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Campus Alert Archive
Miami (OH)

Three-and-a-Half-Hour SWAT Standoff on High Street: Miami University Issues Repeated RedHawk Alerts to Avoid the Block

OHpolice activityemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the evening of Tuesday, April 15, 2025, an hours-long police barricade situation unfolded at the corner of High and Locust Streets in Oxford, Ohio — one block from the Miami University campus. A woman reported to Oxford Police that her ex-boyfriend, Harrison Hooks, had entered her apartment without permission. When officers responded, the suspect barricaded himself in the unit. Authorities called in the Butler County Regional SWAT Team, Butler County Sheriff's Department, the Miami University Police Department, and the Oxford Fire Department. Miami University sent multiple RedHawk Alerts advising students to avoid the area throughout the night.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Miami University
Public R1 · OH
~19,000 studentsOmnilertRedHawk Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 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 ALERTmulti-channel
RedHawk Alert: Oxford Police are responding to an active police event at the intersection of High Street and Locust Street. Avoid the area until further notice. Updates to follow.

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

Reconstructed from Miami Student reporting; confirmed elements: the 'High and Locust' location, the 'active police event' framing (Miami University used this phrase rather than 'barricade' or 'SWAT' in initial messaging), and the 'avoid the area' instruction
RedHawk Alert is Miami University's branded emergency notification system, contracted through Omnilert; it delivers alerts to Oxford, Hamilton, Middletown, and West Chester campuses
Miami's initial 'active police event' phrasing is a graduated-disclosure choice — alerting students to police presence without prematurely characterizing a residential disturbance as a 'standoff' or 'barricade' that might cause panic
UPDATEmulti-channel
RedHawk Alert Update: The police event near High and Locust continues. SWAT is on scene. Continue to avoid the area. There is no immediate threat to the campus community.

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

Reconstructed update message; Local 12 reporting confirmed Miami sent 'multiple emergency alerts' across the evening, but the exact wording of each follow-up was not preserved verbatim
The 'no immediate threat to the campus community' framing is significant — Miami chose to assure students the standoff was contained to one apartment unit, not adjacent to academic buildings
Butler County Regional SWAT response is rare for Oxford — the small college town's last major SWAT deployment of this scale had been years earlier
ALL CLEARmulti-channel
RedHawk Alert: The police event at High and Locust has concluded. The suspect is in custody. The area is now safe and the avoidance order is lifted.

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

Reconstructed all-clear; Oxford Free Press reporting confirmed the standoff resolved 'just before 9:30 p.m.' and Miami's avoidance instruction was lifted
The full incident lasted approximately 3.5 hours from 6 p.m. start to 9:30 p.m. resolution — substantial duration for an Oxford-area emergency that interrupted the late-evening uptown bar district just blocks away
Context

Background

Miami University, founded in 1809 in Oxford, Ohio, is a public R1 doctoral institution with approximately 19,000 students. The university's RedHawk Alert emergency notification system — contracted through Omnilert — delivers SMS, email, and voice alerts to students, faculty, and staff on the Oxford, Hamilton, Middletown, and West Chester campuses. On the evening of Tuesday, April 15, 2025, a woman reported to the Oxford Police Department that her ex-boyfriend, Harrison Hooks, had entered her apartment at the corner of High and Locust Streets without permission and refused to leave. When officers arrived, Hooks barricaded himself in the unit. Because Oxford Police could not safely enter, authorities called in the Butler County Regional SWAT Team, the Butler County Sheriff's Department, the Miami University Police Department, the Oxford Fire Department, and the Oxford Township Police Department. First responders had 'rifles drawn' during the standoff. Miami University issued multiple RedHawk Alerts throughout the evening instructing students to avoid the intersection — situated one block from campus and immediately adjacent to the Oxford uptown bar district where Miami students gather. Hooks was apprehended just before 9:30 p.m. EDT and charged with breaking and entering, robbery, and related offenses. The standoff lasted approximately three-and-a-half hours and ended without injury.
Analysis

Key Findings

Miami University's graduated-disclosure communication framework — initial 'active police event,' update 'SWAT on scene,' all-clear 'suspect in custody' — illustrates how Clery Act emergency notifications can be issued for police activity even when no shots are fired
The three-and-a-half-hour standoff (6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. EDT) is a notable duration that overlapped with the Oxford uptown bar district's busiest evening hours, making the RedHawk Alert avoidance instruction operationally important for student traffic
Butler County Regional SWAT deployment to Oxford is rare — Miami's choice to send RedHawk Alerts (rather than rely on city-level emergency notifications) reflects the university's awareness that the Locust/High corner is effectively part of the Miami student footprint
Harrison Hooks was charged with breaking and entering and robbery — not weapons offenses — yet the SWAT response was triggered by the barricade itself, illustrating how the choice to barricade transforms a domestic-violence trespass into a multi-agency tactical event
Outcome
After a roughly three-and-a-half-hour standoff that began around 6 p.m. EDT, Harrison Hooks was [apprehended just before 9:30 p.m. EDT](https://www.oxfreepress.com/suspect-apprehended-in-oxford-apartment-barricade-situation/) without injury. He was charged with breaking-and-entering, robbery, and related offenses. No shots were fired. The woman who reported the trespassing was not at the apartment during the incident. Miami University lifted the avoidance order via a follow-up RedHawk Alert.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
  6. Official
Tags
police-activityswatbarricadestandoffdomestic-violenceoff-campusohiopublic-r1miami-universityoxfordredhawk-alertmac-conferenceno-shots-fired
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion