Just days after the University of Central Florida lifted its ban on Greek life activities, one fraternity at UCF was contacted by another chapter for more information about a recent theft at their house.
According to a police report, a member of the University of Georgia’s Delta Sigma Phi fraternity reported several missing items from the chapter’s fraternity house, noting that several members of the UCF chapter had stayed there over night.
The property missing, valued at over $2500, includes a large composite photograph, a paddle bearing the UGA crest and fraternity logo and the fraternity’s charter and mission statement documents, according to the police report.
According to the report, the complainant says that when he woke up on Sunday, he noticed that the items were missing from the house and the UCF fraternity members were gone. He also stated that the guests had kicked in a locked first-floor bedroom door to take blankets to sleep with, according to the police report.
The University of Georgia chapter member who reported the thefts had been in touch with the president of the UCF chapter to “determine identifiers,” the police report states.
A man identifying himself as UCF’s Delta Sigma Phi Sergeant at Arms denied the report from Georgia saying that the chapter was at the University of Georgia.
KnightNews.com contacted UCF to see if they were taking any action at this time.
“We are aware of the allegations, and we are looking into them,” a spokesperson for UCF said.
Click ‘next page’ to view the report.