Protesters: “Disclosure! Divest!” As student-led protests take place across the country, university faculty are risking arrest to support the demonstrators. “He's a professor. He's a professor.” At the University of Virginia, The Times got an inside look at the faculty's role. “I can walk you through the events of the day, if you want.” And how negotiations with the police broke down at a critical moment. “Why did he…” “Stand down.” “They were reckless enough to allow the Virginia State Police to come here fully armed with rifles and pepper spray. One of my colleagues was standing there trying to talk to the Virginia State Police. He was arrested. The other person standing next to him was pushed back behind the line and partially pepper sprayed. It didn't need to come to this.” The night before police raided the pro-Palestinian encampment, several Virginia professors tried to defuse the confrontation, recording a conversation with university police chief Tim Longo. The Times agreed to blur the faces of faculty members concerned about their job security. The protesters were refusing to negotiate with the university. So several professors acted as intermediaries. This at times frustrated administrators, who told The Times the process required drastic decisions. “We were here in shifts, two-hour shifts, basically. We wore yellow armbands to identify us as faculty liaisons. Our job was just to be the liaison between the administration, the police and the students.” Hours later, professors Walter Heineke and Mark Sicoli recorded the incident on their cell phones and approached the police chief again, saying they were confused about what campus policy actually stipulated about the use of small recreational tents. Within 30 minutes, Chief Longo called the Virginia State Police before the professors and police reached an agreement on a tent policy. Officers arrived shortly with pepper spray and M4 assault rifles and helped clear the encampment. In total, there were dozens of protesters in about 20 tents. “Shame on you. Shame on you.” University officials had warned the protesters days before that they were violating school rules, he said. Twenty-seven people were arrested, including at least one professor, who declined to discuss the case. “He's a professor. This is a professor,” he said. “We were in front of the students at the camp, then the faculty. Then the Virginia State Police came, they hit me with a riot shield, I got these bruises, they sprayed me with pepper spray, I guess they held me for about 10 minutes, and finally they cut my zip ties.” The violent police response caused anxiety across campus. And now, several faculty members, including Heineke, want to hold the university accountable for what they say was a violent crackdown on free speech protesting Israel's war on Gaza. “I just want to show you one thing about how they're running around,” Heineke said. “If they'd said, let's negotiate, if we leave the tents up for a few more days, this will be resolved. We're not robbing banks. We're just putting up a few tents. It was less risky, why couldn't they have done it differently?” The university president and campus police chief did not respond to requests for comment. “Now I will turn the conversation to Chief Longo.” However, in a virtual town hall on May 7, university police and university officials defended their actions, citing unidentified outside agitators as the primary concern. “Police encountered physical confrontations and attempted assaults and felt unprepared to deal with them given the circumstances. So the decision was made to call in the state police.” “We have a duty to fight for Palestine.” “We have a duty to…” “I feared that myself and the deputy chief would find ourselves in a situation where we would be surrounded and would have to defend ourselves. It was clear from the words and actions that things were escalating.” “Free Palestine.” “In front of the historic rotunda.” In response, Heineke and several other faculty members held their own town hall in an attempt to show that the police actions were unjust. Then, on May 10, the University of Virginia Faculty Council held a public hearing with President Ryan to discuss the university's response to the protests. “I am grateful that he prevented us from getting into a situation like Columbia.” While some voices were supportive, most speakers were critical. “I am heartbroken by what happened,” he said. “It is reprehensible that the Virginia State Police came out in full gear and used excessive force to terrorize students in their own backyard.” “If you feel I am not a good leader, that is your choice.” Faculty members voted to call for an independent investigation into his and Chief Longo's decision on May 4, but stopped short of outright condemning the police's actions. “I get it, and I say it again, I need people here to be here in court.” On the other side of town that same day, supporters of protesters charged with trespassing gathered in solidarity at the courthouse. “This is the first hearing for everyone who has been charged with trespassing, including two of our students.” On May 15, charges against many of those arrested at the protest camp were dropped by prosecutors. A University of Virginia spokesman told The Times that the university had not yet agreed to an independent investigation into the decision to call in state police.
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