Miami Herald

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

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T AND THOMAS TRACY New York Daily News

NEW YORK

More than 100 proPalesti­nian 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.”

Videos shared by the NYPD show cops removing chairs and other furniture used as barricades during the raid Tuesday night. Students had taken over the building early Tuesday morning amid a weekslong protest on campus over the war between Israel and Hamas.

“We regret that protesters have chosen to escalate the situation through their actions. After the university learned overnight that Hamilton Hall had been occupied, vandalized, and blockaded, we were left with no choice,” a university spokesman said in a statement of why the NYPD was called in. “Columbia public safety personnel were forced out of the building, and a member of our facilities team was threatened. We will not risk the safety of our community or the potential for further escalation.”

The NYPD operation at City College included officers clearing an encampment set up on the campus quad and taking dozens of people into custody.

The mass arrests just before midnight followed an announceme­nt the Harlem college would shift to online classes “until further notice,” as the campus continued to be roiled by the pro-Gaza encampment drawing students and faculty from across the City University of New York.

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