Alcohol
In accordance with Massachusetts laws, only persons who have
attained the age of (21) twenty-one are permitted the use of
alcoholic beverages. Massachusetts law forbids the sale or
serving of alcoholic beverages to anyone under the age of (21)
twenty-one. It is also illegal to furnish alcohol to a person
under (21) twenty-one years of age. All students, faculty,
staff and visitors to the college must abide by these laws.
Restricted areas for alcohol possession
Alcoholic beverages are only permitted in upperclass residence
areas including:
Dufault Townhouse
Aubuchon Townhouse
Authier Townhouse
Wachusett Hall
Moquin Townhouse
Dion Townhouse
Young (C Dorm)
Bissonnette Townhouse
Living Learning Center
Alcohol is never permitted in the following areas:
Desautels Hall
Alumni Hall
Worcester Hall
Nault (A Dorm)
Salisbury Hall
Drinking alcoholic beverages and possession
of alcoholic beverages is strictly prohibited from all outside
areas, public areas, athletic facilities / fields or any other
campus building unless specifically designated. Residents and
guests of Nault (Substance-free housing) are prohibited from
possessing alcohol and/or prohibited from being under the influence
of alcohol while in the residence.
The following are some important Alcoholic Beverage Offenses
according to Massachusetts laws:
- Any person under (21) years of age that is unaccompanied
by his parent or legal guardian that knowingly transports
or carries on his person any alcohol or alcoholic beverages.
- Any person under (21) years of age who purchases or attempts
to purchase alcoholic beverages or alcohol.
- Any person under
(21) years of age who makes arrangements with any person
to purchase or in any way procure alcoholic beverages.
- Whoever knowingly makes a false statement as to the age
of a person who is under (21) years of age in order to procure
the sale or delivery of alcoholic beverages.
- Whoever includes
a person under (21) years of age to make a false statement
as to his age in order to procure a sale or delivery of
alcoholic beverages or alcohol to such person under (21)
years of age.
- Any person transferring, altering or defacing
any liquor purchase identification card.
- Making, using,
carrying, selling or distributing a false identification
card.
- Using the identification card of another.
- Furnishing false
information in obtaining an identification card.
Assumption College strictly prohibits
any and all types of:
- drinking paraphernalia
- drinking games
- kegs & beerballs
- spiked punch
- open containers in public areas
- intoxication/Drunkenness
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Controlled Substances (Drugs)
Chapter 94C of the general laws declares that no person knowingly
or intentionally shall possess a controlled substance unless
such substance was obtained directly, or pursuant to a valid
prescription order from a practitioner while acting in the
course of his professional practice.
The following are some important Controlled Substances (Drug)
Offenses according to Massachusetts laws.
Most of these violations are considered felonies:
- Any
person who knowingly or intentionally manufactures, distributes,
dispenses or possesses with intent to manufacture, distributes
or dispense (or cultivates or possesses with intent to
cultivate), a controlled substance.
- Knowingly or intentionally
manufacturing, distributing, dispensing or cultivating
or possessing with intent to manufacture, distribute, dispense,
or cultivate marijuana, cocaine, heroin, morphine, opium,
or related compounds.
- Unlawful possession of hypodermic
syringe, hypodermic needle or any instrument adapted for
the administration of controlled substances by injection.
- Unlawful delivery, sale or exchange of such needle, syringe
or instrument except to an authorized person.
- No person shall
sell, offer for sale, deliver, possess with intent to sell,
obtain, receive, or purchase a hypodermic syringe, etc.
unless licensed to do so.
- No person shall knowingly create,
distribute, dispense or possess with intent to distribute
or dispense a counterfeit substance.
- Any person who is knowingly
present at a place where heroin is kept or deposited in
violation of Chapter 94C or being in the company of a person
knowing that the said person is in possession of heroin in
violation of Chapter 94C.
- Any person who sells, possesses
with intent to sell or manufactures with intent to sell
drug paraphernalia.
- Any person knowing or being in circumstances
where one reasonably should know that drug paraphernalia
will be used in violation of Chapter 94C.
- Knowingly or
intentionally manufactures, distributes, dispenses or possesses
with intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense a controlled
substance in Class A, B or C to a person under the age
of eighteen years.
- Stealing a controlled substance from a
registered manufacturer, or any other person authorized
to dispense or possess any controlled substance.
Assumption College strictly prohibits any and all types
of:
- Illegal drug possession
- Possession of drug paraphernalia
- Distribution of illegal
drugs
- Distribution of drug paraphernalia
- Being under the influence
of illegal drugs
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Assault/Assault & Battery
An assault may be defined as an attempt or offer to do bodily
harm to another by force and violence. If an unlawful and offensive
touching occurs, no matter how slightly, it is a battery.
The following are some important assault/assault & battery
offenses according to Massachusetts laws:
- Two persons who engage willingly in a fist fight are both
guilty of assault and battery regardless of the fact that
they do not want law enforcement officers to intervene.
- Simple
assault: If a threatening, assaultive gesture is made or
if a series of menacing acts are undertaken for the purpose
of inflicting non fatal injury.
- Aggravated assault: If the
purpose of the assaultive gestures and actions is to achieve
some other criminal offense.
- Assault by means of a dangerous
weapon: If a dangerous weapon is used as part of the threatening
or menacing gestures made toward the victim.
- Assault and
battery by means of a dangerous weapon: If an assault and
battery occurs and the dangerous weapon is used in the battery.
- Assault and battery with a dangerous weapon: If an assault
occurs and a dangerous weapon is present but is not used
in actually harming the victim.
- Assault with the specific
intent to commit a felony.
- Assault with the intent to murder
or with intent to maim or disfigure.
- Assault with the intent
to rob, or murder while armed with a dangerous weapon.
- Assault
with the intent to rob or steal.
Enters a dwelling or a house while inside , assaults another
with the intent to commit a felony while armed with a dangerous
weapon.
- Assault and battery for the purpose of collecting
a loan.
- Assault and battery of any public employee (including
a police officer) when such person is engaged in the performance
of his duties at the time of such assault and battery.
- Assault
upon an emergency medical technician or ambulance attendant
while such person is treating or transporting a person in
the line of duty.
- An assault and battery upon a person or
damages the real or personal property of another for the
purpose of intimidation because of the said persons race,
color, religion or national origin.
- "Affray." Two
or more persons fighting together in a public place to the
terror of those persons lawfully present.
- "Mayhem." Mutilation
with the intent to maim or disfigure.
- Assault with a dangerous
weapon, substance or chemical with the intent to maim or
disfigure.
- Aiding in an assault with the intent to maim or
disfigure.
- "Stalking." Willfully,
maliciously, and repeatedly, follows another person or
harasses another person or making a threat with the intent
to place that person in imminent fear of death or serious
bodily injury.
Assumption College strictly prohibits any and all types
of:
- Assaults
- Assault & battery
- Fighting
- Affray, mayhem, stalking
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Sexual Assault
The following are some important sexual assault, indecent
assault and sexual morality and decency offenses according
to Massachusetts laws:
- Aggravated Rape: Sexual intercourse
or unnatural sexual intercourse with a person who is
compelled to submit by force and against his or her will
or is compelled to submit by threat of bodily injury and
the natural or unnatural sexual intercourse which results
in or is committed with acts resulting in serious bodily
injury or is committed by a joint enterprise (two or more
persons working in concert with one another).
- Assault with
intent to rape: Assault on a person with the intent to
commit rape.
- Indecent exposure: Exposing to view of other
people the uncovered or partly uncovered body in an offensive
or indecent manner.
- Lewd, Wanton and lascivious behavior:
Lewd, Wanton and Lascivious person in speech or in behavior.
- Open and Gross Lewd and Lascivious behavior:Men and women,
married or unmarried who engage in open and gross lewdness
and lascivious behavior.
- Drugging person for unlawful sexual
intercourse: Applies, administers or causes to be taken
by any person any drug, matter or thing with the intent to
stupefy or overpower such person so as thereby to enable
any person to have unlawful sexual intercourse with such
person.
- Prostitution: Permits common, indiscriminate sexual
activity for hire.
- Engaging in sexual conduct for a fee:
Engages, agrees to engage or offers to engage in sexual
conduct with another person in return for a fee.
- Common night
walker: Habitually walking in streets, in the nighttime
for the purpose of prostitution.
- Soliciting for a prostitute:
Solicit or receive compensation for soliciting for a prostitute.
- Obscene matter: Is in possession of with the intent to
disseminate or disseminates obscene matter knowing it to
be obscene.
Assumption College strictly prohibits any and
all types of:
- Sexual Assaults
- Rape
- Lewdness
- Prostitution & Solicitation
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Breaking & Entering
Breaking is defined as the movement to a material degree of
any obstacle which bars the way of an intruder. Entering is
defined as when any part of the intruders body comes inside
the building.
The following are some important breaking and entering, robbery,
stealing, larceny, and burglary offenses according to Massachusetts
laws:
- Breaking and entering or breaks after entering
a dwelling house in the nighttime with the intent to commit
a felony.
- Breaking and entering a building, ship, vessel
or vehicle in the nighttime with the intent to commit a
felony.
- Breaking and entering in the nighttime or daytime
a building, ship, vessel or vehicle with the intent to
commit a misdemeanor.
- Makes or mends or begins to mend or
knowingly has possession of an engine, machine, tool or
other implement adapted and designed for the cutting through,
forcing or breaking open a building, room vault, safe or
other depository in order to steal therefrom money or other
property or to commit any other crime.
- Larceny: Unlawful
taking and carrying away of property of another with intent
to deprive that person of the property permanently.
- Unarmed
Robbery: By force or violence or by assault and putting
in fear robs, steals, or takes from a person or from his
immediate control property which may be the subject of a
larceny.
- Armed Robbery: Armed with a dangerous weapon assaults
and robs, steals or takes from a person or from his immediate
control property which may be the subject of a larceny.
Assumption College strictly prohibits any and all types
of:
- Breaking & Entering
- Larceny
- Robbery
- Possession of tools for the intent
of breaking & entering
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Malicious & Wanton
Destruction
Malicious injury is described as something done out of a spirit
of hostility, cruelty, or spite directed personally to the
owner of the damaged property. Wanton injury is injury inflicted
as the result of heedless or reckless disregard of the rights
of others.
The following are some important malicious and wanton destruction
offenses according to Massachusetts laws:
- Willful and malicious destruction or injury to personal
property, dwelling house or building of another.
- Willfully,
maliciously or wantonly writes upon, injures, defaces,
tears, cuts, mutilates or destroys any library materials
or property.
- Willfully, intentionally and without right,
wantonly and without cause, destroys, defaces, mars or
injures a :
- Church, synagogue or other building or structure
or place used for the purpose of burial or memorializing
the dead.
a school, educational facility or community center or the
grounds adjacent thereto.
- Threatens to burn, deface, mar
or injure in any way destroy a church, synagogue or other
building, structure or place of worship.
This also includes the malicious or willful destruction or
defacement of:
- lamp post railings
- traffic regulation signs
- signals or marking devices
- schoolhouses, churches
- any building used for educational
or religious instruction or any property belonging thereto
- glass in a building not his own
- fence or gate enclosing
land not his own
- no trespass sign or notice
- legal notices posted in public
- show bill, placard, program
or other advertisement posted on a wall, fence, billboard
or structure not belonging to him
Assumption College strictly prohibits any and all types
of:
- Destruction of school property
- Destruction of anothers
private property
- Defacement of any property
- Malicious & Wanton behavior
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Arson
The following are some important arson and fire alarm offenses
according to Massachusetts laws:
- The burning or the aiding in the burning of a dwelling
house.
- The burning or the aiding in the burning of any building
or structure not a dwelling house or the contents thereof.
- The burning or the aiding in the burning of personal property
worth more than $25.00.
- The burning or the aiding in the
burning of a motor vehicle, boat, wood timber, fence, gate,
trees, grass etc.
Fire Alarms:
- Without reasonable cause by outcry- ringing of bells or
otherwise makes or circulates or causes to be made or circulated
a false alarm of fire.
- Wantonly and without authority opens
for the purpose of giving or causing to be given a false
alarm or interfere with by injuring or defacing or opens,
tampers or meddles with such box or any part thereof or
with wires or anything connected thereto of a police signal
system or fire signal system.
- Willfully obstructs, interferes
with or hinders a firefighter or fire fighting force or
apparatus in the lawful performance of his or its duty.
Assumption
College strictly prohibits any and all types of:
- False reports
of fire
- False fire alarms
- The burning of any property
- Destruction or defacement of
fire alarm systems
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Weapons/Explosives
Assumption College prohibits all types of firearms and weapons
from campus. No student, faculty member, staff member or visitor
to the college is allowed to bring any type of firearm or weapon
onto the grounds of the campus even if the person possess a
valid permit to carry one. The only exception to this rule
are law enforcement officer's when in the lawful performance
of their duty.
The following are some important ammunition, explosives and
dangerous substances offenses according to Massachusetts laws:
- False
Report of bomb or dangerous substance: Knowing the same
to be false transmits or causes to be transmitted to any
person by telephone or other means a communication falsely
reporting the location of any explosive or other dangerous
substance or contrivance thereby causing anxiety, unrest,
fear or personal discomfort to any person or group of persons.
- A person other than a police or other law enforcement officer
acting in the discharge of his official duties has in his
possession or under his control an infernal machine or
a similar instrument contrivance or device.
- Willfully and
intentionally and without right by the explosion of gunpowder
or any other explosive unlawfully damages or destroys property
or injures a person.
- Willfully intentionally and without
right throws at or near any person or throws into, against
or upon any property or puts, places or explodes gunpowder
or other explosive with an intent to unlawfully destroy
or damage property or to injure any person.
- Makes, sells,
uses or has in his possession or under his control a bottle
or other breakable container containing a flammable liquid
into which has been fixed or placed a wick or similar device
and which bottle or container when ignited and thrown will
cause a fire or explosion.
- Mingles poison with food, drink
or medicine with intent to kill or injure another person
or willfully poisons any spring, well or reservoir with
intent to kill or injure another person.
Assumption College
strictly prohibits any and all types of:
- Firearms or weapons on campus
- Possession of explosive materials
- False reports of bombs
or explosives
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Trespass
The following are some important Trespass offenses according
to Massachusetts laws:
- Any person who enters or remains in or upon a dwelling
house, building, boat, improved or enclosed land, wharf or
pier of another without right after having been forbidden
to do so by the person who has lawful control of the premises
either directly or by notice posted thereon or in violation
of a court order.
- Any person who willfully tears down, removes
or defaces any notice posted on land or other property
by the owner, lessee or custodian warning persons not trespass
thereon.
- Any person who enters upon the private land of
another (whether or not it is posted as no trespass) without
right and in so entering makes use of or has in his immediate
possession or control any vehicle, machine or device which
includes an internal combustion engine or other source
of mechanical power.
Assumption College strictly prohibits
any and all types of:
- Trespassing on the campus
- Destruction of no trespass notices
or signs
- Trespassing with a motor vehicle
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Motor Vehicle
Chapter 90, Section 3 of Massachusetts motor vehicle laws states
that nonresidents enrolled as students at any school or college
in Massachusetts who operate motor vehicles registered in another
state or country must complete a the 'Commonwealth of MA Registry of Motor Vehicle- Non Resident Driver's Statement' located in Campus Police. If you have any questions about this call the Campus
Police Department at 767-7225.
The 2007-2008 Campus Calendar/Student Handbook, clearly states:
“The college reserves the right to revoke the privilege of operating a motor vehicle on the campus from any student who fails to abide by these and/or other parking regulations.”…”Students and employees who receive (10) ten tickets in one academic year will lose their privilege to have and operate a car on campus for at least one full semester” (page 121).
If you have violated the parking policy at Assumption College, you will be informed that your parking privileges will be revoked for the following academic semester. For the sake of clarity, you will not be allowed to have a car or operate a car on campus. If your car is found on campus it will be ticketed and towed immediately at your expense.
The following are some important motor vehicle violations and
offenses according to Massachusetts laws:
- Obstructing or impeding
fire or police or ambulance vehicles.
- Failing to stop for
a stop sign or flashing red signal.
- Failing to slow or
stop for a yield sign.
- Failing to yield for a pedestrian
at a crosswalk.
- Stopping in a crosswalk.
- Operating an unregistered motor
vehicle or trailer.
- Operating an improperly equipped motor
vehicle.
- Operating a motor vehicle without a license.
- Operating
a motor vehicle after suspension or revocation of license.
- Speeding.
- Operating or allowing another person to operate
a motor vehicle after registration for such vehicle has
been suspended or revoked
- Exhibiting to a police officer
a license issued to another person with intent to conceal
identity.
- Operating while under the influence of intoxicating
liquor or of marijuana, narcotic drugs, stimulants, depressants
or vapors of glue.
- Operating recklessly.
- Operating negligently.
- Leaving the scene of property damage
accident.
- Leaving the scene of personal injury accident.
- Allowing
other person to use ones license.
- Drinking from an open
alcoholic container while operating a motor vehicle.
- Refusal
to stop for a police officer. Refusal to give name and
address to a police officer. Refusal to produce license and
registration.
- Operating an uninsured motor vehicle.
Assumption College strictly prohibits any and all types
of:
- Operating recklessly on campus
- Speeding
- Operating under the influence
- Driving while intoxicated
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