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Campus Alert Archive
Lehigh

The Murder That Created the Clery Act: Jeanne Clery in Stoughton Hall

PAsexual assaultadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On April 5, 1986, 19-year-old freshman Jeanne Clery was raped and murdered in her Stoughton Hall dormitory room at Lehigh University by fellow student Josoph Henry, who had entered through three propped-open exterior doors. Clery's parents Connie and Howard sued the university, ultimately securing a $2 million settlement and channeling their grief into the federal legislation that became the Clery Act, which today requires every U.S. college receiving federal aid to issue timely warnings, emergency notifications, and annual security reports.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
1
Injured
0
Institution
Lehigh University
Private R1 · PA
~6,500 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

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 ALERTWebsite
Approximate reconstruction330 chars
The University regrets to inform the community that a freshman student, Jeanne Ann Clery, was found dead in her dormitory room early this morning. Police are investigating the matter as a homicide. Counseling services are available through the Dean of Students office. Further information will be provided as it becomes available.

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

Lehigh did not issue a campus-wide warning about the unlocked-doors security failures that allowed the perpetrator to enter Stoughton Hall, a key omission cited in the family's later lawsuit
The Clerys later argued the university had concealed 38 violent crimes on campus in the three years preceding their daughter's murder
No mass notification system existed; news traveled by word of mouth and through the Brown and White student newspaper
UPDATEWebsite
Approximate reconstruction334 chars
Bethlehem Police have arrested Josoph M. Henry, a Lehigh University sophomore, in connection with the death of Jeanne Clery. Mr. Henry is in custody and the campus is not believed to face an ongoing threat. The University will be reviewing dormitory security procedures, including the use of propped exterior doors, in the days ahead.

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

Henry was arrested the same day after fellow students reported him bragging about the crime at a fraternity party
The university's later response, including continued use of unlocked dormitory doors and limited public disclosure, became central to the Clery family's wrongful death and negligence lawsuit
The reconstructed text reflects the kind of follow-up notice the modern Clery Act would require but which Lehigh did not formally issue in 1986
Context

Background

The murder of Jeanne Clery at Lehigh University on April 5, 1986, is the founding event of the modern campus emergency notification regime in the United States. Clery, a 19-year-old freshman from Bryn Mawr, was raped, beaten, sodomized, and strangled in her Stoughton Hall dormitory room by Josoph Henry, another Lehigh student, who entered through three exterior doors propped open by other students. Her parents, Connie and Howard Clery, discovered after their daughter's death that Lehigh had not informed prospective students about 38 violent crimes reported on campus in the three years before Jeanne enrolled. Their lawsuit and subsequent advocacy produced Pennsylvania's College and University Security Information Act in 1988, the federal Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act of 1990, and ultimately the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act. Every alert in this archive exists in a regulatory framework created in direct response to this single 1986 homicide, which is why the case appears here despite predating the Act by four years.
Analysis

Key Findings

Lehigh in 1986 had no Clery Act, no timely warning obligation, and no emergency notification framework; the absence of these tools is the entire reason they were later mandated
The Clery family's discovery that Lehigh had concealed 38 violent crimes from prospective students became the case-in-chief for federal disclosure legislation
Stoughton Hall's propped exterior doors, which allowed the perpetrator's entry, became a paradigmatic example of how campus security failures could be hidden from the public absent disclosure mandates
Every emergency notification, timely warning, and annual security report in this archive descends from the Clery family's response to this murder
Outcome
Josoph M. Henry, a Lehigh sophomore from Newark, New Jersey, was arrested within hours and in 1988 was convicted of first-degree murder, rape, robbery, and burglary; he was sentenced to death by a Northampton County jury but later dropped his appeals in exchange for life imprisonment without parole. The Clery family's lawsuit (settled out of court for a reported $2 million) and advocacy led to Pennsylvania's College and University Security Information Act (1988), the federal Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act of 1990, and ultimately the renamed Jeanne Clery Disclosure Act (1998), which is the entire reason this archive exists.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Source
  2. Official
  3. Student Paper
  4. Source
  5. Source
Tags
sexual-assaultmurderdormitoryfounding-eventpre-cleryclery-act-namesake1986historicalstoughton-hallno-alert-system
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion