Protests continue at Case Western Reserve after contractors caught on camera spray painting students
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 Published On May 8, 2024

Tensions continue to mount at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland as the encampment by pro-Palestine demonstrators moves into its second week.

On Wednesday, CWRU President Eric Kaler announced that the university is investigating an incident involving protesters who were spray-painted upon by contractors in front of the "spirit wall" near Thwing Center.

"I have reviewed video footage, which depicts students blocking the wall as a third-party contractor spray painted directly onto protesters as he attempted to finish painting the wall, and I am disturbed by what occurred," Kaler wrote in a letter to the Case community.

Kaler says protesters first "painted an advocacy wall near Eldred Hall with language the university administration and many members of our community view as threatening, intimidating and antisemitic" on Tuesday. He added that later in the evening, the protesters painted the spirit wall "with language that was less threatening but still intimidating to some in our community."

According to Kaler, the university "will continue to fully investigate these actions and hold individuals responsible for this behavior, including the failure of our own officers to intervene."

"Let me be clear: No students — or any individuals — should ever be treated this way, especially on a campus where our core values center on providing a safe, welcoming environment. This is not who we are as an institution, and I am deeply sorry this ever occurred," Kaler added in his letter.

"I'm deeply disheartened and saddened that our administrators are willing to condone painting over a student to silence a message to silence an identity to silence expression," Jad Oglesby, a CWRU graduating senior and one of the protest organizers, said.

Raissa Rih-Reh, another Case student, told 3News, "We are here because we understand that asking our university to not be invested in a genocide is something very reasonable."

"The first days we were here was considered trespassing and the stakes haven't changed we understand the stakes but what we're advocating for is worth it for all of us," Rih-Reh added.

Bri Buckley reports: https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/loc... --

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