As students and parents continue to criticize Temple University officials for their handling of a series of off-campus assaults, a picture has surfaced allegedly showing a Temple Police officer sleeping on the job.
Ankit Patel, a Senior and Broadcasting Major at Temple, sent NBC10 a photo of what he claimed was a Temple Police officer sleeping inside his vehicle.
Patel says he spotted the officer shortly before 7 p.m. sleeping inside a vehicle on Cecil B. Moore Avenue and 15th Street. Patel also sent the photo to Temple Police who told the student that the officer would be "pulled from duty while investigated."
NBC10 reached out to Ray Betzner, the Assistant Vice President of Communications at Temple.
"The officer has been pulled from duty for the night, pending an investigation," Betzner said. "If true, this behavior is not indicative of the behavior we expect from a Temple police officer, and full action will be taken."
After multiple attacks at Temple, temple police like to sleep on the job rather than keep us safe. @NBCPhiladelphia pic.twitter.com/eHrAYAln3o
— Ankit Patel (@ankitpatel92) March 25, 2014
The photo was tweeted the same day police arrested a 15-year-old girl for allegedly assaulting a 19-year-old Temple University student with a brick. Four other teens, a 17-year-old, two 15-year-olds and a 14-year-old, were also taken into custody in relation to the assault which took place on Friday. Detectives say these teens may also face charges soon.
A 20-year-old Temple student also told NBC10 that she was attacked by several girls just 15 minutes before the brick attack. Police also said the girls were responsible for a third attack at 17th and Cecil B. Moore Streets in which they allegedly assaulted another woman who is a Temple University student.
Following NBC10.com’s coverage of the attack, Temple University came under fire from students and parents. A number of students said they were frustrated the university did not notify them about the off-campus assaults.
A Temple spokesperson said the university's westerly jurisdiction ends at 16th Street and that the school pays the Philadelphia Police Department $1 million a year to enhance security in the neighborhoods around campus. Officials say off-campus is Philadelphia Police's territory.
Monday night, Temple University sent out a campus-wide email explaining why they did not alert the university community about the attacks.
In the message, university officials explained that they were not made aware of the brick attack until hours after it happened and that the school's "TU Alert" system is reserved for imminent dangers and threats, like bomb threats or an active shooter.
Betzner also told NBC10.com the university has no immediate plans to review its notification procedures. He says that could come at the end of the semester when officials typically review all university procedures.
Be sure to watch NBC10 News Tonight at 11 for an exclusive interview with the Temple student as well as the officer accused of sleeping on the job.
Photo Credit: Twitter.com