The MIT Crime Club was a Massachusetts Institute of Technology student group known for its attempts to develop technological solutions to crime problems and for its unauthorized investigation of a murder in a Harvard dorm. It was established in 2005 to undertake campus-safety projects and raise awareness of campus and neighborhood crime. The group rebroadcast police radio transmissions online, assembled police-log compilations, and constructed crime maps.[2]
In 2009 the club hired two private detectives to investigate the shooting of a local marijuana dealer at a Harvard residence hall.[3] It later contributed to a Snapped: Killer Couples episode about the incident.[4]
History
The MIT Crime Club was established by two MIT students in 2005.[2] Some Harvard students also became members.[3]
On June 2, 2009, a Boston Globe correspondent wrote that MIT said it did not know of any school crime club.[5] In August, Boston magazine reported that the club was an MIT-authorized group with a membership of five students and one or more graduates.[2]
Activities
The group compiled incident data from police logs,[6][7] constructed crime maps,[2][8] and rebroadcast MIT, Harvard, and Cambridge police radio transmissions online.[9] Members wrote weekly police-log compilations for MIT's student newspaper, The Tech.[10]
In 2009 the group awarded an MIT dormitory a "Sparky the Fire Dog Award for Not Setting Off as Many Fire Alarms as Last Year".[2][11] In 2010 it sponsored and hosted an MIT event, the MIT Security Workers Solidarity Gathering, where the campus police union argued against cutting security workers to solve a budget crisis.[12][13]
In 2011 Cambridge City Council adopted a resolution thanking the group for making MIT's campus a "safer and more welcoming environment for students" by sponsoring bicycle theft-prevention workshops and the like. "Club members have for six years furnished MIT students with technology and data of value in safeguarding their persons and property ..."[14][15]
Influence
In 2006 a club member who had written police log compilations at The Tech was hired by the Cambridge Chronicle as its first "Police Log Compiler for MIT and Harvard".[16]
On May 30, 2009, the group hired a private-detective team to investigate security at Harvard University after a marijuana dealer was shot to death in a dormitory basement. The detective and his assistant were arrested by campus police and prosecuted on charges of breaking and entering and trespass.[3][17] A district court judge dismissed the case before trial, finding that the evidence offered by the prosecutors was legally insufficient to convict the defendants.[18][19]PI Magazine, a trade journal, said of the ruling:
One apparent implication is that investigators may take photographs in residential common areas at universities without being subject to immediate arrest. Permission can be granted by an occupant of the residence hall floor. Investigators need not obtain permission of the owner.[18]
The club later contributed to a Killer Couples television episode about the shooting.[4]
In January 2010, Harvard students "looking to MIT's Crime Club as an example" organized the Harvard College Crime Club;[20] the organization was recognized by the college's Office of Student Life.[21][22]
Finances
The group was funded in part by alumni contributions.[2] MIT's alumni association established an MIT Crime Club Fund to support its initiatives.[23]
References
^"The MIT Crime Club Constitution"(PDF). 2005. Art. I. Archived from the original(PDF) on February 29, 2024. The founders of the MIT Crime Club are dedicated to improving general safety for MIT students, both on and off campus.
^ abcFargen, Jessica (June 3, 2009). "MIT Kids Send Spies to Harvard". Boston Herald. p. 2. Archived(PDF) from the original on September 21, 2013. The MIT Crime Club hired the private eyes following the May 18 murder of Justin Cosby, 21, who police say dealt drugs to Harvard students ... Most of the Crime Club's members are MIT students, although Harvard students have joined in the past.
^Nierstedt, Jenna (June 2, 2009). "Trespassing Alleged at Dorm". Boston Globe. p. B7. Archived from the original on June 5, 2009. The MIT Crime Club retained one male and one female private investigator ... to investigate the May 18 homicide ... Harvard University police found the two taking photos inside the dorm ... An MIT spokeswoman said she knew of no school crime club.
^Rafat, Marjan; Sutton, Laura (January 10, 2006). "IAP 2006 Activity: Campus Safety Workshop". MIT. Along with publishing the MIT police logs in The Tech, we: ... _provide safety devices such as personal safety alarms and Drink Detective test kits (which test drinks for date-rape drugs) ... _present new data on property theft rates at local schools ...
^Rafat, Marjan (February 10, 2006). "Police Log". Tech. MIT. p. 17. Archived from the original(PDF) on October 24, 2020. Compiled by Marjan Rafat with assistance from other members of the MIT Crime Club.
^"Sparky the Fire Dog Award"(PDF). MIT Crime Club. 2009. Archived from the original(PDF) on November 30, 2023. 2008 Sparky the Fire Dog Award presented to East Campus-West Parallel ...
^Tsai, Liz (April 13, 2010). "Unions and Students Hold 'Solidarity' Event". Tech. MIT. p. 1. Present at the meeting were representatives from the MIT Police Association ... The event was sponsored and hosted by the MIT Crime Club ... Union members ... as well as members of the Student Union ... discuss the ongoing budget crisis at the Institute.
^"MIT Security Workers Solidarity Gathering". MIT Events Calendar. April 9, 2010. Archived from the original on October 5, 2014. Speaker: City Councilors; MIT union leaders – patrol officers, custodians ... Explore ways to help MIT and its service workers' unions ... determine fair and competitive wages and benefits.
^"Cambridge City Council meeting: Agenda". Cambridge Civic Journal. September 26, 2011. Archived from the original on October 21, 2011. Thanks to the MIT Crime Club for their achievements in making their campus and the City of Cambridge a safer and more welcoming environment.
^Cambridge, Mass., Res. 37 of Sept. 26, 2011. "The MIT Crime Club has sponsored Bicycle Theft Prevention Workshops at which students have theft-proofed their bicycles ..."
^Witlin, Dawn; Rafat, Marjan (September 14, 2006). "Crime Watch". Cambridge Chronicle. p. 5. Archived from the original on June 15, 2009. Compiled by Dawn Witlin and Marjan Rafat, police log compiler for MIT and Harvard.
^ ab"Charges Dismissed against Massachusetts PI"(PDF). PI Magazine. Freehold, NJ: 20 (22). November–December 2009. Archived from the original on September 21, 2013. A judge has dismissed all charges against an investigator and his wife.
^Yu, Xi (January 30, 2010). "CSI: Harvard". Flyby Blog. Harvard Crimson. Looking to MIT's Crime Club as an example, Berryessa wants to organize a criminology interest club at Harvard ...
^"Giving to MIT: MIT Crime Club Fund". MIT Alumni Association. Archived from the original on December 10, 2012. MIT Crime Club Fund (2721276). Gifts to support the club's public-safety initiatives.