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MIT

A Cup of 'Water,' a Fraternity, and an Interruption: MIT's Date-Rape-Drug Timely Warning

MAsexual assaulttimely warninghigh confidence
Under Investigation

Over the weekend of February 21-22, 2024, a female MIT student at an unnamed MIT fraternity was given a cup of water by an unknown male, became disoriented (consistent with possible drugging despite consuming no alcohol), and was taken upstairs where the male began removing her clothing before a friend interrupted. MIT Police issued a Clery timely warning on February 23.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Private R1 · MA
~11,500 studentsMIT Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Verified verbatimMIT Police — Crime Alerts & Timely Warnings1242 chars
MIT Police Timely Warning – Attempted Sexual Assault The MIT Police Department received a third-party report of an alleged incident involving the possible use of a date-rape drug and the attempted sexual assault of a female MIT student at an MIT-affiliated fraternity over the weekend of February 21-22, 2024. The student disclosed that she had not consumed any alcohol that evening. She was given what she believed to be a cup of water by an unknown male individual, after which she quickly became disoriented. The unknown male individual then brought the victim/survivor upstairs and began to remove her clothing until a friend interrupted. This report was made to the MIT Police through a third party in compliance with the Clery Act, a federal law. The MIT Police Department, with assistance from MIT's Office of Student Wellbeing and Violence Prevention & Response (VPR), is investigating. Resources: VPR is the primary, confidential, on-campus resource for issues pertaining to sexual assault, stalking, sexual harassment, and domestic/dating violence. VPR can be reached 24/7 at (617) 253-2300. This Timely Warning is issued in accordance with the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act.
Third-party reporting under Clery is an important and underdiscussed pathway — many sexual assault timely warnings rely on it because survivors often disclose first to friends or RAs who become Campus Security Authorities
The phrase 'victim/survivor' is intentional best-practice trauma-informed language — it lets the reader (often a survivor themselves) self-identify
Naming VPR with a 24/7 number directly in the alert is the gold standard for sexual assault timely warnings and is not consistently practiced across peers
Fraternity is left unnamed — common practice that protects the venue's other affiliates while still satisfying Clery's location-disclosure requirement (the 'where')
Mentioning that the survivor 'had not consumed any alcohol' is unusual and pushes back implicitly against alcohol-blame framing
'Possible use of a date-rape drug' — careful conditional; toxicology was not yet confirmed at the time of the alert
Context

Background

MIT Police issues Clery timely warnings under the heading 'Timely Warning – [Crime Type]' and is unusual in routinely including confidential resource information — specifically the 24/7 phone number for Violence Prevention & Response (VPR) — directly in the body of every sexual-assault alert. The February 2024 incident illustrates several recurring features of sexual assault timely warnings: the report came in via a third party (not the survivor directly), the venue (a fraternity) is described but not named, and the alert uses 'victim/survivor' as a paired term to invite reader self-identification. The drugged-drink modus operandi is a documented pattern at peer institutions and routinely appears in Penn State's timely warning archive and others. The alert's emphasis that the survivor 'had not consumed any alcohol' is a quiet but deliberate rebuttal of alcohol-as-cause framing — the suspect's drink was the drugging vector, not the survivor's choices.
Analysis

Key Findings

MIT routinely embeds VPR's 24/7 confidential resource number in every sexual assault timely warning — a model practice
Third-party reporting is the dominant pathway for sexual assault timely warnings; survivors often disclose to friends or RAs first
MIT uses 'victim/survivor' as a paired term — best-practice trauma-informed language
Fraternity is described but not named — protects unaffiliated chapter members while satisfying Clery location disclosure
Explicit mention that the survivor 'had not consumed any alcohol' implicitly rebuts alcohol-blame framing
Drugged-drink MO is a recurring pattern across R1 timely warning archives (MIT, Penn State, etc.)
Outcome
Suspect not identified. Investigation ongoing through MIT Police and MIT's Title IX office. The third-party report was made under Clery / VAWA disclosure protocols.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. Clery ASR
Tags
sexual-assaultattempted-sexual-assaulttimely-warningfraternityprivate-r1drug-facilitatedthird-party-reporttrauma-informedUnder Investigation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion