Connect with us

Los Angeles, Ca

UCLA loses multi-million-dollar gift over handling of campus protests

Published

on

UCLA loses multi-million-dollar gift over handling of campus protests

LOS ANGELES (KTLA) – Months after pro-Palestinian protests and counter-protests erupted into chaos on the UCLA campus, new insights have emerged into the decision-making process and pressures that unfolded behind the scenes.

KTLA filed a public records request with UCLA on April 30 as the encampment was growing, seeking any emails from former Chancellor Gene Block’s office or his support staff related to the protests. KTLA wanted to know what was happening behind the scenes during those critical days in late April and early May, believing that understanding the internal conversations might be key to that process.

This initiated a back-and-forth that lasted more than six months.

Two months later, on July 29, UCLA responded to the public records request, stating, “Please note that it may be the case that these records are not directly responsive to your request.” They weren’t.

A large encampment of pro-Palestinian protestors gathered on the UCLA campus on May 1, 2024. (KTLA)

KTLA again approached UCLA, asking for the records request to be fulfilled.

Advertisement

On September 12, UCLA stated, “We confirm that our office is still working on this matter and will soon produce the next batch of records once the legal review of them has been completed.”

On October 15, UCLA said, “Records are still under review and are not available at this time. Please know, though, that we are aiming to produce records to you as soon as possible.”

On November 27, UCLA provided another update: “This is a further update regarding your attached records request. Please accept our sincere apologies, but the review process has not yet been completed on the remaining records.”

UCLA said KTLA would receive further communication by December 18. Then, on the Friday before Christmas week, after the close of business, an email arrived from UCLA with a link to 455 pages of documents—some heavily redacted—related to those critical days during the UCLA protests.

On April 28, with protests growing at campuses across the country, physical altercations broke out between pro-Palestinian groups and counter-protesters. Vice Chancellor Mary Osako emailed senior leadership at UCLA, saying, “It’s been a day…” and discussed UCLA’s communication strategy, emphasizing “transparency and humanity.” Chancellor Gene Block replied, “I think the right message. Bruin values.”

Advertisement

On April 29, the Chancellor emailed UCLA BruinAlert about additional security being added due to the physical altercations.

On April 30, Chancellor Block emailed the university and alumni, discussing the encampment on Royce Quad, calling it “unauthorized” and describing some tactics as “shocking and shameful.” He stated that UCLA supports peaceful protest but not activism that harms the ability to carry out UCLA’s academic mission.

Los Angeles, CA – April 30: Barricades surround the encampment for the Pro-Palestine group as a member, right, is punched by a pro-Israel group member, left, at UCLA on Tuesday, April 30, 2024 in Los Angeles, CA. (Michael Blackshire / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

A faculty director emailed the Chancellor, “Gene, good message reaffirming our values for peaceful protest… thanks for your leadership during these difficult times.” The Chancellor replied, “Thank you—very discouraging week. Hopefully we can heal.”

That same night, UCLA declared the encampment illegal, setting the campus administration and university police on a course that would include a violent attack by counter-protesters and –days later– an overnight encampment takedown by police. 

In the meantime, people on all sides of the issue were messaging UCLA leadership: faculty and staff, parents and students, dozens of emails:

  • “It’s ridiculous you are allowing a small group to disrupt the learning of 30+ thousand students who want to learn…”
  • “This is blatant anti-Semitism being allowed to erupt… why no consequences? Enough is enough.”
  • “How much more violence do you need on campus to shut it down?”
  • “We are all very worried that what lies ahead is another Kent State where peaceful protests were met with lethal police violence.”
  • “Shameful! Take control of your university or let the police do it. Never again is now.”
  • “I know Palestine is a very complicated issue. But I think you’re threading the needle very well.”
  • “I write as a deeply troubled and angry faculty member who is at the moment ashamed to be associated with UCLA. Your moral cowardice and appalling failure of leadership is profoundly disturbing.”
  • “Your inability to find a peaceful way through this makes you abysmally unqualified for your job.”
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MAY 02: A California Highway Patrol (CHP) officer detains a protestor while clearing a pro-Palestinian encampment after dispersal orders were given at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) campus, on May 2, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Some went even further.

On April 29, a UCLA alumnus and donor emailed the university regarding its handling of the protests.

Advertisement

“We as donors have amended our Living Trust by removing UCLA as a financial recipient. UCLA has now lost our multi-million dollar bequest,” the donor told the university.

KTLA contacted that donor, who confirmed they had indeed amended their family trust.

A letter from Judea Pearl on May 2, a notable UCLA educator, stated, “Dear Gene… I am not really sure whether you are under pressure to make concessions to the encampment movement but, regardless, I would like you to know that you have the backing of over 400 UCLA professors supporting your refusal to yield to their demands.”

Many correspondences concerned the decision to move classes to remote learning as the protests continued on campus. Just what decision-making was going on behind the scenes isn’t known—or wasn’t included in this batch of documents related to our public records request. The documents also include KTLA’s own requests to UCLA, saying the public had a right to hear from the Chancellor on such important matters.

Still, very few personal correspondences between the Chancellor and his staff are included in these documents. UCLA cited a common line in public records requests: “Additionally, where the public interest served by not disclosing a record clearly outweighs the public interest served by disclosure, such records may be withheld.”

Advertisement
UCLA
A Pro-Palestinian protestor clashes with a pro-Israeli supporter at an encampment at UCLA early Wednesday morning. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Of course, that is very subjective, so the public may never know what the senior leadership at UCLA was discussing in those days. However, the fallout from the protests was clear, and in the weeks that followed, UCLA remained under scrutiny for its handling of the protests.

In the meantime, Chancellor Gene Block retired. In the release from UCLA, the school said, “This position at the helm of one of the world’s greatest research universities will surely be a coveted one, and I am certain we will have many excellent candidates for the role.”

In November, a scathing independent audit suggested a series of steps needed to be taken by UCLA “to address shortcomings, performance failures, systems breakdowns, and campus safety issues that emerged from the campus events of April and May 2024.”

In December, UCLA’s Police Chief—who was criticized over his department’s handling of the protests—was also out. The interim Chief stated, “The men and women of the UCLA Police Department proudly serve this community with a firm commitment to our Core Values: ACCOUNTABILITY, RESPECT, INTEGRITY, SERVICE, and EXCELLENCE.”

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Los Angeles, Ca

Man charged with drug possession now ‘facing consequences’ of recently passed Prop 36: SBSD 

Published

on

Man charged with drug possession now ‘facing consequences’ of recently passed Prop 36: SBSD 

The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department is continuing to remind residents of the effects of the recently passed Proposition 36 after a man was arrested on narcotics possession charges early Friday morning. 

Prop 36, officially titled The Homelessness, Drug Addiction and Theft Reduction Act, was passed by voters by a wide margin in November and went into effect on Dec. 18. Among other things, it includes several new charges, including enhanced sentencing and statutes that can prevent certain offenders from being cited and released prior to their court appearance. 

After the legislation was went into effect, law enforcement agencies across the region have used several methods to get the word out about the consequences, including releasing a video that shows suspects discussing the new law from the back of a police car late last month. 

A more recent incident involving the new consequences of Prop 36 occurred just before 9 a.m. Friday when a 54-year-old Apple Valley resident was contacted by deputies in the area of Bear Valley Road and Algonquin Road.

Advertisement

The man, John Michael Laughlin, was found to be in possession of illegal narcotics and arrested, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department stated.

He was booked into the High Desert Detention Center on drug possession charges with previous a previous conviction and traffic warrants. He is being held in lieu of $30,000 bail. 

Anyone with any information about this investigation is asked to contact Deputy E. Natty with Apple Valley Sheriff’s Station at (760) 240-7400 or Sheriff’s Dispatch at (760) 956-5001.

Callers wishing to remain anonymous are urged to call the We-Tip Hotline at 1-800-78CRIME (27463) or you may leave the information on the We-Tip website.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Los Angeles, Ca

Video captures burglars ransacking Santa Monica condo complex during fumigation

Published

on

Video captures burglars ransacking Santa Monica condo complex during fumigation

Residents are distraught after burglars ransacked a Santa Monica condominium complex while it was being fumigated for termites.

Surveillance cameras captured the suspects arriving at the 10–unit complex on the 400 block of Idaho Avenue while the building was evacuated from Dec. 27-30.

A pair of hooded thieves were seen snooping around and rummaging through closets, trying to find valuable items they could steal. They spend their time checking every nook and cranny, at times opening briefcases and grabbing purses while placing items in tote bags.

  • Video captured a pair of hooded burglars ransacking a Santa Monica condo complex while it was being fumigated for termites from Dec. 27-30, 2024.
  • Video captured a pair of hooded burglars ransacking a Santa Monica condo complex while it was being fumigated for termites from Dec. 27-30, 2024.
  • Video captured a pair of hooded burglars ransacking a Santa Monica condo complex while it was being fumigated for termites from Dec. 27-30, 2024.
  • The suspects used a screwdriver and other tools to break the front door of a victim's home. (KTLA)
  • Residents are distraught after burglars ransacked a Santa Monica condo complex while it was being fumigated for termites from Dec. 27-30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Video captured a pair of hooded burglars ransacking a Santa Monica condo complex while it was being fumigated for termites from Dec. 27-30, 2024.

As residents returned to their homes, the reality that they had been burglarized was distressing and shocking.

Hai Hoang, whose condo was ransacked, said the suspects broke into his home using a screwdriver and some other tools they left behind.

“They entered the building in the morning of Dec. 30 when the fumes stopped,” Hoang told KTLA’s Rachel Menitoff. “They broke the door and broke the frame down. That’s how they entered the building.”

Advertisement

Hoang believed the burglary was premeditated and they were well-prepared. Hoang’s home was left in complete disarray — the closets were completely emptied and everything had been thrown on the floor.

Hoang said the incident has left him concerned for his safety and questions whether he should continue living in Santa Monica.

“You’re supposed to feel safe at home, right?” Hoang said. “But then you go home and your home is turned upside down, everything. They looked at every single thing. They pulled every single thing out of your closet. It changed the way I think about Santa Monica. I’m not sure it’s a safe neighborhood anymore.”

Hoang said that, before leaving his home for the fumigation, he had already taken many of his valuables with him — something police strongly advise residents do whenever they need to fumigate their home.

Residents should also ensure all home security cameras remain powered on to allow easy monitoring of their homes. Any alerts triggered by trespassers should be reported to the police immediately.

Advertisement

The Santa Monica break-in follows a similar incident in early December when burglars ransacked dozens of units at a Playa del Rey apartment complex during a fumigation.

The suspects remain at large. Anyone with information on the incident can call Santa Monica police at 310-458-8491.

Continue Reading

Los Angeles, Ca

Man found shot to death in Orange County alleyway

Published

on

Man found shot to death in Orange County alleyway

Police are investigating after a man was found shot to death in Orange County.

On Jan. 2, Santa Ana police responded to reports of a shooting in an alleyway on the 1400 block of South Standard Avenue at around 7:40 p.m.

Arriving officers found an unresponsive man lying on the ground, suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

The victim was identified as Gerson Ramirez, 38, a Santa Ana resident. No suspect was spotted in the area and the circumstances surrounding the man’s death remain unclear.

Advertisement

“Detectives are attempting to identify and locate additional witnesses who can provide information about the homicide,” police said.

Anyone with information on the shooting is asked to call the Santa Ana Police Department at 714-245-8390 or Orange County Crime Stoppers at 1-855-TIP-OCCS. 

Information provided by the public in this case is eligible for a reward under the police department’s Gang Reward Program.

Continue Reading

Trending