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Los Angeles
#MeToo Wednesday, April 18, 2018 Volume 180 Number 3
The Voice of Los Angeles City College Since 1929
Movement Hits City
I
by eVe moReNo
t was only the second day of school when photography student Astrid Hernandez fled from the Martin Luther King, Jr. Library after she says a fellow student sat down near her and began to masturbate on Feb. 6, 2018. Hernandez works in the Library, but ran to the nearby Chemistry Building to find a friend. âI fled to the Chemistry Buildingâs basement and cried to Natalie,â Hernandez said. Immediately Photography Instructional Assistant Natalie Embrey called campus security. When security arrived, Hernandez was interviewed and asked to describe the incident. Both Hernandez and Embrey say the school security offered to expel her attacker from school after the interview. Hernandez says she never received a follow up call from campus security. âI went with my friend to complain at the sheriff âs oďŹce,â she said. âMy friend asked the sheriffs why hasnât there been a police report filed, and the sheriff âs response was that it was never actually reported by the securities to the sheriffs who file the reports.â Three groups make up campus security at LACC: security guards who respond to calls, cadets that patrol the campus, and the sheriffs who file reports and make arrests. âWhen I told the police what had happened their response was why didnât I do anything, or why didnât I get up, I felt like I was being victim-blamed,â Hernandez said. âWe shouldnât be victim-blaming toward survivors,â she said. âMy incident wasnât reported even though I was interviewed after the attack.â Fairfax High School graduate Bobae Yoo says she went to school with the alleged offender. She says there were multiple incidents where he harassed his peers. âHe tried to pull that shit with me and I told him to f*ck off, and that pretty much told him âno,ââ Yoo said. The Collegian interviewed the alleged perpetrator about the incident. He is a third semester student at LACC, and is currently majoring in computer science. He says he was born with autism, a disorder that impairs the ability to communicate and interact with others. With tears in his eyes, he told the Collegian that he is not a bad person, and his autism is under control. âAll I was doing was scratching my nuts to get rid of an itch,â he said. âIâm a fine student and I donât bul-
ly people, Iâm just trying to make friends and transfer out to a university.â Ideal Program Services (IPS) is an organization based in South Los Angeles that works with individuals across a broad spectrum of physical and cognitive disabilities. Executive Director Lara Okunubi says the alleged wrongdoer needs guidance from a professional who can work with him on behavior modification. She also mentioned that April is Autism Awareness month. âOur philosophy is simple, when support improves, outcomes will increase,â she said. âThe hormones for a person that age is the same regardless of cognitive diagnosis.â
âi once had a dude grab My ass While i Was WalKing on caMpus. i Went to the lacc sheriff station and they didnât KnoW What to say.â - Johanna Molina,
cinema and photography student
She says it takes a community effort to train people with special needs for the changes that occur during puberty. âHe needs help from someone who understands what he is going through and can redirect him on what is a socially acceptable conduct in public,â Okunubi said. LACC student and IPS Director of Consumer Services and Chief Administrative OďŹcer Karla Melgar says that unfortunately people diagnosed with autism have the tendency to isolate and be misunderstood. âBased on my experience at the program, the aggression and inappropriate social behaviors detaches from SEE âHARASSMENTâ PAGE 4
Photo by eve moreno Luz/CoLLegian
Photography student Astrid Hernandez organized a protest outside of Franklin Hall on April 9, 2018 to raise awareness and share the stories of sexual assault survivors. Hernandezâs sign reads, âOne in five women will be a victim of sexual assault in college, 90 percent will not report it.â
Rumor Mill Creates Unsafe Environment
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Heads turn toward Evelyn Siliezar whose clicking heels announce her arrival at the podium. Stationed between two art installations, the graphic design major hooks the audience with her performance of online poet kgosi. shangoâs âSlut.â Performers wait in the Student Union Building of Los Angeles City College. One of them sports electric blue curls, while another sports blonde tips. They are as disparate as the female writers they have chosen to commemo-
rate during LACCâs Womenâs History Month Celebration. For the first time, the event will feature an oral interpretation contest where students will recite a piece written by the author of their choice. Senator of Student Services for the Associated Student Government (ASG,) Gaby Toapanta coordinated the event while the Communication Studies Department sponsored the contest. âIt was really important to have something to celebrate Womenâs History Month and also International Womenâs Day⌠you donât
see a lot of it on this campus,â Toapanta said. The contest begins with kgosi. shangoâs âSlut. The sex positive piece urges listeners to embrace their carnal desires and do away with shame, a message Siliezar feels compelled to share. âI want women and men who have been called sluts and whores to know that there are other people like them,â she said. They should not cower in fear ⌠I want SEE âWOMENâS HISTORYâ PAGE 4
A male student has been accused of sexually harassing a female student on February 6, 2018. The alleged victim says that the alleged offender followed her around campus and then began masturbating next to her for over five minutes in the library. The female student says that when she reported what happened to the campus sheriff âs department, they didnât see what happened as a serious crime. However, the event quickly blew up across social media. The alleged victim posted news of the incident on her Facebook account and other female students commented that this male student had also harassed them. Several students noted that they had negative encounters with the alleged perpetrator as far back as middle school. The story continued to build momentum and the male studentâs face was quickly spread across social media including on the Facebook group page, âToo Broke to Afford Books (Whaddup LACC?).â ASG Vice President of Clubs, Theresa Morgan Cruz is an administrator of the groupâs page and she implored students to stop posting the alleged perpetratorâs face on the page.
âPlease stop posting pics of the student alleged to have been involved in an incident on campus last week,â she posted online. âI will delete and block anyone else that posts his picture. There is absolutely no proof this actually happened. The sheriff âs oďŹce found no offense occurred. Iâm not saying it didnât happen, but we cannot be judge and jury on this page.â According to Cruz, a rumor about a student being attacked in front of the Student Union on March 16 by a presumed vigilante group was brought to her attention by a student who messaged her. âIn response to these posts a vigilante group attacked a student outside the Student Union building on Friday,â she said on the page. âI still donât know if it was the accused, or someone who looked like him. Please letâs get together to discuss safety on campus, and what we can all do to make LACC a safe environment for all students including those that have special needs. Iâm in the ASG oďŹce every day from 11 to 1 p.m. if you would like to address your concerns privately.â Dean of Student Life, Alan Andriassian, said that as soon as he heard the rumor about a vigilante group attacking a student he looked into the matter with campus security. They told him no one reported anything - it was just a rumor.