The Boston Globe

Law firms warn schools on bias

Follows reports of antisemiti­sm

- By Janet Lorin

Two dozen top US law firms sent a letter to more than 100 law school deans telling them to take an “unequivoca­l stance” against antisemiti­c harassment on their campuses.

The letter, which was signed by firms including Gibson Dunn & Crutcher Cravath, Swaine & Moore, and Wachtell Lipton Rosen and Katz, comes after some law students saw their job offers rescinded for comments made about Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack that killed 1,400 Israelis. Israel’s retaliator­y bombing of Gaza has fueled protests across the country.

Antisemiti­c incidents have soared since the war began, and the conflict has bitterly divided dozens of campuses, including Harvard University, Stanford University, and the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Presidents at Harvard, Penn, and Columbia University have announced task forces on antisemiti­sm.

At Cornell University, a series of antisemiti­c incidents culminated in a junior engineerin­g student being charged with making online death threats to Jewish students. A swastika was found drawn in Columbia’s Internatio­nal Affairs building, and videos have circulated of what appears to be Harvard students harassing a Jewish student during an anti-Israel protest.

“Antisemiti­c activities would not be tolerated at any of our firms. We also would not tolerate outside groups engaging in acts of harassment and threats of violence, as has also been occurring on many of your campuses,” the law firms’ letter said.

The letter was written this week by Joseph C. Shenker, senior chair of Sullivan & Cromwell, after he was contacted by Jewish law students from top universiti­es. He circulated the draft to the other firms, each of which sent a copy to the law schools they work with on Wednesday night, Shenker said in an interview.

When asked if the firms would curtail recruiting from schools where they have seen concerning behavior, Shenker said, "People can draw their own conclusion­s. The letter speaks for itself."

"We’re asking the deans to create a safe environmen­t for all their students where one is treated with respect," he said.

Antisemiti­c incidents including assaults, harassment, and vandalism soared 400 percent across the US since Oct. 7, with 54 incidents reported on campuses, according to the Anti-Defamation League. The group tallied 110 anti-Israel rallies on campuses in that period, with 27 including expression­s of support for terrorism.

Hours after the attack by Hamas, which is deemed a terrorist organizati­on by the US and European Union, more than 30 student groups at Harvard placed the responsibi­lity for the violence on Israel. It took criticism from Harvard’s former president, Larry Summers, before the school’s leadership denounced the attack and said the students didn’t speak for them.

At New York University, the student bar associatio­n president also laid blame on Israel in a post to law students. Law firm Winston & Strawn rescinded an employment offer to that student, who was previously a summer associate, after learning of the "inflammato­ry" comments. Davis Polk & Wardwell also rescinded job offers to three law students at Harvard and Columbia after organizati­ons they were part of made controvers­ial statements about the Hamas attack.

"As employers who recruit from each of your law schools, we look to you to ensure your students who hope to join our firms after graduation are prepared to be an active part of workplace communitie­s that have zero tolerance policies for any form of discrimina­tion or harassment, much less the kind that has been taking place on some law school campuses," the law firms’ letter said.

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