Crime log: intruders, drunk drivers, bike crash

- Lincoln’s final Daily Nebraskan crime log lists multiple incidents including intruders, drunk drivers and a cyclist struck at an intersection. - Report names a 21-year-old UNL student receiving a policy violation and details an April 16 collision injuring a biker. - The log highlights campus safety concerns and ongoing enforcement efforts by Lincoln police (dailynebraskan.com).

Lincoln’s last campus crime log of the school year bundled voyeurism concerns, suspected drunk driving and a bicycle crash that injured a rider in one week. (dailynebraskan.com) The Daily Nebraskan reported that on April 14 a student found a black iPhone placed under a shower stall in an Abel Residence Hall bathroom, and police linked it to a similar earlier-April incident involving a black phone. (dailynebraskan.com) The same roundup said a 21-year-old University of Nebraska-Lincoln student received a policy violation, and it described an April 16 crash at an intersection in which a bicyclist was struck and injured. (dailynebraskan.com) At Nebraska-Lincoln, those incident summaries sit inside a public crime and fire log required by the federal Clery Act, which says colleges with police or security departments must record the nature, date, time, general location and disposition of reported crimes. (scsapps.unl.edu) University police say the Nebraska-Lincoln log is updated within two business days and keeps the most recent 60 days online, with older logs available on request through the department. (scsapps.unl.edu) Nebraska-Lincoln’s annual campus security report says University Police includes state-certified officers, security officers, dispatchers and support staff, and publishes crime, arrest and referral statistics as part of its yearly safety disclosures. (police.unl.edu) Lincoln police also maintain separate citywide tools for daily call summaries, blotter entries, crime statistics and neighborhood crime mapping, putting campus incidents inside a broader local enforcement system. (lincoln.ne.gov) The final log closes the semester with a snapshot of the calls that tend to cluster around a large residential campus in April: dorm complaints, traffic enforcement and street-level crashes that spill across university and city jurisdictions. (dailynebraskan.com)

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