a few Utes, but not from BYU.
"Do not eliminate the desired standard — champion the adherence to it all the day long — just leave reporting of the falling short of it up to the individual, according to his own conscience."
So are you suggesting they ignore known instances of violations because it didn't come from the person who committed the offense? That is pretty much ridiculous. Those aspects of the honor code that could affect individual salvation are clearly between the person and God, the fact that the person also agreed with BYU to live those standards are between BYU and the individual.
I am an attorney. Attorneys have a code of ethics. Some violations of the code of ethics may also violate my religious standards. However, you cannot honestly tell the bar, "You can only enforce an ethics violation if I am the reporting it."