FRIDAY, Nov. 13, 8:16 a.m. - A 19-year-old female student in Hinman College's Hughes Hall received several consecutive, indecipherable calls on her cell phone, said Investigator Dennis P. Bush of Binghamton's New York State University Police. After these initial calls, the victim received an additional call in which the unknown suspect spoke to her in a threatening manner. When the victim received a call from another unknown male approximately half an hour later, she called the police. Police currently have no suspects; this case is pending investigation and several reports of similar cases have been reported around campus. Any student who receives such threatening calls is advised to record exactly when the call took place and, if possible, the phone number of the caller and report it to the police immediately.

SATURDAY, Nov. 14, 3:09 a.m. - Officers on patrol arrived in the downstairs bathroom of the New University Union when a male cleaning employee reported gang graffiti on the inside of one of the stalls, Bush said. The graffiti read "Blood is gay - Crip all day." Additionally, several penises had been drawn in and around the stall. There were no other witnesses, and police currently have no suspects.

SATURDAY, Nov. 14, 1:12 p.m. - Officers were called to Hinman College's Roosevelt Hall when a woman reported a male suspect smoking a red bong outside of the hall, Bush said. When officers arrived, the suspect was no longer there, so police made their way inside and followed the smell of marijuana until they were able to reach the suspect's room. Officers learned that the suspect was a 17-year-old visitor and was at Binghamton University with his friend and his friend's girlfriend. Police located his wallet and in addition to identifying him, found a small bag of marijuana and four unidentified pills. Outside the hall, police located the suspect inside of a vehicle - the suspect admitted to ownership of the drugs and stated that although he had bought the pills in Downtown Binghamton the previous night, he did not know what they were. The suspect was arrested and issued a court appearance ticket for Dec. 1.

SUNDAY, Nov. 15, 12:30 a.m. - A female resident assistant spoke to police after having found offensive drawings on the whiteboard outside of her room, Bush said. The drawing had been erased when officers arrived on the scene, but the RA had taken a picture of it. The offensive drawing consisted of a "poorly-drawn" penis. Aside from that, there were no damages. Police have no suspects.