Connect with us

West

Friend testifies James Craig dismissed wife's symptoms as 'post-COVID' in poisoning trial

Published

on

Friend testifies James Craig dismissed wife's symptoms as 'post-COVID' in poisoning trial

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

Angela Craig’s lifelong best friend took the stand Monday as the murder trial of Colorado dentist James Craig entered its second week, telling jurors that the mother of six was never the kind of woman who gave up easily.

“She wasn’t a risk-taker. She wasn’t manipulative,” Nicole Harmon told the jury Monday. “And she never said anything—ever—about wanting to die.”

On March 9, 2023, approximately one week before the 43-year-old was pronounced brain-dead, Angela texted her friend asking for help checking her blood sugar. When she arrived, she found Angela curled up, she testified.

Advertisement

“She hadn’t eaten. She couldn’t stand,” she said, saying that James Craig had given Angela a shake that morning.

When the friend texted and asked what was going on, she said James Craig brushed off Angela’s ailment: “Post-COVID. Not diabetes.”

VICTIM OR MANIPULATOR? COLORADO DENTIST’S MURDER TRIAL PAINTS DUELING PORTRAITS OF WIFE IN TROUBLED MARRIAGE

Angela and James Craig pose for a selfie. James is accused of murdering Angela by spiking her protein shakes with potassium cyanide.  (Angela N Jim Craig (Facebook))

Not once, she told jurors, did he mention poison.

Advertisement

“Angela never knew what was killing her,” the witness said. Angela was hospitalized for five days. Doctors couldn’t figure it out. And through it all Angela never expressed that she wanted to die, her friend testified.

A nurse who treated Angela Craig during her final hospitalization described her condition as “very critically ill” when she took the stand Monday.

Kristin Aubuchon, a registered nurse at the University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, testified that she treated Angela on March 15, 2023, just days before the 43-year-old mother of six was declared brain-dead. 

Aubuchon, who previously worked at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, said she was the nurse who drew Angela’s blood that day.

“Yes, I drew those samples that day,” Aubuchon told the jury.

Advertisement

During cross-examination, the defense pointed out that Angela Craig’s name does not appear on the specific lab document shown to the jury. Aubuchon acknowledged that was true.

“I treated other patients that day until Angela arrived,” she explained, noting that she was not responsible for managing official medical records.

Aubuchon also clarified that she is not a custodian of records and cannot personally authenticate all documentation from the hospital’s system.

Angela and James Craig pose for a photo. Craig is accused of killing Angela by poisoning her protein shakes.  (Angela N Jim Craig (Facebook))

Peter Sottile, a physician at the University of Colorado, testified Monday that James Craig’s reaction to his wife’s rapidly deteriorating health was “lackluster.”

Advertisement

Recalling the moment she was rushed to the CT scanner, Sottile said Angela was “very critically ill,” with dangerously low blood pressure and oxygen levels barely registering on monitors. Fearing she might crash during the procedure, the doctor accompanied her into the testing.

“She could have died in the scanner,” he said.

The CT scan revealed catastrophic brain swelling, an injury so severe that, according to the doctor, no blood was reaching her brain. 

“Swelling of that magnitude only happens with massive injury,” he testified. Other scans of Angela’s chest, abdomen, and pelvis showed no abnormalities.

By the time the scan was complete, Angela was unresponsive. Neurosurgeons were called in and drilled into her skull to insert a pressure monitor, which confirmed her intracranial pressure was over 60, which matched her blood pressure, Sottile explained. 

Advertisement

“That meant there was no blood flow to her brain,” he said. 

Angela had been unresponsive for at least 90 minutes. “Recovery was impossible,” Sottile testified.

Sottile recalled James Craig’s reaction when he was told that his wife would not recover.

“That’s bitter,” James Craig said, according to Sottile, who said the dentist’s reaction was “lackluster.”

Angela and Colorado dentist James Craig in a family portrait. James has been charged with first-degree murder for allegedly poisoning his wife. (Faceboook)

Advertisement

Carla Walker, the laboratory director for a private toxicology lab, took the stand Tuesday as an expert witness for the prosecution, explaining how her team confirmed the presence of cyanide in Angela Craig’s blood. 

Walker, who was recognized by the court as an expert in toxicology, described the rigorous scientific process behind the testing, which was conducted using liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry.

According to Walker, two separate blood samples from Angela Craig were tested. Each sample received a unique identification number and was handled by multiple trained analysts under a quality control protocol. After initial analysis, the results were independently reviewed by a second analyst and then certified by a third-party scientist. 

Though Walker was not the certified scientist in Angela’s case, she oversees the team and later conducted a personal review of the full data package. 

“I sign off on all of them,” she told the jury.

Advertisement

Walker testified that the cyanide test passed all quality assurance checks and showed no signs of error. The findings, she said, were legitimate.

Walker noted that the toxicology report does not reveal how the cyanide entered Angela’s system, nor can it pinpoint when it was administered.

The Arapahoe County courthouse on Wednesday, July 16, 2025, Centennial, CO. James Craig stands trial inside he is accused of murdering his wife. (Jeremy Sparig for Fox News Digital)

Dr. Justin Brower, a forensic toxicologist with NMS Laboratories, testified Monday that the earliest blood sample taken during Angela Craig’s final hospitalization showed elevated arsenic levels, which he said could not have come from food or natural exposure.

“330 µg/L is not a background level. It’s elevated,” he testified.

Advertisement

When asked by the prosecution what that level of arsenic suggested, he said: “Intentional ingestion. This isn’t from food.”

Brower said the lab screened Angela’s blood for the following substances: Cyanide, arsenic, an expanded drug panel and tetrahydrozoline (a chemical found in eye drops).

During cross-examination, the defense asked Brower who had collected Sample 001 (a toxicology sample).

“I do not know,” Brower responded.

He clarified that all samples from the hospital were submitted by Dr. Kelly Lear, the Arapahoe County Coroner, who did not personally collect the blood.

Advertisement

The third day of James Craig’s trial opened last week with brief testimony from a key law enforcement officer in the case. 

Det. Bobbi Jo Olson, who was the lead investigator in the case, was asked by prosecutors to identify a computer hard drive and phone seized from Craig during the trial. After only a few minutes on the stand, the defense was called to cross-examine her. 

She confirmed for the defense that Craig turned over his devices voluntarily during the investigation. 

Olson was then excused from the stand with the understanding that she will return to testify in much greater detail later in the trial. 

On Wednesday, Craig’s murder trial hinged on critical testimony from the office manager at his Sunnybook Dental Group practice in Aurora, Colorado, who said Craig flippantly dismissed the first alleged poisoning attempt of his wife, Angela. 

Advertisement

Caitlin Romero worked at the dentist’s office in 2023 and was with Craig for several days during the period he is alleged to have killed his wife by mixing cyanide and tetrahydrozoline, a chemical in eyedrops, in her protein shakes. 

She told Assistant District Attorney Ryan Brackley and the court that, on March 6 of that year, Craig entered the office unusually late and told her he and his wife had worked out earlier in the morning. He apologized for being late and told Romero Angela wasn’t feeling well after he made her a post-workout protein shake. 

VICTIM OR MANIPULATOR? COLORADO DENTIST’S MURDER TRIAL PAINTS DUELING PORTRAITS OF WIFE IN TROUBLED MARRIAGE

Recalling the conversation, Romero testified that Craig said, “Maybe he added too much protein” to his wife’s shake. 

She said Craig left the office later that day to take his wife to the emergency room, where Angela reported feeling dizzy. She texted her husband that she felt “drugged” before they went to the hospital. She was released without a diagnosis the same day. 

Advertisement

Craig returned to the office at 5:30 p.m., which was unusual. The practice closes at 4 p.m.

When she left for the day, Romero said she was startled to find Craig sitting in the dark, using the computer in an exam room, which was not his usual computer. When she asked him what he was doing, Craig told her he had come back to the office to unwind after a stressful day dealing with his wife’s sickness.

After Romero left the office that day, she said Craig texted her to alert her that a personal package would be delivered to the office and asked her not to open it. That had never happened before, Romero noted. 

James Craig talks with his family (not pictured) from his seat before the start of opening arguments in a Murder trial at the Arapahoe District Court on Tuesday, July 15, 2025, Centennial, CO. Craig is accused of murdering his wife. (Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)

COLORADO DENTIST’S ALLEGED INTERNET SEARCH HISTORY TAKES CENTER STAGE AS MURDER TRIAL BEGINS

Advertisement

On March 9, Angela returned to the hospital, exhibiting similar symptoms to three days earlier. This time, she was admitted and remained in the hospital until March 14.

Romero testified that, on that day, Craig told her he didn’t think Angela would live through the night, which Romero said was the second time he had made that prediction since Angela began experiencing symptoms. 

“Evidence that Craig predicted his wife’s death twice before it occurred can be significant in his criminal case to prove his alleged intent in his case,” Kelly Hyman, a nationally renowned defense lawyer and legal analyst, told Fox News Digital. Hyman is not involved in the tr

“Intent in murder cases refers to the accused’s mental state at the time of the crime. First-degree murder can require proof of premeditation and specific intent to kill in a criminal case.

“Predictions of death may suggest that Craig had allegedly been contemplating and planning the act for a period, potentially for a ‘sustained period of time,’ which may imply premeditation.”

Advertisement

The defense chose not to challenge these statements made by Romero, but Hyman said it could have. 

Ryan Brackley, a lawyer for the prosecution, delivers his opening arguments during a Murder trial for James Craig at the Arapahoe District Court on Tuesday, July 15, 2025, Centennial, CO. Craig is accused of murdering his wife.  (Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)

SMALL TOWN DENTIST FACING TRIAL FOR ALLEGEDLY POISONING WIFE’S PROTEIN SHAKE AMID SECRET AFFAIR

“However, the defense would challenge the admissibility and interpretation of such statements and argue that Craig’s wife was suicidal,” Hyman said. “Also, the defense could argue that the statements were taken out of context and/or misinterpreted.”

On March 13, the package arrived to Craig’s practice. A staff member opened the package before bringing it to Romero, who described the contents of the box as a sealed “foil package” and a paper invoice. The box was marked as a biohazard. She checked the invoice to make sure it was the personal package that Craig had discussed with her and saw that it was. On the invoice, she read that Craig had ordered potassium cyanide, which she immediately googled out of curiosity. 

Advertisement

On March 15, Angela was admitted to the hospital for the final time. 

Craig was in the office that day and told Romero he had to leave because Angela was returning to the hospital. 

Romero testified that with suspicions mounting, she then googled symptoms of cyanide poisoning. 

Ashley Whitham, a lawyer for the defense, delivers her opening arguments during the murder trial of James Craig in Arapahoe District Court Tuesday, July 15, 2025, Centennial, Colo. (Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)

COLORADO DENTIST’S MURDER TRIAL PUT ON HOLD AFTER DEFENSE ‘SUDDENLY QUIT’ PRIOR TO JURY SELECTION

Advertisement

During cross-examination, lead defense attorney Lisa Fine Moses pointed to the fact that while Romero had received the package and read that it contained potassium cyanide, she couldn’t be sure of that because she did not open the sealed foil package. 

She also asked Romero about her evening office interaction with Craig on March 6, and Romero conceded that, emotionally, Craig seemed normal during that time. 

Moses examined Romero’s relationship with Craig, which Romero described as an “intimate emotional relationship.” She established that the pair were close and often spoke about personal and family matters on personal devices and via channels unrelated to their work. 

Moses also established that, during the investigation into the alleged crime, when Romero spoke to police, she did not disclose the true nature of their relationship or all of the communications between them. 

James Craig tears up during opening arguments in his Murder trial at the Arapahoe District Court on Tuesday, July 15, 2025, Centennial, CO. Craig is accused of murdering his wife. (Stephen Swofford/Denver Gazette via Pool)

Advertisement

The importance of calling a critical witness like Romero as a witness so early in the trial was not lost on Hyman. 

“The prosecutor will want to start strong and end strong as to the witnesses,” she said. “The prosecutor may want to start the case with the most important witness. For example, the star witness, or someone that is going to start telling the story of the case as to the timeline of the case from start to finish.”

Read the full article from Here

Utah

Utah Jazz Run Into Familiar Face vs Charlotte Hornets

Published

on

Utah Jazz Run Into Familiar Face vs Charlotte Hornets


As the Utah Jazz look to take on the Charlotte Hornets for their second of two meetings for the season, it’ll mark the first time that a familiar face, Collin Sexton, returns to the Delta Center since his offseason trade to the East Coast.

Advertisement

Earlier in this past offseason, Sexton was sent to the Hornets along with a pair of future second-round picks in exchange for veteran center Jusuf Nurki. It was a deal that was a bit criticized from Utah’s perspective upon initially going down, but in the time since, has seen both players find their way into notable roles with their new squads.

Advertisement

While Nurkic is listed as questionable to suit up for the action against his former team, Sexton seems ready to go against his, and could even start back in Utah after having previously done so in the Hornets’ latest game against the Indiana Pacers; a game they fell short in 112-114.

So, not only will Sexton be looking for a bounce-back win off a loss, but he could have an extra chip on his shoulder to perform well against his former team as well.

Advertisement

Collin Sexton Returns to Utah as Jazz Take on Hornets

Sexton was a part of the Jazz for three seasons from 2022 to 2025 after initially coming aboard as a part of the extensive Donovan Mitchell and Lauri Markkanen trade as a sign-and-trade acquisition, and for the tenure that he was in Salt Lake City, was a pretty significant part of the roster––playing a total of 189 games, starting in 120 of them.

Advertisement

In that time, Sexton averaged 17.5 points, 2.5 rebounds, and 4.2 assists while shooting 48.8% from the field and 39.8% from three, being a consistent offensive piece in the backcourt next to a growing Keyonte George and, at the time, his fellow veteran guard, Jordan Clarkson.

However, the Jazz, during their latest offseason, made the inevitable shift to focus on their young talent in place of Sexton after three good years of being a core rotational piece, sending him to Charlotte for his third team since being drafted to the Cleveland Cavaliers back in 2018.

Advertisement

Nov 2, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Charlotte Hornets guard Collin Sexton (8) on defense against Utah Jazz guard Keyonte George (3) during the first quarter at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images | Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

Advertisement

Since being in Charlotte, Sexton has remained about as steady as he was in Utah––averaging 15.2 points a night on 48.3% from the field, paired with 2.0 rebounds and 4.1 assists per game, filling in once again as a valuable locker room add and veteran teammate to help bring along the Hornets’ developing roster.

Last time he went up against the Jazz, it was on his new home floor in Charlotte, making for a pretty brutal game from the Jazz, as they were blown out by Sexton and the Hornets, 103-126 at the beginning of November, which also made for the first time Utah was without Walker Kessler after he was ruled out for the season due to shoulder surgery on a torn labrum.

The Jazz will try and even up their season series, looking a bit different from that two-month span, and will be forced to do so without the services of Lauri Markkanen (rest) and Ace Bailey (hip), thus giving a brighter green light for Keyonte George to have another explosive night scoring the ball, this time against his former teammate.

Be sure to bookmark Utah Jazz On SI and follow @JazzOnSI on X to stay up-to-date on daily Utah Jazz news, interviews, breakdowns and more!

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Wyoming

Budget hearings day 15: UW curriculum takes center stage

Published

on

Budget hearings day 15: UW curriculum takes center stage


Lawmakers grilled University of Wyoming (UW) leaders about environmental and gender studies course offerings in Cheyenne on Friday.

The Joint Appropriations Committee (JAC) is in the midst of hammering out the draft budget bill that the full Legislature will amend and approve during the upcoming budget session in February. The biennial budget will decide how much each state agency, including UW, receives for the next two years.

UW officials already testified before the committee in December, requesting additional funds for coal research, athletics and other projects. They were “called back” for further questions Friday.

Representatives John Bear (R-Gillette), Ken Pendergraft (R-Sheridan) and Jeremy Haroldson (R-Wheatland), all members of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus, launched immediately into a discussion of UW’s course offerings.

Advertisement

“It’s just come to my attention there’s quite a bit of stuff out there that may be in conflict with what the people of Wyoming think the university would be training our young people towards,” Bear said, before turning over to Pendergraft.

The Sheridan rep proceeded to list several elective courses offered through UW’s Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources.

“I thought perhaps I would seek an undergraduate minor in sustainability,” Pendergraft said. “And if I were to do so … I would have my choice of the following: ‘Social Justice in the 21st Century,’ ‘Environmental ethics,’ ‘Global Justice,’ ‘Environmental Justice,’ ‘Environmental Sociology,’ ‘Food, Health and Justice,’ ‘Diversity and Justice in Natural Resources,’ or perhaps my favorite: ‘Ecofeminism.’ After I got through with that, I would be treated to such other courses as ‘Global Climate Governance’ and ‘Diversity and Justice in Natural Resources.’”

“I’m just wondering why these courses aren’t offered in Gillette,” he said.

Haub School Associate Dean Temple Stoellinger said at least one of those courses had already been canceled — “Diversity and Justice in Natural Resources,” which Pendergraft listed twice in his comment. She added students seeking a degree through the Haub School often pursue a concurrent major in another college.

Advertisement

“The remainder of the courses [you listed] are actually not Haub School courses,” Stoellinger said. “Those are courses that we just give students the option to take to fulfill the elective components of the minor.”

Bear responded.

“Unfortunately, what you’ve just described is something that is metastasizing, it sounds like, across the university,” he said. “So, President [Ed] Seidel, if you could just help me understand, is this really a direction that the university should be going?”

Seidel pointed to the Haub School’s efforts to support Wyoming tourism and other industries as evidence that it seeks to serve the state.

“I believe that the Haub School is a very strong component of the university, and I believe it is also responding to the times,” Seidel said. “But they’re always looking to improve their curriculum and to figure out how to best serve the state, and I believe they do a good job of that.”

Advertisement

Bear returned to one of the courses Pendergraft had listed.

“How is ecofeminism helpful for a student who wants to stay in Wyoming and work in Wyoming?” he asked Seidel.

“I do not have an answer to that question,” the university president replied.

Stoellinger shared that the Haub School is largely funded by private donors, with about 20% or less of its funding, about $1.4 million, coming from the state.

Haroldson took aim at separate course offerings. Rather than listing specific courses, the Wheatland rep pointed to gender studies in general, saying his constituents “have kids that go to the university and then get degrees that don’t work” and “don’t have validity.”

Advertisement

Jeff Victor

/

The Laramie Reporter

University of Wyoming President Ed Seidel delivers the state of the university address Sept. 17 in the student union.

“It’s hard to defend you guys when we see these things come up, because these are the things that we’ve been fighting over the last couple of years,” Haroldson said. “[We’ve been] saying this isn’t the direction that our publicly funded land-grant college should be pursuing, in my opinion and in the opinion of the people that have elected me, or a majority of them.”

He questioned how a graduate could make a career in Wyoming with a gender studies degree and asked Seidel why these courses were still being offered.

Advertisement

Seidel said the university was committed to keeping young people in Wyoming and that he viewed that mission as his primary job.

“And then we’ve also been restructuring programs,” he said. “Last year, the gender studies program was restructured. It’s no longer offered as a minor. There were not very many students in it at the time, and that was one of the reasons why … It’s been part of the reform of the curriculum to re-look at: What does the state need and how do we best serve the state?”

UW canceled its gender studies bachelor’s degree track in 2025, citing low enrollment as the trigger. Gender studies courses are still offered and students may apply them toward an American Studies degree.

Seidel said the webpage where Haroldson found the gender studies degree listed might need to be updated. Haroldson said the state “sends enough money” to UW that having an out-of-date webpage was “absolutely unacceptable.”

“I would recommend and challenge you, when I make this search on Monday, I don’t find it,” Haroldson said.

Advertisement

Interim Provost Anne Alexander clarified later in the hearing that the degree was still listed because, even though it’s been canceled, it is still being “taught out.” That means students who were already enrolled in the program when UW decided to ax it are being allowed to wrap up their degree.

“Once they are done, those will also no longer show up,” Alexander said. “But I’ve been chatting with my team on my phone, listening intently, and they are going to ensure that the program does not show up on the website as an option by Monday.”

In addition to the questions about course offerings, lawmakers also asked UW about its plans for an independent third-party financial audit of the work conducted at the High Bay Research Facility, the funding that passes through UW to Wyoming Public Media and how university leaders approach picking contractors for large construction projects, like the parking garage between Ivinson and Grand Avenues.

Mike Smith, the university’s lobbyist, told the committee UW prioritizes Wyoming contractors when possible.

“But there are those situations, and maybe the parking garage was one of them, where as the architects and builders are looking at: How do we set the criteria for that balance between using as many of those dollars here with Wyoming contractors, versus ensuring that the state gets its bang for the buck with the highest quality and lowest price,” Smith said. “Sometimes those things are balanced out.”

Advertisement

The JAC will begin work on the budget bill next week, deciding what funding to endorse or reject for every agency in the state government. The budget session starts Feb. 9.





Source link

Continue Reading

West

UC Davis professor who posted violent threats against ‘Zionists’ keeps job after discipline

Published

on

UC Davis professor who posted violent threats against ‘Zionists’ keeps job after discipline

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A UC Davis professor who drew widespread backlash after posting that “Zionist journalists” and their children should fear for their lives was suspended without pay for one academic quarter and remains employed by the university.

Jemma DeCristo, an assistant professor in the American Studies program who identifies as transgender, was the subject of an internal investigation following a social media post shared days after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. The university’s investigative report, completed in June 2024, was released publicly last week in response to a public-records request, as first reported by The Chronicle of Higher Education.

On Oct. 10, 2023, DeCristo posted on X: “One group of ppl we have easy access to in the US is all these Zionist journalists who spread propaganda & misinformation… they have houses w addresses, kids in school… they can fear their bosses, but they should fear us more.” The post included emojis depicting a knife, an axe and drops of blood.

The post went viral a week later after being amplified by conservative commentators, such as the late Turning Point USA founder, Charlie Kirk, who called the professor’s post a threat of terrorism.

Advertisement

Charlie Kirk called attention to Jemma DeCristo’s post in October 2023. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA ORDERED TO REINSTATE LAW STUDENT WHO WAS EXPELLED AFTER ANTI-JEWISH COMMENTS

According to the investigative report authored by UC Davis School of Law Dean Kevin R. Johnson and the outside law firm London & Stout, DeCristo told investigators the post was intended as satire and not a literal call to violence.

DeCristo claimed the language was intended to be “a sarcastic response to distressing geopolitical events,” and the message was not intended to be taken seriously.

The professor refused to issue a clarification or apology, according to the report, telling investigators, “it would just fuel the right-wing media that was harassing her.”

Advertisement

UC Davis concluded in their report that while the professor did not intend the post to be a literal threat, its language “injured members of the Jewish community,” caused fear for children’s safety, and triggered “a ripple effect of anxiety and increased burden on campus.” The report concluded the professor violated the faculty code of conduct regarding the university’s ethical principles and recommended discipline.

Memorial Union from a Distance at the University of California-Davis campus in Davis, California, taken on July 21, 2025. (istock)

TEXAS A&M COMMITTEE FINDS PROFESSOR’S FIRING OVER TRANSGENDER-RELATED LESSON UNJUSTIFIED

The investigation also documented “significant disruption” to university operations, including receiving hundreds of e-mails with demands that DeCristo be fired, complaints from students and staff over safety concerns and donations being jeopardized. At least one major donor threatened to withhold six-figure gifts unless DeCristo was terminated, according to the report.

A faculty panel in June 2025 recommended DeCristo be censured, but Chancellor Gary S. May decided that suspension was warranted as well.

Advertisement

UC Davis confirmed to Fox News Digital that DeCristo was suspended for the fall academic quarter and did not receive pay from Oct. 1, 2025, through Dec. 31, 2025. DeCristo is not currently teaching but remains employed by the university.

“The chancellor suspended the faculty member without pay for one academic quarter and placed a Letter of Censure in the faculty member’s personnel file,” a statement from the university read. “The letter will remain in the faculty member’s personnel file for the duration of the faculty member’s employment with UC.”

Kerr Hall, UC Davis, Davis, California. Taken April 8, 2015. (Joseph DeSantis/Getty Images)

PROFESSOR SLAMMED FOR ‘DESPICABLE BEHAVIOR’ WITH CONTROVERSIAL REPOSTS ON CHARLIE KIRK

In the letter of censure, May wrote that both investigators and the hearing panel found a failure to recognize the “deep pain and significant disruption” caused to the university community and a failure to offer clarification or apology that could have mitigated the impact.

Advertisement

“Particularly where students were among those who suffered as a result of your actions,” May wrote, “your glaring lack of insight into the harm you caused is in direct conflict with your obligation to protect and preserve conditions hospitable to student learning.”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

DeCristo did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Fox News’ David Rutz contributed to this report.

Advertisement

Read the full article from Here

Continue Reading

Trending