Marin Independent Journal

Second noose found at campus

- By Colin Atagi

A second rope fashioned like a noose was discovered inside a Sonoma State University classroom days after the first one was found in a dormitory swimming pool, campus police and staff said.

The latest discovery occurred Thursday inside a Salazar Hall classroom, campus police Chief Nader Oweis confirmed Monday.

There was no damage to the classroom and no suspects have been identified.

Oweis said investigat­ors have not determined if the incident is linked to the May 2 discovery by staff of a noose-like rope attached to a barbecue grill submerged in a pool.

The sites “are not near each other,” Oewis said.

“We have encouraged anyone with informatio­n or tips to contact us about both incidents,” he said.

Finals exams are underway this week and graduation takes place this weekend.

A campus email was distribute­d to students and staff on Friday to alert them about the second rope, which is being investigat­ed as a potential hate crime.

In the email, officials condemned the discoverie­s and described them as “vile gestures of hate and intoleranc­e.” The email was from Provost Karen Moranski and Jerlena Griffin-Desta, the Sonoma State chief of staff.

The noose has a long, racist history, the email noted, “signaling lawless violence and torture of Black Americans throughout this country, and echoes as a threat to a community already subjected to centuries of police and extrajudic­ial violence, slavery, segregatio­n, daily microaggre­ssions, and incidents of unconsciou­s bias.”

Under California law, anyone convicted of displaying a noose may face jail time or fines of several thousand dollars.

Sonoma State administra­tors referenced similar incidents that recently occurred at other Bay Area colleges, including one at Stanford University on May 8.

According to Stanford, ropes were tied to a tree for a student performanc­e outside Branner Hall, a campus residence, several years ago.

The ropes were never removed and one of them was fashioned into a noose last week.

Stanford's Department of Public Safety is investigat­ing the incident.

“We are working in vigorous and committed ways to advance equity, inclusion, and belonging in our Stanford community. We have been making progress. But incidents like this one show how far we still have to go,” Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne said in a statement.

A similar incident occurred on March 30, 2021 at the University of San Francisco when a noose was discovered on a fourth-floor railing at a student housing building.

A student admitted to hanging the noose and was later expelled, USF officials later announced.

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