New York Daily News

22Bogus ‘bias’

Air Force won’t say why cadet pulled ‘N-word’ hoax

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER — The Air Force Academy said Wednesday it would not discuss what led a student to allegedly stage a hate crime, but a researcher said those who commit hoaxes are sometimes trying to bolster their reputation­s or want to deflect attention from trouble they are in.

The academy said this week that an African-American student acknowledg­ed writing anti-black slurs in a dormitory in September and that an investigat­ion confirmed the student was responsibl­e.

The epithets prompted academy Superinten­dent Lt. Gen. Jay Silveria to sternly warn students that racists were not welcome at the school, and he invoked some of the racial tensions that have been gripping the country. A video of the speech has been widely viewed online.

Silveria stood by his comments Tuesday after the slurs were revealed to be a hoax, saying the need for a culture of respect can never be overemphas­ized.

Academy spokesman Meade Warthen said he could not discuss what may have motivated the student, citing privacy laws.

Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University-San Bernardino, said hate-crime hoaxes are often meant to attract or divert attention or they can be a political statement.

The slurs were found at a prep school on the Air Force Academy grounds outside Colorado Springs. The prep school helps potential academy cadets meet the academy’s entrance requiremen­ts.

The student, whose name was not released, has left the school, but officials will not say whether the student was expelled or withdrew.

Many hate-crime hoaxes occur in school settings, Levin said.

“I think that schools and universiti­es are perceived as places that are more embracing to victims of such a tragedy (as a hate crime),” he said. “A place where the culture is to rally around victims of prejudice, such as universiti­es, would be a reason.”

The FBI said 5,850 hate crimes were reported to law enforcemen­t in 2015, an average of 16 a day. Levin estimated that no more than three hoaxes a month occur nationwide.

 ??  ?? Lt. Gen. Jay Silveria gave stern warning about racism at the Air Force Academy in September, but the Colorado institutio­n won’t discuss why a black cadet, who has left the school, wrote the slurs.
Lt. Gen. Jay Silveria gave stern warning about racism at the Air Force Academy in September, but the Colorado institutio­n won’t discuss why a black cadet, who has left the school, wrote the slurs.

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