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UVM

Laboratory Equipment, Tools, and Computers from Unlocked Rooms: UVM's Pattern-Theft Timely Warning

VTthefttimely warninghigh confidence
Under Investigation

In the week leading up to the timely-warning notification, the University of Vermont Police Services received multiple reports of thefts of laboratory equipment, tools, and computers from unoccupied, open, or unlocked rooms in buildings on UVM's Main Campus in Burlington. UVM issued a Clery timely warning urging the community to double-check that equipment and rooms were secure and that exterior doors were locked after hours.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of Vermont
Public R1 · VT
~14,000 studentsRaveCATAlert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Timely Warning Notification: Recent Thefts on Main Campus. In the last week, UVM Police have received multiple reports of thefts of laboratory equipment, tools, and computers from buildings in the area of UVM's Main Campus. In each instance, the property was taken from unoccupied rooms that were open or unlocked. Please take time to double-check that equipment is secure when leaving a workspace, and secure your rooms (doors and windows) and belongings. Do not leave items unattended in unsecured areas. Double-check that exterior doors are locked behind you if leaving a building after-hours; if you believe an exterior door should be locked and it is not, call UVM Police at 802-656-3473. Anyone with information regarding an on-campus theft can contact UVM Police at 802-656-3473, or information can be sent confidentially by visiting the UVM Police Services website or by text to 847411 (tip411) and include the keyword UVM in your message.
Distributed via UVM's tip411 alerts portal and the CATAlert system; tip411 preserves the exact text of timely warnings as an alert with permanent URL
The reference to 'laboratory equipment, tools, and computers' suggests the targeted buildings were primarily research and academic facilities rather than residence halls
Pattern-based timely warnings (multiple incidents over days) often signal a Clery alert that has been delayed from individual occurrences until a pattern is established
The warning's emphasis on exterior door security suggests UVM Police suspected tailgating or unauthorized after-hours access by someone using propped or unlocked doors
Context

Background

Sometime in the second half of 2025, University of Vermont Police Services issued a Clery Timely Warning Notification describing multiple thefts of laboratory equipment, tools, and computers from buildings on UVM's Main Campus in Burlington. The notice — preserved on UVM's tip411 alert portal — described a one-week pattern in which the property had been taken from 'unoccupied rooms that were open or unlocked.' UVM's Timely Warning policy requires a notice when a Clery crime represents a 'serious or ongoing threat.' The pattern of multiple lab and tool thefts cleared that bar. The warning was distributed via CATAlert, UVM's Rave-platform mass-notification system. UVM Police asked community members to take extra precautions with building and workspace security and to call 802-656-3473 with information or text 'UVM' to 847411 anonymously. The warning illustrates how Clery timely warnings serve property-crime patterns — a quieter end of the campus-alert spectrum but one that still requires institutional disclosure.
Analysis

Key Findings

UVM's preservation of the verbatim timely-warning text on the tip411 alerts portal creates a permanent, citable record of the notice — a practice many institutions do not follow
Pattern-based timely warnings illustrate how Clery's 'serious or ongoing threat' standard can be triggered by repeated low-violence property crimes when no single incident would have qualified
Specifying the targeted property (laboratory equipment, tools, computers) signals which buildings and which community subgroups face the highest risk and prompts targeted preventive behavior
Targeted advice on exterior-door security suggests UVM Police suspected someone was exploiting propped or after-hours-unlocked doors — a common access vector for academic-building thefts
Outcome
UVM Police continued investigating the pattern of thefts. The warning urged community members to call UVM Police at 802-656-3473 with information or send anonymous tips by text to 847411 using the keyword 'UVM'.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
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Tags
thefttimely-warninglaboratory-equipmentacademic-buildingsvermontuvmpattern-crimeverbatim-confirmedtip411Under Investigation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion