I'm not sure, there might be a precedent for something like this. things to note.
people who are experts identified BK as a serious ticking time bomb and thought he was a threat to the students and personnel of the program.
the student incidents could have been serious enough to alert police to this problematic, predatory person who is harassing and intimidating with young women.
Alert the police about what though? He graded female students unfairly? He was rude to some students? He was coming on to some of the girls? He was arrogant. Talked back to his professor and they got into a tussle?
I don't see much of anything that could be reported to the police. There is a campus police department ready and willing to take reports, but this would be a nothing burger, imo.
police don't always have to make an arrest, they can do other things, they can mitigate, warn and observe.
Observe what, mitigate what? They will warn a young child if you ask a cop to talk to your minor child about shoplifting or riding without a helmet. But a grown PHD candidate?
I don't see anything that BK was accused of that the police department would be able to help much with. He was slick, in his own way. He didn't cross any legal lines that we know of. Leering at girls, walking behind them out to the parking lot? It's not really illegal.
People believed he broke into his friend's apartment, and he may have , but no one knows if he did or not. Lots of girls thought he was creepy, but police can do nothing about a nebulous accusation.imo.
it is questionable but I think the consensus would be that either the school didn't have protocols in place to exercise due diligence in a serious situation with a problematic student, or they simply didn't follow commonsense protocol, which would have been to alert police and allow them to assess the situation.
I don't see it. What could the police possibly do about vague and subjective accusations about being creepy or awkward?
He did nothing to make anyone think he was about to brutally stab 4 strangers to death. imo
I don't think it matters that these college kids were at another school.
It's kind of like they just rushed him out of the program and didn't want this reflecting on their program that attracted a weirdo, dangerous creep.
They didn't rush him out, did they? I thought they gave him a couple of chances and had some meetings, to set boundaries and discuss options and suggested ways to improve ? They gave him opportunities to make changes but he apparently continued to beef with his mentoring professor.
I think the school has to settle with the parents.
I hope they don't. This is an overreach, imo. And sets a bad precedent. Are we going to go sue the last school that any future murderers attended for not noticing their student was going to be violent?
there is no way to ascertain wether or not Bryan could have been spooked after
a police confrontation, spooked enough to abandon his ideas. I mean eventually he would kill I think..someday but maybe not this one time...with more of an intervention. mOO
I don't understand the concept here----are we saying that if the university called the police and said "please come talk to this student Bryan, he is creeping out the female students, etc" And they'd come and warn him somehow, and then he'd put off his homicidal ideations for awhile?
I don't think it would work like that. I could see them requesting that he might get some counselling so he could get along better with superiors or authority figures. But it would be up to him if he followed through because no charges were brought against him by any victims.