Reports of sexual assault at Minnesota colleges have risen sharply in recent years, lending urgency to a national call to bring down the number of sex offenses that occur on campuses across the country.
The University of Minnesota, which has had two high-profile rape cases this school year, reported 31 percent more sexual assaults in 2012 than in 2008, reflecting the change at colleges across the state. Across Minnesota, the number of reported sex offenses rose from 115 in 2008 to 141 in 2012, according to data supplied by colleges as required under the federal Clery Act.
The surge in reported cases is a sign that more victims are coming forward as police and colleges improve how they handle the crime, campus observers say. Despite the increased awareness, the actual number of sexual assaults — both reported and not — remains steady. One in five women are assaulted on campus, according to a White House report last month. President Obama announced a task force to address what he called "an affront to our basic decency."
"We've come to accept as a norm that this will happen at this rate," said Donna Dunn, executive director of the Minnesota Coalition Against Sexual Assault. "And we've got to actually be outraged."
A close call near campus.
Brittany Bastian, a University of Minnesota junior, reported her close call to police last November.
She and three friends had just left a midnight show at the St. Anthony Main Theatre when a man in an unmarked black SUV pulled up and asked her and her female friend if they wanted a ride, saying he was a taxi driver.
They refused, and the man drove away.
Two hours later, a man in a black SUV offered a ride to another U student, saying he was a police officer. When she got in the vehicle, he drove to an area west of Interstate 35W and raped her.