Published November 16, 2018 This content is archived.
UB Police made an arrest today in connection with the hit-and-run crash that seriously injured a UB student earlier this month.
Hannah M. Christensen, 20, a UB student from Clifton Park, New York, who resides in an off-campus apartment in Buffalo, has been charged with leaving the scene of a serious injury accident without reporting, which is a class E felony.
Police say Christensen was driving a 2005 Honda Civic that struck Renuka Ramanadhan, a 20-year-old UB student from Singapore, as she crossed Hadley Road in front of the Hadley Village Apartments on the North Campus, where she lived, just before 10 p.m. Nov. 1.
Ramanadhan remains in stable condition at Erie County Medical Center in Buffalo.
A person who knew Christensen and knew that she said she had struck something while driving on campus identified her to police as a suspect after seeing news reports of the hit-and-run. UB Police subsequently obtained a warrant to seize Christensen’s vehicle for evidence collection.
Christensen has been cooperative with police during the investigation.
Because of federal privacy laws protecting student academic records, the university cannot confirm or comment on disciplinary actions involving UB students.
Generally speaking, the university has an on-campus judiciary process to address violations of the university’s Student Code of Conduct. Should a student’s action be ruled as violating the Student Code of Conduct, the student may be subject to a variety of sanctions, including warnings, probation, community service, long-term suspension and expulsion.