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The Murder That Forced Every R1 to Re-Read Its Timely-Warning Policy

VAdomestic violencetimely warningmedium confidence

In the pre-dawn hours of May 3, 2010, University of Virginia women's lacrosse player Yardley Love, 22, a fourth-year from Cockeysville, Maryland, was found dead in her 14th Street NW apartment off the UVA Corner. Her former boyfriend, men's lacrosse player George Huguely V, was arrested hours later and charged with first-degree murder. Because the crime occurred in off-campus student housing in the early morning and the suspect was in custody before sunrise, UVA did NOT issue an immediate Clery-Act timely warning — a decision that drew intense national scrutiny and helped reshape how universities interpret the Clery Act 'continuing threat' standard.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
1
Injured
0
Institution
University of Virginia
Public R1 · VA
~21,000 studentsUVA Alerts
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 ALERTEmail
Approximate reconstruction503 chars
It is with great sadness that I write to inform you of the death of a fourth-year student, Yeardley Love, of Cockeysville, Maryland. Yeardley was found dead this morning in her apartment on 14th Street, just off campus. The Charlottesville Police Department is investigating the matter as a homicide. A suspect is in custody. We do not believe there is any ongoing threat to the University community. Counselors are available at Student Health for any student needing support during this difficult time.

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

The phrase 'no ongoing threat' was the linchpin of UVA's defense for not issuing a Clery-Act timely warning — federal regulations only require timely warnings when there is an ongoing or continuing threat to the campus community
Note the misspelling 'Yeardley' — that was the correct legal spelling of the victim's first name, not a typo. Media coverage often standardized to 'Yardley'
Sent by President Casteen, then in his final weeks of a 20-year tenure — this was one of the last major communications of his presidency
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Approximate reconstruction386 chars
The University community is grieving the loss of Yeardley Love. Memorial gatherings are being planned. The Charlottesville Police Department has charged George Huguely with first-degree murder in connection with her death. CAPS counselors are available 24 hours for any student in distress. The University remains committed to the safety and well-being of every member of our community.

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

Names the suspect — unusual in a campus-community email, but standard practice once an arrest has been made and charges filed
Mentions 'CAPS' — UVA's Counseling and Psychological Services — which is the standard support referral in post-incident communications
Does not use the words 'timely warning' or 'Clery' — UVA continued to maintain throughout the response that this was not a Clery-Act triggering event
Context

Background

The murder of Yeardley Love at approximately 2:15 AM EDT on May 3, 2010, was a watershed moment in the post-Virginia Tech era of campus emergency communications — not because of how UVA's alert system performed, but because of what it chose NOT to do. Love, a senior women's lacrosse player, was beaten to death in her off-campus apartment on 14th Street NW by her ex-boyfriend George Huguely V, a senior on the UVA men's lacrosse team. Huguely was arrested at his Charlottesville apartment around 7:00 AM. Because Charlottesville Police informed UVA that a suspect was already in custody, the university determined that no Clery Act timely warning was required — there was, in its view, no 'ongoing threat to the campus community.' The first communication to students was not a UVA Alert text but an email from President John T. Casteen III sent mid-morning, framing the death as a tragic loss rather than a security incident requiring emergency notification. The decision drew significant scrutiny from Security on Campus, Inc. (now the Clery Center) and the U.S. Department of Education's Clery Compliance Division. Subsequent reporting revealed that Huguely had a documented history of violence toward Love — including a prior physical altercation reported to UVA athletics staff — that arguably should have triggered earlier intervention. The case became a foundational citation in the 2013 Clery Act amendments under VAWA, which expanded the timely-warning categories to include dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking — and required universities to publish clearer policies on when warnings would and would not be issued. In 2010, the lawn-side outpouring at UVA — and the unanswered question of whether 'timely warning' had become a bureaucratic dodge — set the terms of a national conversation that ultimately led to law.
Analysis

Key Findings

UVA did not issue a Clery Act timely warning for the May 3, 2010 homicide, citing the 'no ongoing threat' exception because a suspect had been arrested before campus-wide notification was possible
The university's first communication was a presidential email rather than a UVA Alert text — a deliberate choice that reflected how UVA interpreted the boundary between Clery-required notifications and pastoral communication
The case became a major citation in the 2013 Clery Act amendments under the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act, which expanded timely-warning categories to include dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking
Huguely had a documented prior history of violence toward Love that was known to UVA athletics personnel but did not trigger institutional intervention — a gap that contributed to subsequent policy reforms around Title IX and athletics oversight
Outcome
Yardley Love was pronounced dead at the scene. George Huguely V was arrested at approximately 7:00 AM on May 3, 2010, and was [convicted of second-degree murder and grand larceny](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Yardley_Love) on February 22, 2012, and sentenced to 23 years in prison. The case was a major touchstone for [the 2013 amendments to the Clery Act](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clery_Act) under the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act, which expanded timely-warning categories and required clearer notification policies.
Provenance

Sources

  1. secondary
  2. News
  3. secondary
  4. Official
  5. national media
Tags
homicidedating-violencetimely-warningclery-actno-warning-issuedoff-campusathleticsvawa2010
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion