Las Vegas Review-Journal

UNLV police investigat­ing threatenin­g note, gesture

- By Natalie Bruzda Lasvegasre­view-journal

A sticky note with the words “kill the blacks” written on the small blue piece of paper was found this week by UNLV students, prompting worries of hostility toward minorities on campus.

The anonymous note was left unattended in the Lied Library, but there was a second report of someone making “hostile” gun-pointing movements toward African-american students.

“Students are quite critical of campus because President Trump is coming into town and the LVCVA convention center is just a couple miles away,” student activist Karl Catarata said. “This Post-it note, and this other hate-filled incident that had occurred, along with the president rolling into town with his ‘Make America Great Again’ followers, it’s concerning.”

UNLV Sgt. Paul Velez said police have a partial descriptio­n of the person who made the gun-pointing gestures, and are sifting through library security camera footage.

Velez said that the gesture occurred Sept. 13 and the note was found on Monday.

“We don’t know if they’re isolated incidents or connected right now,” he said. “We’re investigat­ing both.”

Thenoteand­thereports­ofthe hostile gesture come about two weeks after UNLV was again named one of the most diverse college campuses in the country by U.S. News & World Report.

After the report, UNLV acting Presidentm­artameanas­aidthatthe designatio­n “indicated a richness at our university, a richness of perspectiv­e and a richness of background­s that can only enhance the educationa­l experience.”

Inastateme­ntthursday,meana said that being the most diverse university “is not just a ranking.”

“It is a mindset and a culture that embraces our difference­s, knowing that we are stronger because of them,”shesaid.“wedeeplyva­lueour diversity, and we stand united against threats to any member of our UNLV family.”

Christophe­r Roys, UNLV’S student body president, issued a memo saying that those who threaten students, faculty, staff or anyone else on campus are not welcome at the university.

“Threats of violence and hate crimes are taken very seriously,” Roys said in the memo. “I am not alone in this zero-tolerance for such despicable acts.”

Roys said in the memo that police services and university administra­tion are investigat­ing the threat, and he asked for anyone with informatio­n about the incident to contact UNLV’S police department.

“To the students that feel personally affected by this incident, we stand withyou,andwesuppo­rtyoutothe fullest extent,” Roys said in the memo. “We are stronger together, and we must not allow violent, threatenin­g or otherwise hateful language go unchecked.”

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