INITIAL ALERTEmail
USC DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
TIMELY WARNING
Incident: Robbery and Attempted Rape
Date/Time of Occurrence: 03/18/2024, 2:59 AM
Location: In front of the John & Alice Tyler Building located at 3601 Flower Street
While walking on Flower Street, a non-USC victim was approached by a suspect on a bicycle, who pushed the victim towards a nearby bush where he attempted to remove the victim's pants at knife point. A passerby heard the victim scream for help and intervened, which caused the suspect to stop his attack. The suspect took the victim's cell phone and left on his bicycle going eastbound on Flower Street under the 110 Freeway overpass.
The Clery Act requires that USC notify the public of certain crimes which occur within Clery-designated geography. These reports are called Timely Warnings. When a criminal incident occurs within USC's Clery Geography that represents a serious or continuing threat to the safety of students, employees, and others, DPS issues a Timely Warning in compliance with the Clery Act.
The purpose of this warning is to aid in the prevention of similar crimes by alerting the community about the incident and to provide information which allows individuals to make informed decisions about their personal safety.
Safety Recommendations:
- Walk in groups, especially at night
- Be aware of your surroundings at all times
- If you feel threatened, call DPS immediately
- Use Campus Cruiser or Lyft ride services provided by USC
- Report suspicious activity to DPS
If you have information relevant to the crime(s) reflected in this alert, immediately call DPS at (213) 740-6000 for the University Park Campus (UPC), (323) 442-1000 for the Health Sciences Campus (HSC) or (213) 485-6571 for the LAPD Southwest Division.
The incident occurred at 2:59 a.m., during the highest-risk window for campus sexual assaults, when fewer witnesses and safety escorts are available
USC discloses that the victim was 'non-USC' — language commonly used in DPS bulletins for incidents within Clery geography but involving community members who are not USC students or employees
The alert details the suspect's MO (bicycle approach, pushed victim into bushes, knife point) — atypically specific for a sexual-assault Clery alert because the suspect was a stranger and the bystander intervention provided witness detail
A passerby's intervention was decisive in stopping the attack — the alert preserves this fact, modeling bystander response without making it a generic safety tip
References USC's Campus Cruiser and Lyft ride services as preventive resources, reflecting the university's investment in late-night transportation alternatives