Man rearrested, faces 4 charges tied to stalking on University of Utah campus

University of Utah police rearrested a man Friday after issuing a campus-wide safety alert Wednesday about a man who was following women into university housing. He faces trespassing, lewdness and stalking charges.

University of Utah police rearrested a man Friday after issuing a campus-wide safety alert Wednesday about a man who was following women into university housing. He faces trespassing, lewdness and stalking charges. (Laura Seitz, Deseret News)


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SALT LAKE CITY — University of Utah police arrested a man Friday after issuing a campus-wide safety alert earlier in the week saying he had been following women into university housing. He is now facing charges of stalking, lewdness and two counts of criminal trespassing.

Oluwatobi Oludaisi Shokunbi, 34, also known as "King Rocky," is believed to have threatened a woman at the University of Utah Hospital, according to a safety alert issued Wednesday night.

The man was arrested on a no-bail warrant and was booked into the Salt Lake County Jail Friday. A notice sent to students on Friday says Shokunbi is not allowed to return to university property, and police urged students and others on campus to remain aware and report any future sightings of Shokunbi.

U. Police Capt. Brian Lohrke said Shokunbi was first confronted last Saturday and kicked off of the campus. Three days later on Tuesday, he was arrested by university police and was booked into the Salt Lake County Jail, but was later released from the jail. He was charged Friday in that case with criminal trespassing, a class B misdemeanor.

On Sept. 4, police say Shokunbi entered the residence of a University of Utah student and began rummaging around and asking for the victim by name. A roommate confronted the man and told him to leave. The student told police she did not know who Shokunbi was and that they had never met before, the charges state.

A week later on Sept. 11, police say Shokunbi approached the victim at a TRAX station, where she recognized him from the incident the week before. The victim said she was "unsettled" and believed he had been following her, according to the charges.

Oluwatobi Oludaisi Shokunbi, 34, was arrested and trespassed from the University of Utah after police said he was stalking women there.
Oluwatobi Oludaisi Shokunbi, 34, was arrested and trespassed from the University of Utah after police said he was stalking women there. (Photo: University of Utah)

On Sept. 14, police say Shokunbi entered a residence hall on campus where the victim was working on a project. University police officers escorted him out of the building. The charges say Shokunbi's action caused the victim to fear for her safety and he was charged with stalking, a class A misdemeanor, stemming from incidents on those three days.

Shokunbi is also charged with criminal trespassing, a class A misdemeanor, and lewdness, a class B misdemeanor, in a separate case from Sept. 7. In that case, a woman called police saying a man, later identified as Shokunbi, entered her apartment, opened her door and said, "I'm looking for a beautiful lady," the charges state.

The victim told him to leave, but he then allegedly entered her roommate's room. Court documents say the roommate knew Shokunbi from work but did not know him personally. She told him to leave.

The two women said they don't know how Shokunbi knew where they lived.

That same day, officers responded to the same apartment complex on a report of lewdness. Shokunbi was standing in the apartment's community room "completely naked," according to the charges. He was taken into custody by the police.

"(Shokunbi) has put multiple female victims in fear for their safety and security within a very short time frame and is escalating in his behavior. All the victims involved are young women who have been victimized in their homes or in other secured areas in which they have a right and expectation of protection," a motion seeking pretrial detention says.

Lohrke said the department is working on a program to have an "embedded officer" within residential halls "mainly for communication and relationship building, but also for situations like this."

Contributing: Emily Ashcraft

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Logan Stefanich is a reporter with KSL.com, covering southern Utah communities, education, business and tech news.
Cassidy Wixom is an award-winning reporter for KSL.com. She covers Utah County communities and breaking news. Cassidy graduated from BYU before joining KSL in 2022.

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