Current News

/

ArcaMax

Over 100 pro-Palestinian protesters arrested during NYPD raid of Columbia University

Chris Sommerfeldt and Thomas Tracy, New York Daily News on

Published in News & Features

NEW YORK — Over 100 pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested when an army of NYPD cops stormed Columbia University to end the seizure of a school building where all the doors had been barricaded with bicycle locks, officials said Wednesday.

“This is what we encountered on every door inside Hamilton Hall,” NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Public Information Tarik Sheppard said in a Wednesday morning appearance on MSNBC with Mayor Adams, holding up one of the heavy chain-link locks. “This is not what students bring to school, OK?”

At the request of Columbia University administrators, hundreds of cops in riot gear entered the campus about 9 p.m. Tuesday, climbing in through windows to access Hamilton Hall, which had been occupied by protesters less than 24 hours earlier as part of an encampment protest that started last month.

At least 292 pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested citywide overnight, NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell said Wednesday. Some 119 of them were busted at Columbia University, about 50 of those inside Hamilton Hall, while another 173 were arrested at the City College campus in Harlem, where a separate encampment protest has been playing out this week, Chell said.

Sheppard said the police raid of Hamilton Hall was a “calm, precise operation.” Charges the protesters could be facing include burglary, trespassing and criminal mischief.

Adams said the student protesters “were trained on how to barricade a location, on what type of locks to use.”

 

Adams has said unidentified “outside agitators” hijacked the protests at Columbia this week, a claim student demonstration leaders deny.

Though he did not identify her, Adams said that among those who have participated in the Columbia encampment is a woman whose husband is a convicted terrorist. In a briefing later Wednesday at NYPD headquarters, Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence Rebecca Weiner said the woman wasn’t present for Tuesday night’s raid and that there’s “no evidence of any criminal wrongdoing on her part.”

“But that’s not someone who I would want necessarily influencing my child if I were a parent of somebody at Columbia,” said Weiner, adding that the woman was seen on the campus last week.

The mayor and NYPD officials declined to immediately say how many of those arrested were “outside agitators.”

...continued

swipe to next page

©2024 New York Daily News. Visit at nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus