Do you think I can have my admissions decision be reversed if the police department emails the admissions director about stuff that happened to me during college all season?
Are you a transfer?
What kind of “stuff”? We’re you arrested or charged with anything?
Freshmen waitlisted, and I was the victim.
Were you victimized while engaged in illegal activity? If not I cannot see this being reported.
Victim’s identities are usually protected.
If you were a victim of a crime, a police department has no right or reason to contact your college admissions office unless there is some unrevealed element of this incident that would necessitate a public health type warning.
I wonder if you, the victim, are in a mild state of shock & wrongly blaming yourself for being a crime victim. Try to talk about your experience with a trusted adult–such as your parents–so that you place this traumatizing event in a proper perspective.
I am sorry that you had a bad experience. Even though it was not your fault, it will take time to recover.
Many jurisdictions offer victim’s counseling services for free, in addition to victim’s advocate programs. If you were assigned a victim’s advocate, then contact him or her for consultation & for information about services available to you as a victim. (Usually victim’s of crimes of violence are offered free, confidential counseling through victim’s advocate programs.)
P.S. If you have strong feelings of anger and severe mood swings, then you need to get counseling as this may be a type of post traumatic stress syndrome.
I mean if I was rejected do you think the police department can get me in?
No
What makes you think that the police department has any influence with the admissions department?
I think OP is stating that being a crime victim affected the college admissions process (perhaps poor grades first semester senior year??). OP seems to be asking if having the police confirm the crime might get the admissions office to chenge the decision.
If my interpretation is correct, the issue should have been addressed by the school guidance counselor in the recommendation or by OP in an additional comments statement. The police don’t need to verify that the crime occurred. Admissions offices would have believed a statement from the OP and/or would have verified with guidance.