University of Minnesota President Rebeca Cunningham gave a report about Monday’s occupation of Morrill Hall at the University Senate meeting Thursday, saying the actions of protesters Monday were unacceptable.
The protests and occupation of Morrill Hall were led by UMN Students for a Democratic Society. The occupation lasted several hours, during that time windows were broken inside the building, security cameras were spray painted and doors were barricaded. Many members of staff were in the building.
“This is clearly unacceptable behavior within our University community,” Cunningham said. “And to be clear, this was not a peaceful protest and not a First Amendment-protected activity. These activities crossed the line into illegal activity.”
Cunningham said the actions of protesters Monday endangered the safety of the University community and undermined the legitimacy of important causes that students, faculty and staff care about.
This is the first protest this academic year where arrests occurred. Eleven protesters were arrested and released Wednesday, and one faces charges.
“We’ve seen many peaceful protests already this semester, both before Monday and even after that without incident,” Cunningham said. “However, what happened in Morrill Hall on Monday was different. The situation involved intimidating employees and their workplaces, hampering their ability to move about freely and destruction of University property.”
Cunningham spoke directly about Minnesota Daily reporter Tyler Church, who was briefly detained Monday and had his belongings confiscated by the University of Minnesota Police Department (UMPD), which were not returned until Wednesday.
“I want to reiterate that we’re all committed to ensuring our journalists are able to safely and freely carry out their responsibilities and be in the eyes and the ears of the public, and we’ll continue that commitment to be at the forefront of our work,” Cunningham said.
UMPD released a similar statement which states they are committed to ensuring journalists can safely and freely do their job.
Cunningham said UMPD is investigating the occupation of Morrill Hall with Hennepin County, including what was observed by employees and what was captured on building and campus security cameras.
“When I have tearful, frightened staff calling from their office, that is the time for our campus police to restore safety,” Cunningham said. “This was vandalism and disruption of University operations.”
There was a resolution from faculty to formally disapprove of UMPD for its involvement, but it was not discussed because of time constraints. The student senate censured UMPD earlier Thursday afternoon.
Correction: A previous version of this article inaccurately stated there is a University senate meeting Nov. 7.
KG
Oct 26, 2024 at 1:19 pm
There appears to be an effort to downplay the significance of Morrill Hall’s seizure by SDS supporters of Hamas. However, this was far from trivial. President Cunningham stated that “the situation involved intimidating employees in their workplaces, restricting their movement, and destroying University property,” noting that UMN employees were tearful and afraid. Tyler Church’s report that protesters politely “escorted staff out” contradicts President Cunningham’s account. Yet, oddly, much of the media coverage has focused on Tyler Church’s personal items rather than the protest’s impact. The media seems intent on diverting attention from the real issues here.
Let’s not forget that democratic Israel is engaged in a defensive war against Hamas, a dictatorship and terrorist organization responsible for brutal and well-documented genocide in Israel’s villages on October 7, 2023. Hamas’s actions include mass rape, burning families alive, widespread torture and murder, and the abduction of hundreds of women and children. They continue to use Palestinian civilians as human shields and fire missiles at Israeli civilians, prolonging death and destruction in Gaza. Hamas bears full responsibility for the devastation in this war.
The UMN community is watching to see if the SDS Hamas enablers who have disrupted our campus and threatened its people will face appropriate consequences.
Richard Turnbull
Oct 26, 2024 at 6:13 am
I see the comment on here arguing that, in effect, any potential terrorist armed with firearms or bombs need only construct a “PRESS” label to make their backpack immune from police inspection at a protest, or in other contexts. There’s no protection in our First Amendment or criminal case law or statutes for anything that absurd, of course.
Becca
Oct 25, 2024 at 4:57 pm
“I want to reiterate that we’re all committed to ensuring our journalists are able to safely and freely carry out their responsibilities and be in the eyes and the ears of the public, and we’ll continue that commitment to be at the forefront of our work.” This lady is only committed to using UMPD to intimidate students and anyone else who dares mention her involvement in an ongoing genocide. Arresting members of the press is terrifying and authoritarian, and by not punishing the officers involved, she is giving UMPD the green light to do this again, regardless of what she’s ‘committed to’.
Student
Oct 25, 2024 at 2:53 pm
I got a chance to meet President Cunningham and was told that the arrested journalist was already laying down when UMPD entered and that they did not see that they were labeled PRESS like they did with the other journalists. Allegedly, the journalist was only in cuffs for 5 minutes and was released upon seeing that they were PRESS. Re: their belongings. Again the UMPD says that the reporter’s backpack was not with them and that while they made a good faith attempt to find it they had higher priorities than that. It was not just this reporter impacted. Faculty did not have access to things like their keys and phones for 24 hours and things like their work laptops for 48 hours. The UMPD needs to do better, but I feel like information isn’t being distributed clearly. I also wish I could fully trust that the UMPD is being honest about what went down.
Nathaniel Mills
Oct 25, 2024 at 2:38 pm
The resolution censuring UMPD was not not discussed because of time constraints at the Senate. It was not discussed because, as an item of new business, it needed 66% of the Senators to vote to bring it to the floor. Enough Senators voted against any discussion of the resolution to prevent it being considered.
Tom
Oct 25, 2024 at 2:26 pm
Today I learned (from David below) that if you put on a magic vest that says press you can’t be detained by police and you’re allowed to break the law and trespass on property that isn’t yours with zero consequences.
Absolutely genius stuff.
Raven
Oct 25, 2024 at 1:31 pm
This university seems to love MLK until it’s students practice anything he believed in. Oh my god, civil disobedience, how scary!!!
No crap students are suddenly resorting to “violence” (no one was in any danger btw- except for the protesters having guns pointed at them), they’ve been trying to get you to stop investing in mass murder for an entire year and you’ve been ignoring them!
Once again thank you for covering this topic, I can’t imagine (well actually i can) how frustrating it is to have the university claim that they are on your side after detaining your journalists and confiscate their belongings.
David
Oct 25, 2024 at 11:07 am
A great way for UMPD to demonstrate that they are committed to allowing journalists to do their job is to confiscate the backpack of someone extremely clearly marked as press without giving any reson beyond their presence at a protest for the sake of covering it. Surely that has no potential to intimidate others out of doing journalistic work at protests!