Gulf News

University of Chicago ‘had no choice but to close’ after threat

CITY WAS ON TENTERHOOK­S AFTER LAST WEEK’S RELEASE OF VIDEO OF POLICE SHOOTING

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The University of Chicago may have felt it had no choice but to take the extreme step of closing for an entire day after an online threat against whites on campus that authoritie­s say was motived by the police shooting of a black teenager, security experts said.

The city was on tenterhook­s after last week’s release of video of Officer Jason Van Dyke fatally shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times. Protests that followed, as well as heightened awareness about campus shootings elsewhere and the recent attacks in Paris, may have forced the university’s hand, said one expert. It cancelled classes and activities on Monday.

“I think the university erred on the side of caution after putting the whole picture together,” said Michael Fagel, who teaches national security and emergency management at several schools, including the Illinois Institute of Technology. “They had to think: If we don’t react appropriat­ely and something happens, there’ll be an outcry.”

Jabari R. Dean, 21, of Chicago, was arrested on Monday on a federal charge of transmitti­ng a threat in interstate commerce. According to a criminal complaint, Dean, who is black, posted the threat online on Saturday, days after prosecutor­s charged Van Dyke with first-degree murder and after the city released video of the shooting.

Dean, an electrical engineerin­g student at the University of Illinois at Chicago, wrote that he would “execute approximat­ely ... 16 white male students and or staff, which is the same number of time (sic) McDonald was killed” and “will die killing any number of white policemen that I can in the process,” the complaint says.

The University of Chicago cited “recent tragic events” at other campuses nationwide in explaining its decision to close. On October 1 at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon, a gunman opened fire and killed nine people. Other shootings have happened in Arizona and Tennessee.

The FBI was tipped about the Chicago threat on Sunday, according to a criminal complaint. After the FBI traced it to Dean, he admitted to agents that he had posted it online and said he took it down shortly afterward, the complaint says. Despite the threat mentioning three guns, a prosecutor said Dean did not appear to pose a threat.

Flurry of messages

Graduate student Marlene Saint Martin, of Mexico, said she heard about the threat through a flurry of phone messages Sunday night, then saw an email from campus officials announcing classes were cancelled.

“I felt that at least the university was taking all the precaution­s to keep us ... safe,” she said.

The university’s move affected more than 30,000 people, though the University of Chicago Medical Centre was open to patients.

The online threat allegedly read: “This is not a joke. I am to do my part and rid the world of white devils.”

Phillip Rutherford, Dean’s uncle, told reporters that his nephew was never serious about an attack and had done something “silly” and “stupid” because he’d had too much time on his hands.

 ?? AFP ?? Tension in the air People gather outside Chicago police headquarte­rs for a prayer vigil and demonstrat­ion to protest the alleged cover-up of Laquan McDonald’s killing. The University of Chicago was closed after an online threat against whites on campus...
AFP Tension in the air People gather outside Chicago police headquarte­rs for a prayer vigil and demonstrat­ion to protest the alleged cover-up of Laquan McDonald’s killing. The University of Chicago was closed after an online threat against whites on campus...

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