<p>At USC our campus police have an agreement with the LAPD that makes them peace officers with the right of arrest on and off campus (within a specific radius). This is because USC’s campus is tiny, and the vast majority of students live off campus. As a result, the area surrounding the campus has become much, much safer, as it’s more patrolled than other areas of Los Angeles.</p>
<p>Keep in mind that USC’s DPS officers are academy trained, and many are ex cops. USC also has extensive surveillance equipment on and off campus.</p>
<p>USC’s DPS seems to go out of its way to avoid using the word “police” to describe itself, unlike some other schools where the campus police are real police.</p>
<p>The reach of campus police has been a hot topic at Eastern Michigan after there have been 3 murders in off campus apartments in the last year. I think I heard recently that the Ypsilanti police were saying the campus could no longer be an island and there needs to be further collaboration between campus police and city police. I think they need to do whatever it takes to improve safety in the surrounding apartments which are almost exclusively if not exclusively occupied by students.</p>
<p>Even back in the 1980s, I knew that the Harvard Police were sworn law-enforcement officers in Middlesex County, with arrest powers off campus as well as on.</p>
<p>It is not surprising! a lot of them are just hte city/county police force that happens to have a headquarters on the campus. it’s not like they are just hired private security guards or something in these casses~</p>