Las Vegas Review-Journal

UC Davis condemns prof ’s threatenin­g online post

- By Jeremy Childs

LOS ANGELES — The chancellor of UC Davis condemned a controvers­ial online post made by a faculty member, which threatened “zionist journalist­s” in the days after the terrorist attacks in Israel by Hamas.

The post was made Oct. 10 by Jemma Decristo, an assistant professor of American studies and an undergradu­ate faculty adviser, according to an archived web page of the University of California school’s website.

In screenshot­s of the now-deleted post on X, Decristo posted under her account jemmaisoke­h that “zionist journalist­s who spread propaganda & misinforma­tion” were a group that was easily accessible to the public.

She said in the post that “they have houses w adddresses, kids in school,” and “they can fear their bosses, but they should fear us more.” The post ends with a knife emoji, followed by a hatchet emoji and three drops of blood emojis.

The post garnered controvers­y and was widely shared by several prominent social media figures, including Andy Ngo, a conservati­ve journalist, author and influencer who has 1.3 million followers on X. Decristo has since deleted the post and made her X account private.

UC Davis Chancellor Gary S. May responded to the controvers­y Thursday amid calls on social media to discipline Decristo.

“I find the comments revolting in every way, and I disagree wholeheart­edly with them,” May said in the statement. “UC Davis rejects all forms of violence and discrimina­tion, as they are antithetic­al to the values of our university.”

May said that if a faculty member has violated the school’s code of conduct, he or she will be discipline­d after a review of the matter.

“These processes are confidenti­al personnel matters that we are not permitted to share with the public, but we can confirm that the provost will refer this matter to the appropriat­e campus department­s that investigat­e harassment, discrimina­tion and faculty conduct, in consultati­on with legal counsel regarding First Amendment rights,” he said in the statement.

Decristo did not immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment Friday. Her faculty page, which has been temporaril­y removed from public view, said she received her PH.D. in the history of consciousn­ess program at UC Santa Cruz. Her work in the humanities focuses on music, race and gender, particular­ly regarding Black musical traditions and artists.

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