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Crime Log — March 12 – March 19

This week’s Crime Log was fairly quiet, with two trespassing alerts and one case of vandalism.
A picture of a Campus Safety car.
Photo courtesy of Courtesy of Creative Commons

Vandalism — Lot A

Reported March 13, 4:20 p.m., occurred between 12:30 p.m. and 12:31 p.m.

A student returned to their vehicle and found its window smashed. Campus Safety is continuing the investigation, but a report was not filed with the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department.

Trespassing — La Mirada Apartments

Reported March 15, 4:02 p.m.

A Campus Safety officer reported a transient individual taking items out of the dumpsters by the apartments. Officers made contact with the person and gave them an official trespass warning. They left without further incident.

Trespassing — La Mirada Apartments

Reported March 15, 5:40 p.m.

A resident reported a transient individual—a different person from the one described above—taking items out of the dumpsters by the apartments. Officers made contact with the person and gave them an official trespass warning. They left without further incident.

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About the Contributor
Christian Leonard
Christian Leonard, Editor-in-Chief
Christian Leonard is a junior journalism major whose affinity for chickens is really getting out of hand. He can often be found singing in the office, wrapped around a book, or arguing for the classification of cereal as a soup. [email protected] I came to Biola a nervous freshman, not really sure what I wanted to do during my time at university. Years of prayer and waiting seemed fruitless, until an academic counselor recommended I contact the Chimes, since I had shown a modest interest in journalism. I figured it was worth a shot, so I got in touch with the news editors. After a brief chat, I left, figuring I would write for them the following semester. I was assigned my first story a few days later. The following semester, I became a news apprentice, stepping into a full editorship my sophomore year. Through the experience, I gained a greater appreciation for the bustling community that is Biola—its students, its administration, and its culture—and a deeper desire to serve it through storytelling. As my time as news editor drew to a close, I was encouraged to apply for the editor-in-chief position, a prospect which both intimidated and thrilled me. Yet I ultimately saw it as a way to better support the publication through which God showed me His desire for my life. Now, as I oversee the Chimes, I am committed to upholding myself and the newspaper to standard of excellence, and to helping train the next generation of student journalists.
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