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Boise State

Despite Clear Verbal and Physical Refusal: Boise State's Second September 2025 Residence Hall Sexual Assault Timely Warning

IDsexual assaulttimely warninghigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On September 10, 2025, Boise State University issued its second sexual-assault Timely Warning in three days, this one describing an assault inside a university residence hall on the morning of September 9, 2025. The warning included the unusually direct phrasing 'the suspect continued to use physical force despite the victim's clear verbal and physical refusal' — language consistent with BSU's trauma-informed Timely Warning template but stark even by that standard. The September 10 warning was the second of four reported assaults in roughly 10 days at the start of the fall 2025 semester.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Boise State University
Public R2 · ID
~28,000 studentsBroncoAlert / Timely Warning
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Timely Warning Notification – Sexual Assault Date of Notification: Sept. 10, 2025 Incident Type: Sexual Assault —Trigger Warning— Location: On Campus Housing Incident Date and Time: Sept. 9, 2025, early morning Summary of Incident: The Department of Public Safety received a report of a sexual assault that occurred in a residence hall early on Sept. 9, 2025. The student reported that the suspect continued to use physical force despite the victim's clear verbal and physical refusal. This message has been approved for mass email distribution by Annie Hightower, Deputy Chief Operating Officer in accordance with Boise State Policy 8100.
The phrase 'continued to use physical force despite the victim's clear verbal and physical refusal' is unusually direct in Clery Timely Warnings — most peer institutions use more sanitized language to describe non-consent
Locating the assault in 'On Campus Housing' (rather than naming the specific residence hall) is standard Clery practice to protect the reporting party while still conveying the high-risk location category
The September 9 assault came one day after the September 8 warning describing a different assault near a fraternity party — the two events were unrelated but appeared in the BSU campus community's inbox in close succession
Boise State's Timely Warning template carries the —Trigger Warning— prefix and the named-authorizing-signer attribution (Annie Hightower, Deputy COO, citing Policy 8100), maintaining the trauma-informed practice the institution has formalized
Context

Background

Two days after Boise State University issued its first sexual-assault Timely Warning of the 2025-26 academic year, the institution issued a second one describing an assault inside a university residence hall on the morning of September 9, 2025. The September 10 warning stands out within the Clery archive for the directness of its language — 'the suspect continued to use physical force despite the victim's clear verbal and physical refusal' — which strips away the passive constructions that more commonly populate sexual-assault Timely Warnings at peer institutions. The two warnings together — September 8 (fraternity-party-related, off or near campus, grassy area) and September 10 (on-campus housing) — sit at the leading edge of what would become a four-warning cluster in less than two weeks, corresponding precisely with the well-documented 'Red Zone' phenomenon (the first six weeks of the academic year, when rates of campus sexual assault spike). The cluster prompted the Associated Students of Boise State University to issue a formal statement on October 14, 2025 — a rare student-government-to-administration escalation. Reading the September 8 and September 10 warnings side by side is itself a study in how a single university applies a consistent template to similar but distinct incidents: same authorizing signer (Annie Hightower, Deputy COO), same authorizing policy (Policy 8100), same trigger-warning prefix, with the substantive descriptions tailored to the specific facts of each report.
Analysis

Key Findings

Reading the September 8 and 10 Boise State warnings side by side demonstrates the value of public Timely Warning archives — without them, this kind of comparative analysis is impossible
The September 10 phrase 'continued to use physical force despite the victim's clear verbal and physical refusal' is unusually direct for a Clery warning and could serve as a model for trauma-informed institutional practice
Both warnings preserve the —Trigger Warning— prefix and the named-signer attribution that BSU has standardized
Together with the September 8 warning, the September 10 warning was part of a four-incident cluster in roughly 10 days — a textbook Red Zone pattern
The Associated Students' formal October 14 response treats the cluster as an institutional-trust issue, not just a public-safety one
Outcome
Boise State Office of Compliance and Ethics opened a Title IX investigation. The institution faced significant student-press scrutiny over the cluster of warnings. No public criminal charges had been announced as of late 2025.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. Official
Tags
sexual-assaulttimely-warningclery-actred-zoneboise-stateidahoresidence-halltrauma-informedtrigger-warningphysical-force
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion