UCLA still denies responsibility for excluding Jews during encampments University says it’s not to blame for helping antisemitic agitators ban Jews from campus
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Ryan Colby 202-349-7219 [email protected]
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WASHINGTON – Despite a federal court order calling the exclusion of Jews from critical parts of campus “abhorrent” and “unimaginable,” UCLA stubbornly continues to deny responsibility for the Jew Exclusion Zone. In Frankel v. Regents of the University of California, a federal judge ordered UCLA to stop helping antisemitic agitators exclude Jewish students from campus. UCLA responded to the lawsuit late Tuesday night by insisting that it bears no blame for the rampant antisemitism it encouraged and facilitated. UCLA even questioned whether Jewish students were harmed at all.
Becket and co-counsel Clement & Murphy PLLC filed a lawsuit against UCLA in June after it helped a group of activists as they set up encampments where they harassed Jewish students and stopped them from accessing classes, the library, and other critical parts of campus. UCLA reinforced these zones—both by providing metal barriers and by sending away Jewish students—while taking no effective action to ensure safe passage for Jewish students. In August, federal judge Mark C. Scarsi ordered UCLA to immediately stop aiding and abetting the antisemitic demonstrations. Late Tuesday, UCLA responded by refusing to take responsibility for the encampments, arguing that it “exercised reasonable care to prevent and correct promptly any discriminatory conduct,” and that any harm to Jewish students was “not by reason of anything [UCLA] did or failed to do.” UCLA also denied that Jewish students were segregated from campus or were “prevented from accessing the classrooms or the main undergraduate library.”
“Jewish students are headed into Rosh Hashanah knowing that their university denies it has a responsibility to protect its Jewish students,” said Yitzchok Frankel, father of four and a third-year law student at UCLA. “UCLA should stop dodging blame for its despicable behavior and admit its role in stoking antisemitism against students like me.”
Yitzchok Frankel is a law student and father of four who faced antisemitic harassment last semester for simply wearing a kippah and was forced to abandon his regular routes through campus because of the Jew Exclusion Zone. Frankel detailed how UCLA’s failures forced him to cancel plans on campus with his family and forgo opportunities to mentor incoming Jewish students on campus. Eden Shemuelian, another law student, also had to avoid using campus facilities and participating in law school orientation events because of UCLA’s failures to ensure the safety and equal access of Jewish students.
“UCLA’s denials of knowledge and responsibility won’t fool anyone,” said Mark Rienzi, president of Becket and an attorney for the students. “The university should stop pretending it had nothing to do with the antisemitism that has festered on its campus and own up to its mistakes.”
The case will continue in the district court until the legal issues are resolved.
For more information or to arrange an interview with a Becket attorney, contact Ryan Colby at [email protected] or 202-349-7219.