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Auraria

Police Activity at Student Commons: How a One-Hour Auraria Lockdown Bridged Protest, Trespass, and Alert-Wording Backlash

COcivil unrestemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Just after 4 p.m. MDT on May 13, 2024, more than a dozen pro-Palestinian protesters marched from the Tivoli Quad encampment to the CU Denver Student Commons building, entering the building and occupying the Bursar's Office on the fifth floor. Auraria Higher Education Center posted an emergency alert at 4:44 p.m. MDT 'due to police activity at Student Commons Building' and placed the campus on lockdown. Lockdown lifted at 5:48 p.m. MDT after staff were safely evacuated and 10 protesters who remained were issued summonses for trespassing, interference, and disturbing the peace.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Auraria Campus (CU Denver, MSU Denver, CCD)
Public R1 · CO
~35,000 studentsAuraria Campus Emergency Alert / CU Denver Alerts
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence · 2 verified verbatim

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTmulti-channel
Auraria Emergency Alert: Due to police activity at Student Commons Building. Campus is on lockdown. Please avoid the area. More information will follow.
AHEC publicly characterized the alert as posted 'at 4:44 p.m.' — reporting consistently quoted the words 'police activity at Student Commons Building'
The phrase 'police activity' became the focus of student criticism: it is the same wording used during shootings and active threats elsewhere, making the alert read more severe than the underlying trespass
Auraria Campus is unusual: a single physical campus shared by three institutions (CU Denver, MSU Denver, CCD) with a fourth entity (AHEC) operating campus-wide systems including emergency notification
UPDATETwitter/X+21 min
Auraria Emergency Alert: Campus still on lockdown due to a trespass issue in Student Commons. Please stay out of the area. More info to follow.
Verbatim from the official @AurariaCampus X/Twitter account during the May 13, 2024 lockdown — this update reframed the cause from 'police activity' to 'trespass issue,' partially addressing student criticism about the vagueness of the initial alert
The phrase 'trespass issue' was a de-escalation signal that the lockdown was not related to an armed threat but rather to civil disobedience
ALL CLEARTwitter/X+1h 4m
Auraria Emergency Alert: Campus lockdown lifted. Normal operations have resumed.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

All-clear came 64 minutes after the initial alert — short by lockdown standards because the underlying incident was civil disobedience rather than an armed threat
AHEC's own May 13 protest update characterized the lockdown as enabling 'safe evacuation of staff in the area and to assess the situation' rather than as a response to violence
Text reconstructed from the tweet title and AHEC's protest update; the exact full text from the X post was not fully confirmed — sourceUrl is the official X post at 5:48 PM MDT
Context

Background

The Auraria Campus in downtown Denver is shared by three institutions — the University of Colorado Denver, Metropolitan State University of Denver, and the Community College of Denver — with the Auraria Higher Education Center (AHEC) managing campus-wide infrastructure including emergency notification. That shared-governance reality shapes both how alerts get sent and how they get received. On May 13, 2024, the campus was placed on lockdown when more than a dozen pro-Palestinian protesters — part of a several-week-long demonstration camp on the Tivoli Quad — marched to the CU Denver Student Commons and entered the Bursar's Office on the fifth floor. AHEC's emergency alert went out at 4:44 p.m. MDT and used the phrase 'police activity at Student Commons Building.' Students complained that the wording was indistinguishable from alerts they had received elsewhere about armed threats, causing panic disproportionate to the underlying civil disobedience. The case sits in the archive at the intersection of two ongoing campus stories of 2024: (1) the spring 2024 wave of pro-Palestinian protests that put dozens of US universities under emergency-notification scrutiny, and (2) the persistent question of how 'police activity' became a vague catch-all in campus alert templates after years of swatting and active-shooter incidents — to the point that recipients now read it as code for 'something potentially lethal.' Ten protesters cited and released. The lockdown lasted just over an hour. AHEC's own write-up of the day framed the lockdown as enabling staff evacuation rather than responding to violence — quietly conceding that the alert wording and the incident severity were mismatched.
Analysis

Key Findings

Auraria's shared-campus governance means a single alert reaches three universities at once — multiplying the audience for any ambiguous wording
The phrase 'police activity' has become problematic in campus alerts: it is used both for shootings and for trespass/civil-disobedience, leaving recipients unable to calibrate
AHEC's own May 13 protest update characterized the lockdown as a staff-evacuation tool — a quiet acknowledgment that the alert language overstated the threat
The 64-minute lockdown duration was short by emergency-notification standards, reflecting the non-armed nature of the underlying incident
Spring 2024 pro-Palestinian protests created a new category of campus alert use: emergency-notification systems deployed for civil-disobedience responses, raising questions about whether they're being misused
Outcome
Ten protesters cited and immediately released. No injuries. The lockdown ran approximately 64 minutes. [Students publicly criticized the alert wording](https://kdvr.com/news/local/auraria-students-upset-about-wording-of-emergency-alert-during-lockdown/) — specifically the use of generic 'police activity' language that suggested an armed-threat-level emergency to many recipients rather than a trespass/civil-disobedience response. AHEC defended the wording but acknowledged a review of alert categorization.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. Official
  4. News
  5. News
  6. Official
Tags
civil-unrestlockdownaurariacu-denvermsu-denverccdcoloradodenverpro-palestinianstudent-commonsalert-wordingahec
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion