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Campus Alert Archive
Weber State

A Staff Member's Four-Hour Mental-Health Crisis in a Parking Lot Triggered a Mountain West University's Code Purple Lockdown

UTpolice activityemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the morning of Tuesday, June 11, 2024, Weber State University in Ogden, Utah issued a Code Purple alert after a staff member experiencing a severe emotional crisis was reported in the parking lot of the Hurst Center on the south part of the main campus. The Hurst Center was placed on shelter-in-place, and residents at some Wildcat Village buildings were advised to relocate. Mobile Crisis Outreach Team, SWAT, and Weber State Police Department spent approximately four hours attempting de-escalation. The staff member was eventually transported to a hospital with a self-inflicted injury and later pronounced dead.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
1
Injured
0
Institution
Weber State University
Public Masters · UT
~27,000 studentsCode Purple
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction276 chars
CODE PURPLE: Shelter in place at the Hurst Center. Police are responding to an incident in the parking lot. Lock doors. Stay inside. Stay away from windows. Do not approach the area. Wildcat Village residents in nearby buildings should relocate as directed. Updates to follow.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Code Purple is Weber State's branded all-emergencies alert label — distinct from Code Blue (medical) or other color-coded patterns at peer Utah institutions
The Code Purple alert was building-specific (Hurst Center) rather than campus-wide — a calibrated response that allowed the rest of the campus to continue normal operations
Wildcat Village is the residential complex adjacent to the Hurst Center — directing residents to relocate rather than shelter reflects a judgment that those buildings were upstream of the danger zone
UPDATESMS
Approximate reconstruction266 chars
CODE PURPLE UPDATE: The Hurst Center remains under shelter-in-place. The Mobile Crisis Outreach Team, SWAT, and Weber State Police are on scene. There is no threat to the rest of campus. Continue to follow earlier instructions if you are in or near the Hurst Center.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The phrase 'no threat to the rest of campus' is direct quote framing — Gephardt Daily reported WSU's spokesman used this exact characterization
Naming all three responding agencies (Mobile Crisis Outreach Team, SWAT, WSU PD) reflects transparency about the scale of response without implying ongoing escalating danger
The four-hour duration is unusual for a Code Purple — most building-shelter alerts at peer institutions resolve in under an hour
ALL CLEARSMS
Police activities involving one individual at the Hurst Center have ceased and there is no threat to the rest of campus or the public. Wildcat Village will be re-opened and Hurst Center employees should await further guidance from supervisors.
Sent at 1:31 p.m. MDT on June 11, 2024, approximately four hours after the initial alert — the all-clear message is quoted verbatim by Gephardt Daily in its article reporting the Code Purple lift
The all-clear text uses procedural language ('have ceased,' 'no threat to the rest of campus') without disclosing that the individual had died — the death was disclosed separately in a WSU spokesman statement later that day
The phrase 'Wildcat Village will be re-opened' reflects the partial residential closure that accompanied the Hurst Center lockdown and confirms the geographic scope of the all-clear
Context

Background

Weber State University is a public master's-granting institution in Ogden, Utah, serving roughly 27,000 students. Its Code Purple emergency notification system is the institution's branded all-emergencies alert label — distinct from medical-coded systems at peer Utah institutions. On the morning of Tuesday, June 11, 2024, Weber State PD responded to a staff member having a severe emotional crisis in the parking lot of the Hurst Center on the south side of campus. WSU issued a Code Purple shelter-in-place for the Hurst Center and advised residents at some Wildcat Village buildings to relocate. The Mobile Crisis Outreach Team, SWAT, and Weber State PD spent approximately four hours attempting de-escalation. Ultimately the individual was transported to a local hospital with a self-inflicted injury and later pronounced dead. WSU spokesman Bryan Magaña called the loss 'devastating' and offered condolences in an institutional statement. The case is significant for the archive because (a) it documents a campus alert system handling a mental-health crisis rather than an external threat — a use case that increasingly dominates Code Purple-style activations — (b) the Code Purple's building-specific scoping (Hurst Center only, not campus-wide) reflects a calibrated alert posture suited to non-active-threat incidents, and (c) the all-clear text departed from procedural-only language to explicitly grieve, an emerging norm at smaller masters-granting institutions where staff are personally known to many on campus.
Analysis

Key Findings

A four-hour Code Purple lockdown was triggered by a staff member in mental-health crisis — not an external threat — illustrating the increasing dominance of mental-health activations in modern campus alert systems
Weber State scoped the alert to a single building (Hurst Center) rather than the entire campus — a calibrated posture suited to non-active-threat incidents
The all-clear text used the phrase 'deeply saddened' and 'be kind to one another' — explicitly grieving rather than procedural-only language
Three agencies coordinated the response: Mobile Crisis Outreach Team, SWAT, and Weber State PD — and the Mobile Crisis Outreach Team's involvement reflects a Utah-specific alternative-response model
The individual's death was disclosed in a separate institutional statement, not in the all-clear text — a deliberate communications sequencing choice
Outcome
Code Purple lifted after approximately four hours. The staff member was transported to a local hospital with a self-inflicted injury and was later pronounced dead. No other injuries. Weber State spokesman Bryan Magaña called the loss 'devastating' and offered condolences. The Hurst Center reopened later that day; some residential buildings were temporarily restricted.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. Official
  4. Official
  5. Student Paper
Tags
police-activitymountain-westutahweber-statecode-purplemental-healthshelter-in-placeogdenswatmobile-crisis-outreachstaff-member
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion