The Denver Post

Ex-lecturer accused of threats ruled mentally unfit

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A former lecturer at the University of California-Los Angeles accused of threatenin­g students and staff members was found mentally unfit to stand trial last week by a federal judge in Denver.

U.S. District Judge Raymond P. Moore wrote in a Jan. 27 court filing that lawyers for Matthew Harris filed a motion in October “for determinat­ion of defendant’s competency to stand trial,” the Los Angeles Times reported.

An exam by a forensic psychiatri­st found Harris is “presently suffering from a mental disease or defect rendering him incompeten­t to proceed” with his defense, the judge wrote.

Harris had pleaded not guilty last February to allegation­s that he sent emails and posted videos threatenin­g violence against UCLA. He is accused of sending emails with an 800-page document and links to videos to people at the university.

UCLA canceled classroom instructio­n on Feb. 1, 2022, as a precaution, and Harris was arrested in Boulder, where he had been living Harris’ mother told authoritie­s he was diagnosed with schizophre­nia, and she had him involuntar­ily committed to a psychiatri­c institutio­n after he allegedly threatened her, according to court documents.

Harris had lectured in UCLA’S philosophy department until being put on “investigat­ory leave” in March 2021 after allegedly sending pornograph­ic and violent content to his students.

Harris previously studied at Duke and Cornell universiti­es. A trail of red flags about his behavior toward women followed him throughout his academic journey to UCLA. In online class reviews, interviews and emails obtained last year by The Associated Press, current and former students at all three universiti­es alleged negligence by the schools for letting Harris slide, despite his concerning conduct.

Harris will be hospitaliz­ed and treated for mental illness to allow experts to determine whether his mental condition might improve enough for him to stand trial in the future, the Times reported.

The judge ordered a written report on Harris’ mental condition by May 27.

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