INITIAL ALERTEmail
TIMELY WARNING NOTICE - SEXUAL ASSAULT
On 9/8/19 at approximately 1:30 a.m., Public Safety was informed of a sexual assault. Officers responded and met with the reporting Swarthmore student. At that time, it was learned that the incident may have occurred earlier that morning at Worth Residence Hall. The reporting student was unable to recall any additional information at that time.
The reporting student has been offered resources and options. Members of the Dean's Office responded to the incident, and the Title IX coordinator was advised of this matter as well.
Anyone with information that might aid in the investigation or who observed any criminal or suspicious activity is asked to contact the Swarthmore College Department of Public Safety at 610-328-8333 or the Swarthmore Borough Police Department at 610-543-0123 or 911.
Such acts of sexual violence are never the victim's fault, and the blame lies solely with the perpetrator(s). Victims of crime are encouraged to seek help and resources from Public Safety, CAPS, Title IX or other on- and off-campus support agencies.
Michael J. Hill
Director of Public Safety
Swarthmore College
Published on the official Swarthmore College Public Safety timely warning notices page, confirming this is the exact text
The phrase 'unable to recall any additional information' signals the potential involvement of alcohol or incapacitation without stating it explicitly
Location is identified only as Worth Residence Hall with no room number or floor, following the standard practice of protecting the reporting student's privacy in sexual assault timely warnings
The closing statement that 'sexual violence is never the victim's fault' is a deliberate departure from the neutral institutional tone of most Clery notifications and reflects post-2013 VAWA-influenced language
Signed by name by the Director of Public Safety, which is uncommon for timely warnings and adds a personal accountability dimension
Issued just two weeks into the fall semester at a small residential campus where nearly all 1,600 students live on campus, meaning the entire community received and discussed this notice