In the early morning hours of November 7, more than 12 police officers showed up outside at an address in Springfield, Virginia, knocked, broke down the door, and raided the family home of two Palestinian American students at George Mason University.
University and Fairfax County police refused to show the family the warrant. One Fairfax County detective with the FBIâs Joint Terrorism Task Force â cross-designated as a local and federal agent â was also present. The family and Mason faculty supporting them, however, believe they know what the FBI-led investigation was about: the young family membersâ pro-Palestine activism.
Two of the Palestinian American familyâs daughters attend George Mason. One is an undergraduate student and the co-president of Masonâs chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. The other is in a masterâs program at Mason and a former president of the schoolâs SJP chapter.
âThese students havenât been accused of a criminal, civil, or student conduct violation, yet they have been banned from campus.â
The authorities told the family the raid was related to a spray-paint vandalism incident at George Masonâs campus in August â part of the widespread campus protests related to Israelâs war on Gaza. In September, the university police department put out flyers offering a $2,000 reward for information about the incident.
In short order, the schoolâs SJP chapter was suspended. Soon after, George Mason Police Chief Carl Rowan Jr. served the sisters with criminal trespass notices barring them from campus for four years â meaning that they can no longer continue their education.
âIâm worried for our students and Iâm concerned for our schools,â said Ben Manski, the SJP chapterâs faculty adviser. âThere are still no allegations and no charges that Iâm aware of. Without those, we canât have due process, we donât know what is behind these actions, and we canât know whether the public interest is being served or harmed.â
Alexander Monea, an associate professor of English at George Mason, questioned the schoolâs disciplinary process.
âThese students havenât been accused of a criminal, civil, or student conduct violation,â Monea said, âyet they have been banned from campus for four years, effectively expelling them from the university.â
âAn Extension of State Powerâ
The severe moves against the family and the schoolâs SJP chapter are part of the latest wave of the crackdown against campus Palestine solidarity protests. As Israelâs war and demonstrations against it have dragged into a second year, the repression of Gaza protests continues to derail studentsâ education and ensnare them in disciplinary and court proceedings over activism on campus.
Police in Philadelphia conducted a similar raid in October, The Intercept reported, when authorities descended on the home of student leaders in the University of Pennsylvaniaâs Palestine solidarity movement.
An attorney for the family questioned the basis for the raid and called on George Mason to resist overreach by law enforcement. âItâs clear that the university and policeâlocal and federalâare working in tandem to intimidate, penalize, and criminalize student activism around Palestine,â said attorney Abdel-Rahman Hamed.
âStudents, faculty, and people of conscience must stand firmly against this authoritarian overreach and demand accountability from university administrators, the police, and the Fairfax County Commonwealth Attorney.â
George Mason spokesperson Paola Duran declined to answer questions about the raid. âThe university has no comment on matters of ongoing criminal investigations,â Duran said in a statement to The Intercept.
Fairfax County Police Departmentâs public affairs office told The Intercept the department only assisted with the case and that George Mason University and the FBI were the lead investigators and directed questions to them. FBI Washington field office spokesperson Lira Gallagher said the agency could not confirm or deny the existence of an investigation and directed questions to George Mason police. The Fairfax County Attorney and George Mason police did not respond to requests for comment.
Police used excessive violence in the raid in response to paint on the floor, said Bassam Haddad, a member of the George Mason faculty.
âUniversities and university administrators have become an extension of state power, and we have now seen it firsthand in this case of a violent raid into the studentsâ home without any material evidence whatsoever,â said Haddad, a founding director of the Middle East and Islamic Studies program at George Mason and an associate professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government.
It was not lost on George Mason students that the crackdown seemed to target the large number of Arab and Muslim students at the school.
âWhen they do things like this, it really does impact an entire community and an entire demographic at our school.â
âThis repression has really been built up against multiple organizations on campus, especially with SJP, but really with any pro-Palestinian leaning organizations,â said a student representative of the George Mason University Coalition for Palestine, a campus organization, who asked for anonymity to avoid retaliation. âGMU has a huge Arab and Muslim population. When they do things like this, it really does impact an entire community and an entire demographic at our school.â
âThis honestly has just been an attack, not only on Palestinian organizers and the movement in general, but also on free speech as well.â
SJP Suspension
When police arrived at the household last month, they forced the family to gather in the living room while they searched the house, according to two people familiar with the matter. Some family members were eventually released to attend work, but the rest remained while police conducted their six-hour search.
Police seized electronics from the residence, including phones and laptops, but made no arrests. At one point, police found antique firearms legally registered to the familyâs son, a Mason alum and volunteer deputy chief firefighter.
Following the raid, authorities brought charges against the son related to the firearms. After he went to court, a Fairfax County Circuit Court judge dismissed the charges two weeks later.
âAs a faculty senator, my colleagues requested that I inquire to President Gregory Washington about the studentsâ family home being raided during a faculty senate meeting,â explained Monea, the English professor. âHowever, he refused to provide any information to the faculty senate at that time.â
Following the raid, Mason administrators sent an email to the SJP co-president the next day, informing them that the SJP chapter had been temporarily suspended. Unfortunately, the current leader of SJP, whose computer was seized during the raid, did not see the email until the following week.
Other members of SJP and Manski, the groupâs faculty adviser, were not informed of the suspension until later in the month. They only became aware of it when SJP members were notified that a planned panel with the school chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People had been canceled due to the suspension.
The raid is seen as part of the schoolâs growing hostility towards activism against the war in Gaza, according to Haddad, the faculty member supporting the students. George Masonâs Board of Visitors, which governs the school, includes two appointments by Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin who are associated with the Heritage Foundation, a group that has called for the FBI to investigate campus protests against the war in Gaza.
âAre we turning into the Soviet Union that we have long criticized for its abuse of power, corruption, and tyranny?â questioned Haddad. âIs this who we have become?â
Source link