Connect with us

Education

Yale Scholar Banned After A.I. News Site Accuses Her of Terrorist Link

Published

on

Yale Scholar Banned After A.I. News Site Accuses Her of Terrorist Link

Helyeh Doutaghi, a scholar in international law, began a new job in 2023 as the deputy director of a project at Yale Law School.

As an activist who had championed pro-Palestinian causes in both published papers and public appearances, Dr. Doutaghi seemed to fit into the left-leaning mission of the Law and Political Economy Project, which promoted itself as working for “economic, racial and gender equality.”

Last week, though, she was abruptly barred from Yale’s campus in New Haven, Conn., and placed on administrative leave. She was told not to advertise her affiliation with the university, where she had also served as an associate research scholar.

Yale officials cited the reason as allegations that she was tied to entities subject to U.S. sanctions. It was an apparent reference to Samidoun, a pro-Palestinian group placed on the U.S. sanctions list last year, after the Treasury Department designated it a “sham charity” raising money for a terrorist organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

The decision came three days after a news site, powered at least in part by artificial intelligence, published a story about Dr. Doutaghi’s connections to the group.

Advertisement

The news site called her a member of a terrorist group, citing postings referring to appearances she made on panels at Samidoun-sponsored events, but a lawyer for Dr. Doutaghi said she is not a member of Samidoun, a global organization that sponsors meetings and protests supporting Palestinian causes.

In an interview, Dr. Doutaghi, 30, called herself a “loud and proud” supporter of Palestinian rights. “I am a scholar,” she said, adding, “I am not a member of any organization that would constitute a violation of U.S. law.”

The swift action against Dr. Doutaghi illustrates the tightrope American universities are walking as the Trump administration takes aim at higher education. Yale’s peer institution, Columbia, lost $400 million in federal funding last week after being named on a list of schools accused of tolerating antisemitism. On Monday, the Trump administration announced that Yale was among 60 schools that could face funding cuts if federal investigations show evidence that they have permitted antisemitic behavior.

In a statement Tuesday, Yale Law School described the allegations against Dr. Doutaghi as reflecting “potential unlawful conduct.”

“We take these allegations extremely seriously and immediately opened an investigation into the matter to ascertain the facts,” said the statement, issued by Alden Ferro, a spokesman for Yale Law. “Such an action is never initiated based on a person’s protected speech.”

Advertisement

Dr. Doutaghi said the actions against her are part of an attempt to silence scholars. “This is the type of thing that happens under fascist dictatorships, which Donald Trump is trying to establish,” she said in the interview.

The article about Dr. Doutaghi was published on March 2 on Jewish Onliner. On its website and on Substack, Jewish Onliner says it is “empowered by A.I. capabilities.” It does not identify any reporters on its site.

An effort to reach Jewish Onliner for comment elicited a response from “JO,” which identified itself as an A.I. assistant developed by Jewish Onliner. Later, emails from the site said that, while it uses A.I. to enhance research, fact-checking and rapid content creation, the final edits are done by humans.

The identities of the news site’s staff were kept private out of concern for “professional repercussions, doxxing, etc.,” the site said.

In January, the Israeli publication Haaretz questioned the reliability of such A.I.-powered platforms that it said worked to promote Israel’s cause online.

Advertisement

Eric Lee, the lawyer representing Dr. Doutaghi, also questioned the reliability of Jewish Onliner’s reporting in correspondence with Yale.

In his letter last week letter placing Dr. Doutaghi on administrative leave, Joseph M. Crosby, Yale’s senior associate dean, raised concerns about her activities. “As you are aware, the university is reviewing serious allegations regarding your activities with various entities that are subject to U.S. sanctions,” said the letter, dated March 5, which was reviewed by The New York Times.

Samidoun, based in Vancouver and London, says that its primary mission is to support Palestinian prisoners and to amplify the voices of Palestinian advocates of justice and human rights.

The impact of U.S. and European Union sanctions on Iran was the topic of Dr. Doutaghi’s dissertation for the Ph.D. she obtained from Carleton University in Ottawa, which was officially awarded after she joined the Yale project.

Amy Kapczynski, a Yale Law professor who co-founded the project, which is funded by outside grants, envisioned the project as an effort to understand the structures that led to the election of Mr. Trump and a counter to neoliberal thought in America, according to posts on its website. Ms. Kapczynski did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Advertisement

Dr. Doutaghi joined in October 2023, about a week before the Hamas attack on Israel. An Iranian and a Muslim, she said Yale knew about her views when they hired her.

“In fact, at the time I believed that this quality would be an asset for the project I was hired to help lead,” she said.

The Law and Political Economy Project appeared to embrace Dr. Doutaghi’s views, featuring her last year in a virtual event titled, “A Political Economy of Genocide and Imperialism.” The page describing the discussion has been scrubbed from the project website, but it referred to the “genocide in Palestine,” a characterization that some pro-Israel groups have called antisemitic.

Within 24 hours of the Jewish Onliner article’s publication, Dr. Doutaghi said, she began to receive harassing and threatening messages online. She was also asked to meet with Yale officials to explain her position. She decided to retain a lawyer, Mr. Lee, who is based in Southfield, Mich., and asked for additional time to prepare for the meeting with Yale because she was fasting for Ramadan and dealing with harassment.

But three days after the Jewish Onliner published its article, Dr. Doutaghi was barred from campus and placed on administrative leave by Mr. Crosby, who told her the move was necessary because “we have not received any responses or factual explanations from you.”

Advertisement

Mr. Lee said he hoped Dr. Doutaghi’s job and access to emails and campus would be restored, and he is asking the school to take “public action to restore her reputation.”

Education

Video: Violence at a Minneapolis School Hours After ICE Shooting

Published

on

Video: Violence at a Minneapolis School Hours After ICE Shooting

new video loaded: Violence at a Minneapolis School Hours After ICE Shooting

transcript

transcript

Violence at a Minneapolis School Hours After ICE Shooting

As Minneapolis reels in the aftermath of a fatal shooting, the city shuts down its public schools following a violent confrontation between federal agents and civilians at a local high school.

Just hours after a federal agent fatally shot a woman in her vehicle, we captured these scenes at Roosevelt High School a few miles away. “The first thing I see is six or seven or eight S.U.V.s parked in the street, people in military fatigues, essentially, masks.” “Murderer!” “There were lots of yelling, whistling. It was really chaotic.” It was around 3:30 p.m. Classes had been dismissed and students were trickling out of school. “We were in a staff meeting, talking about the shooting that had happened earlier in the day. Another staff member came in and informed us within about five or 10 minutes of that meeting starting, that the agents were outside.” Teacher Nick Wilson ran out and started filming on his phone. One student said she fled the scene after seeing agents emerging from their cars. “We see them tackle teachers on the floor. And that’s when I was like, ‘Oh my God.’ I ran because I was scared for my life.” In a statement to The New York Times, the Department of Homeland Security said agents were chasing a U.S. citizen, who they said had rammed his vehicle into a government vehicle before driving and stopping in a school zone. D.H.S. said that it was not targeting the school, its students or its staff. The Times independently confirmed that one educator was detained by federal agents and has since been released. “It made me not want to come back to school no more because this is so terrifying. So yeah, that’s how I feel.” Minneapolis Public Schools told The Times the incident is currently under investigation and that all M.P.S. schools are closed until Monday out of an abundance of caution. “I’m still kind of in shock that was something that happened at this place I’ve called home for the last 14, 15 years of my life.”

Advertisement
As Minneapolis reels in the aftermath of a fatal shooting, the city shuts down its public schools following a violent confrontation between federal agents and civilians at a local high school.

By Ben Garvin, Ang Li, Mark Boyer and Arijeta Lajka

January 11, 2026

Continue Reading

Education

Video: A Viral Beauty Test Doesn’t Hold Water

Published

on

Video: A Viral Beauty Test Doesn’t Hold Water

new video loaded: A Viral Beauty Test Doesn’t Hold Water

There are better ways to judge a product’s value than using a gimmicky test you saw on social media. At Wirecutter, we use good old-fashioned math.
Advertisement

January 9, 2026

    Do You Always Need to Shampoo Twice?

    0:53

    This Organizer Reclaims Counter Space

    0:34

    Should You Buy a Vintage Bread Maker?

    0:55

    Why I ‘Bricked’ My Phone

    1:18

    Advertisement
    The Best Boxed Brownie Mixes

    0:59

    Unboxing 450 Pounds of Returned Goods

    0:58

Video ›

Latest Video

Visual Investigations

Advertisement

Diary of a Song

Magazine

T Magazine

Op-Docs

Opinion

Advertisement

Middle East Crisis

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Education

Video: This Organizer Reclaims Counter Space

Published

on

Video: This Organizer Reclaims Counter Space

new video loaded: This Organizer Reclaims Counter Space

When you have a small kitchen, finding space for a plethora of tools and equipment can feel like a frustrating game of Tetris. To help you make better use of tight quarters, our experts tested dozens of shelves, racks, magnets, and other space-saving options — like this paper-towel-holder-meets-shelving-unit from Yamazaki Home.

January 5, 2026

Continue Reading

Trending