coordinator let them in. Three Smirnoff bottles were on the counter. When asked to turn in any other alcohol, the occupants handed over an empty bottle of Peach Amsterdam, a bottle of Smirnoff wine cooler and one half-full bottle of clear fluid. The students were Jasmine Smith, 19, Elizabeth Fowler, 20, Kristen Jackson, 20, Lakebia Taylor, 19, Otisdrevius Richardson, 19, Kameron Chatman, 19, Kreshawna Mills, 19, and Alexander Vann, 21. The nonstudents were Destiny Boyland, 19, Kasmonique Jackson, 21, Jaterius Montaque, 18, and a 17-year-old juvenile. All students were issued Judicial Board citations and the nonstudents were told to leave. All people under 21 were issued warnings for being minors in possession of alcohol and the people over 21 were issued warnings for contributing to the delinquency of minors.
October 25
- Nonstudent Mark Stripling, 25, was arrested for a DWI at 1:35 a.m. after an officer saw him drive left of center several times. Stripling was going north on Donaghey when he drove left of center near the intersection of Donaghey Avenue and Dave Ward Drive. The truck was swerving and drove left of center again near the intersection of Erbach Street and Donaghey for about seven seconds. The officer turned on his lights at the intersection of Bruce and Donaghey, and the truck took about 23 seconds to stop. Stripling had red, glassy, watery, bloodshot eyes and smelled of alcohol. Stripling said he had two beers at Old Chicago over the course of an hour. The officer asked Stripling for his license, registration and insurance, and gave him a divided attention test by also asking him where he had come from and where he lived. Stripling stopped searching to answer these questions. By the timer on the video, Stripling took two minutes and 48 seconds to look through his stack of documents for the registration. The officer returned to his car to run Stripling’s identification, and after he returned to Stripling’s car, Stripling been asked for his registration five minutes and 48 seconds ago but still couldn’t find it. After failing the field sobriety tests, Stripling was taken to UCAPD, where a breathalyzer test read he had a Breath Alcohol Content of .11. Stripling was charged with carless driving, driving left of center and a DWI.
- Students Alexander Harvey, 20, and Min-Chueh Yin, 20, were cited at 2:13 a.m. for disrespecting a university official after Yin wouldn’t let the Conway Hall Resident Coordinator in the second floor female wing study room. The RC tried to open the door and immediately felt someone pushing against the other side, and Yin said, “Wait a minute, just give me a minute.” The RC kept trying to open the door and kept meeting resistance, so the RC said she would call the police. After a few minutes Yin opened the door, saying, “I’m sorry.” The RC said when the door opened completely she saw Harvey sitting on the study room couch. Harvey was made to leave campus to return to his residence and Yin was made to return to her room.
- Student Nadia Akins, 21, reported a hit-and-run at 2:22 a.m. near Stadium Park Apartments. Akins said she was driving west the wrong way down the one-way, and when she went to pull into a spot a car hit her. Akins said the vehicle was an older model of Honda, dark in color. Akins said she finished pulling into the spot and stepped out of her car, and saw the Honda heading south in Stadium Park for the exit, continuing west onto Bruce Street.
- Student Lance Nail, 22, fled police at 5:57 p.m. after nearly hitting an officer’s car. Nail was in the parking lot north of the baseball field when he pulled out in front of the patrol car, making the officer have to rapidly stop to avoid hitting him. The officer turned on his lights as Nail drove past his patrol car. The officer yelled through his open window for Nail to stop, but Nail continued, accelerating to about 35 miles per hour in the crowded lot, which had pedestrians about. The officer tried to catch up, but Nail made a right turn out of his sight, and the officer couldn’t find him. The officer told the Communications Center about what happened, and a short while later another officer said he found a car matching the description in the same parking lot. The officer who had pursued Nail confirmed it was the same car and was able to learn from the license plate and student permit that Nail was the driver. On October 30 at 5:30 p.m., the officer who chased Nail was contacted by Nail in the UCAPD lobby. Nail spoke to the officer with a lawyer present, saying he had gotten scared about being stopped because he’ll graduate soon and was worried it might hurt his chances on getting a job. The officer gave Nail a municipal citation for Careless/Unsafe Driving instead of obtaining warrants for his arrest.
- Northwestern State football player Imoan Claiborne, 22, was injured during the football game at 7:51 p.m. after being tackled and hit in the abdomen with a helmet. Medical professionals thought he might have a ruptured spleen. Claiborne was taken to Conway Regional Medical Center.
- Nonstudent Tykeasha Anderson, 20, experienced respiratory distress in her boyfriend’s Bear Village apartment at 9:01 p.m. Anderson was found by officers lying on her side in one of the apartment’s bedrooms, apparently having a seizure. Her eyes were open, she was drooling and her breathing was shallow and rapid. Anderson was unresponsive. Her boyfriend, Student Antuan George, 22, said she had been sitting on the bed when the behavior started. An ambulance took Anderson to Conway Regional Medical Center.
- Nonstudent Terrell Moses, 19, was arrested as part of a warrant assist at 10:37 p.m. near Stadium Park Apartments. Moses was driving the wrong direction in the one-way drive around the apartments, and an officer rolled down his window and told him he was going the wrong way. Moses pulled into a parking space, and the officer initiated a stop when he realized Moses’ plates were expired. Moses couldn’t provide his license, registration or insurance. Moses said he had a learner’s permit, but it wasn’t with him. The passenger didn’t have his license either. Moses said he bought the car from a friend, but couldn’t tell the friend’s name and could only call the friend’s mother to verify. The vehicle contained a piece of paper with the registered owner’s name on it, but there were no other legal documents tying Moses to the car. The officer ran Moses’ name through the database and learned his license was suspended and he had a warrant from Conway PD. The officer had also smelled marijuana in the car, so he called for other officers to assist in a probably cause search. The officer arrested Moses for driving on a suspended license and as part of the warrant assist. A search revealed an unusable amount of marijuana shake. Moses was cited for Driving on a Suspended License, Failure to Pay Registration Fees, No Proof of Insurance and Fictitious Tags.
October 26
- Student Laura Pipkins, 18, was arrested for public intoxication at 3:30 a.m. when she was found passed out next to a puddle of vomit on a couch in Carmichael Hall. She was awoken and told she would be arrested. Pipkins asked the officer to follow her to her room to get her underage friends, saying she had been drinking with her high school friends at the Kappa Sig house. Her friends weren’t in the room. Pipkins was taken to UCAPD and her mother came to get her.
- Arkansas Hall Resident Assistant Ladasia McCullough, 20, reported at 4:33 a.m. that her wallet was missing. McCullough said she had been in front of Short-Denney Hall with friends when one of them tripped and fell to the ground. A group of men walked up and asked if her friend was OK. McCullough said she thinks she set her wallet, a dark blue Vera Bradley Ribbons Zip ID Case with her Student ID, driver’s license and room key down on the ground or her friend’s car during the incident. After returning to her room in Arkansas Hall, McCullough realized her wallet was missing. She returned to the area but couldn’t find it. The men were still in the area but said they hadn’t seen it, then quickly left the area.
- Student Kendra Marbley, 18, reported at 10:37 a.m. that somebody had turned her bike upside down. Marbley said she parked her purple Next bike at the rack on the southwest corner of Denny Hall on October 25 around 4:30 p.m. The bike rack had several bikes in disarray. Marbley’s bike had damage to the right grip and shifter, with an estimated damage of $40.
- Student Creshunna Scott, 18, reported at 10:39 p.m. that she had been taking out her trash earlier at the dumpsters north of Hughes Hall when an unknown man grabbed her arm and said, “Hey, come with me.” Scott immediately jerked her arm away and ran directly to UCAPD. She described the man as about six feet tall, black, wearing dark basketball shorts with a dark shirt. Police drove through the area looking for a suspect, but couldn’t find anyone matching the description. Scott was escorted to her room.
October 27
- Student Whitney Cobb, 24, reported at 12:52 p.m. that she was being harassed by her ex-boyfriend, nonstudent Glenn Robinson, 24. Cobb said Robinson followed her as she drove from the Baldridge Street parking lot to the Wal-Mart on Skyline Drive. Robinson didn’t make any verbal contact, but Cobb said she felt anxious because of the following.
- A 26-year-old nonstudent was arrested after going to Harrin Hall around 2:59 p.m. and telling staff that he was Jesus Christ and his stepmother was trying to kill him. Officers asked Counts his name and he said, “Jesus Christ,” and didn’t have any identification on him. Eventually he gave the name “Dasmien Counts,” and mentioned he had walked to campus from Mayflower, AR. He repeatedly told police that he was Jesus Christ and that it was on his birth certificate. He also said his stepmother was trying to kill him by “destroying his mind” and that his stepmother’s boyfriend was “the devil and she is the devil incarnate.” He said he was drawing in her energy to make him stronger. Counts said that he was adopted when his stepmother found him in the trash when he was a baby. When asked why he would tell people that his stepmother was trying to kill him, Counts said, “Because it’s the truth.” During questioning, as police asked why he was on campus, he began to act nervous and started to move away from officers more, so they took him into custody and held him for evaluation by Counseling Associates. Counts was banned from campus.
October 28
- No reports filed.