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Five Days, One Mertz Hall Crime Alert: Loyola's Delayed Sexual Assault Timely Warning

ILsexual assaulttimely warninghigh confidence
Under Investigation

On the morning of March 16, 2024, a criminal sexual assault occurred in Mertz Hall, a residence hall on Loyola University Chicago's Lake Shore Campus. The university did not issue a Clery Act timely warning until March 21, five days after the assault was reported, prompting student concern about the delay. The offender was reported to be known to the survivor.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Loyola University Chicago
Private R1 · IL
~17,000 studentsLoyola Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Crime Alert - March 21, 2024 Campus Safety notified the University community of a delayed criminal sexual assault report that occurred in Mertz Hall in the early morning of March 16, 2024. The offender is someone known to the survivor/victim. Anyone with information about the crime is encouraged to immediately contact Campus Safety at 773-508-SAFE (7233) or safety@luc.edu. This message was sent out in compliance with the Timely Warning requirement of the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (Clery Act).
Verbatim text recovered from Loyola University Chicago Campus Safety's crime-alert archive page; opening narrative ('delayed criminal sexual assault report... in Mertz Hall... early morning of March 16, 2024'), 'offender is someone known to the survivor/victim,' the 773-508-SAFE / safety@luc.edu contact line, and the Clery Act compliance footer are preserved as published
The five-day delay between the March 16 incident and the March 21 alert is explicitly acknowledged in the alert through the word 'delayed' — a transparency choice that follows Department of Education guidance to issue warnings 'as soon as the pertinent information is available' even when delayed
Mertz Hall is a first-year residence hall on Loyola's Lake Shore Campus on the north side of Chicago, making the location detail particularly meaningful for students living there
Context

Background

Loyola University Chicago is a private R1 Catholic university with about 17,000 students across two main campuses on the north side of Chicago. On March 16, 2024, a criminal sexual assault was reported to have occurred in Mertz Hall — a first-year residence hall on the Lake Shore Campus. Loyola Campus Safety did not issue a Clery Act timely warning until March 21, 2024 at approximately 1:09 PM CDT, five days after the incident. The alert acknowledged the delay in its opening line, characterizing the report itself as 'delayed' rather than blaming the institution, and noted that the offender was known to the survivor. The alert followed Loyola's standard crime-alert template, which combines incident-specific facts with prevention messaging about consent and intoxication. The delayed timing drew quiet criticism from students, particularly given that Loyola later experienced a separate Mertz Hall intruder incident in September 2024, reinforcing safety concerns about the building. Sexual-assault timely warnings present an inherent tension under the Clery Act: institutions must balance the threat-information requirement with respect for survivor confidentiality, often producing alerts like this one that share location and circumstance but withhold suspect identity.
Analysis

Key Findings

The five-day delay between the March 16 incident and the March 21 alert is unusually long for a Clery timely warning; most institutions aim to issue within 24-48 hours, though delays are permitted when the report itself is late
Loyola explicitly acknowledged the delay in the alert's opening sentence, a transparency choice that contrasts with peer institutions that simply omit timing details
The alert's prevention language about consent and incapacitation reflects Loyola's standard sexual-assault crime alert template, which is reused across multiple incidents
Mertz Hall would feature in another safety incident six months later when an intruder entered a student's room on September 8, 2024 — making this 2024 alert the first of two Mertz Hall alerts that year
Outcome
Loyola Campus Safety opened an investigation. The offender was identified by the survivor as someone known to them. No arrest was publicly reported in connection with this specific incident at the time of the warning. The crime alert was issued in compliance with the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Student Paper
  3. News
  4. Official
Tags
sexual-assaulttimely-warningclery-actresidence-hallprivate-r1illinoischicagodelayed-reportloyola-alertknown-offenderUnder Investigation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion