California's law enforcement mutual aid system, which sets aside $25 million annually to support local agencies in natural disasters and other emergencies, was used by the state's public universities to quell pro-Palestine protests. In an effort to curb student-led demonstrations for Palestinian solidarity on their campuses, university officials asked for outside law enforcement assistance through the LEMA (Law Enforcement Mutual Aid) system.
University President Tom Jackson of California Polytechnic University, Humboldt, emailed the sheriff of Humboldt County's police department in April 2024, asking to bring in additional law enforcement officers to end a three-day occupation by students demonstrating in solidarity with Palestine. He requested assistance from outside agencies under the LEMA program, which allows for reimbursement of expenses incurred during mutual aid events.
The university's decision was part of a broader effort by California public universities to suppress pro-Palestine protests. According to an investigative series conducted by The Intercept, more than 20,000 pages of documentation show that at least 30 public universities across the state requested LEMA assistance, including Cal Poly Humboldt.
University officials argued that campus closures would result in significant revenue loss and cited the threat of "domestic violent extremism" as justification for the action. However, civil liberties advocates argued that the use of outside law enforcement agencies to suppress student-led protests undermined trust between students and university administrators.
The practice of bringing outside law enforcement officers onto campus has become increasingly normalized in the University of California system, with many universities responding to pro-Palestine demonstrations by deploying militarized police forces. This approach fundamentally alters the power dynamics of a protest, said Sabiya Ahamed, a staff attorney at Palestine Legal, as it brings trained violent tactics against peaceful protesters.
In some cases, this resulted in radicalizing students who witnessed the use of force against their classmates and injuring peaceful protesters. For instance, at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), university administrators tapped state emergency services funds to bring in outside law enforcement officers and arrest countless students, with many injured.
The pro-Palestine encampments presented university leaders with a public relations crisis, forcing them to choose between allowing peaceful protests to continue or quelling them using the full force of the police. With encouragement from the state government, California public universities overwhelmingly chose the latter approach.
The Intercept's investigation into the use of LEMA funds by California public universities found that these funds were used to bring in outside law enforcement agencies to clear university pro-Palestine encampments, often resulting in violent crackdowns and arrests. The incident highlights the normalization of militarized policing on college campuses and underscores concerns about the erosion of trust between students and university administrators.
University President Tom Jackson of California Polytechnic University, Humboldt, emailed the sheriff of Humboldt County's police department in April 2024, asking to bring in additional law enforcement officers to end a three-day occupation by students demonstrating in solidarity with Palestine. He requested assistance from outside agencies under the LEMA program, which allows for reimbursement of expenses incurred during mutual aid events.
The university's decision was part of a broader effort by California public universities to suppress pro-Palestine protests. According to an investigative series conducted by The Intercept, more than 20,000 pages of documentation show that at least 30 public universities across the state requested LEMA assistance, including Cal Poly Humboldt.
University officials argued that campus closures would result in significant revenue loss and cited the threat of "domestic violent extremism" as justification for the action. However, civil liberties advocates argued that the use of outside law enforcement agencies to suppress student-led protests undermined trust between students and university administrators.
The practice of bringing outside law enforcement officers onto campus has become increasingly normalized in the University of California system, with many universities responding to pro-Palestine demonstrations by deploying militarized police forces. This approach fundamentally alters the power dynamics of a protest, said Sabiya Ahamed, a staff attorney at Palestine Legal, as it brings trained violent tactics against peaceful protesters.
In some cases, this resulted in radicalizing students who witnessed the use of force against their classmates and injuring peaceful protesters. For instance, at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), university administrators tapped state emergency services funds to bring in outside law enforcement officers and arrest countless students, with many injured.
The pro-Palestine encampments presented university leaders with a public relations crisis, forcing them to choose between allowing peaceful protests to continue or quelling them using the full force of the police. With encouragement from the state government, California public universities overwhelmingly chose the latter approach.
The Intercept's investigation into the use of LEMA funds by California public universities found that these funds were used to bring in outside law enforcement agencies to clear university pro-Palestine encampments, often resulting in violent crackdowns and arrests. The incident highlights the normalization of militarized policing on college campuses and underscores concerns about the erosion of trust between students and university administrators.