Assault/simple assault — 1
Drug/narcotics violation — 2
Drunkenness — 2
Fake/other ID use — 1
Larceny/all other — 1
Larceny/theft from building — 2
Larceny/theft from vehicle — 1
Larceny/theft of motor vehicle parts or accessories — 1
Larceny/pocket picking — 1
Trespassing — 1
Vandalism/destruction of property — 1
— An officer was sent to McClintock at 9:34 a.m. in response to theft from a building. The victim, who was moving into her room, was gone from her room between 2 p.m. and 3:05 p.m. One of her roommates was in the room the entire time. When the victim returned to her room, she noticed her flower pot was missing. Several of the roommates told her that the other roommate, who had been in the room, gave the flower pot to them. They returned the flower pot to the victim. At 6 p.m., the victim noticed that six of her family photos were also missing. The roommate who had taken the flower pot admitted to an RM that she took the family photos, but she refused to give them back. The officer made an unsuccessful attempt to resolve the issues, but the victim no longer lives in the room.
— An officer stopped a man running down Laurens Street in the direction of Five Points at 2 a.m. The officer asked him if he was okay, and he said he was just returning to Five Points to get his ID from the Pour House bar. The officer noticed the man had been drinking because of the smell of alcohol. When the officer asked the man for his name and date of birth, the man said his birth year was 1991, but he could not tell him how old he was. The man also said he was from Tennessee, but gave the officer an ID from Mississippi. The man admitted that the ID was a fake, and eventually gave the officer his real ID. He was given a citation for minor in possession of beer.
— An officer took a call on Oct. 9 about an incident that took place on Sept. 28 at the football game against Missouri. The victim reported that a black man gave him two high fives at the game. When the victim reached for the high fives, the man grabbed both of his hands. A second black man grabbed his wallet from his pocket, and both of them ran away. The victim had no money in his wallet, and he called his bank to cancel his credit card. Ten to fifteen days ago, the victim received a call saying that a black man had used his driver’s license in Texas and received a counter check of $1,500, but the victim only reported his wallet with his credit card missing.