Please see the Support Resources below and take care of yourself as needed.
Type of Incident Reported: Sexual Battery-Groping
Date/Time of Incident: 11/08/2019 9:20pm
Date Reported to DPS: 11/08/2019 10:20pm
Location: 351 Lasuen St (Frost Amphitheater)
Suspect Information: White Male in his 30’s - 40’s, red hair, blue eyes, 6'3”, muscular
build, hair style described as shaved on the sides and back with long hair tied in a bun
on the top, wearing gray t-shirt and dark jeans.
Additional Details: A juvenile female victim was groped from behind at a concert.
The suspect grabbed the victims breast and hips. Deputies responded to the scene but were unable to locate the suspect.
Safety Suggestions: Be alert and protect yourself. Updates when available at https://police.stanford.edu/alert If you have information about this crime, please call the
Stanford University Department of Public Safety at (650) 329-2413, 24 hours 7 days a week.
Support Resources for Community Members: Stanford University does not tolerate sexual assault, sexual misconduct or sexual harassment. The university encourages anyone who has been sexually assaulted or subject to other forms of sexual misconduct or harassment to report the incident to university officials.
The information about this incident is being reported to you in accordance with the Clery Act. The remainder of this email provides information about preventing and reporting sexual assault.
· Ignorance of the law or of university policy concerning sexual assault, sexual misconduct and sexual harassment is not a defense.
· Receive affirmative consent from your partner before engaging in sexual activity.
· Perpetrators may attempt to use alcohol to facilitate a sexual assault. Statistically, the majority of reported sexual assaults occur while one or both parties are
under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Alcohol or drugs may impair one's ability to judge whether or not consent has been given, but it is never an excuse for choosing to
violate another person.
· There are a number of drugs that may be added to beverages with the intent of altering the consciousness or incapacitating a person without their knowledge.
These drugs are particularly dangerous when combined with alcohol and often produce amnesia, leaving a victim unclear about what occurred afterward. These drugs can
facilitate criminal activity; most often acts of sexual misconduct or sexual assault.
If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, or if you aren't sure whether you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, there are a number of resources
available to you at Stanford to inform you of your options and to support you in whatever path you choose to take in addressing the incident. The university's website
containing resource information is: https://sexualviolencesupport.stanford.edu/ This timely warning message is being sent to you in compliance with the Jeanne Clery Act.