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Georgetown Chimes
GU Protects Racists Sit-Ins Since 1920 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2023
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Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 104, No. 10, © 2023
Timeline of Events It has been 287 days since a student committed a hate crime against LaHannah Giles (CAS ’23) at Georgetown University. Below, see what has happened since the day of the hate crime. April 29, 2022
Student Commits Hate Crime Against Giles
April 30, 2022
Between the hours of 5 p.m. and 6 p.m., a white male student yells racial slurs at Giles and calls for the death of all Black people from a window in New South Hall.
May 2-6, 2022
May 6, 2022
University Contacts Giles for the First Time
For the first time since Giles filed their reports, the university reaches out to them.
University Sends Message to New South Residents
GUPD Develops Potential Suspects Based on Video Footage May 6, 2022
GUPD Provides Report to Other University Offices, Reveals It Has Lost Footage of the Incident May 13, 2022
May-November 2022
University Takes No Public Action
IDEAA representatives work with Giles over the next few weeks, revealing that all video footage has been lost.
Giles Meets with Johnson
Judy Johnson, the director of the Office of Student Conduct, meets with Giles . Giles says Johnson shames them for their reaction to the hate crime.
Giles Posts About Their Experience on Instagram November 30, 2022
Giles shares an Instagram post explaining what happened to them.
Giles and GUPR post demands including public acknowledgement from the university about the hate crime. December 5, 2022
Sit-In Protests Begin
December 5, 2022
GUPD Reclassifies Incident as Hate Crime December 6-7, 2022
December 7, 2022
Rally for Justice
Giles and over 200 students march from the front gates to the IDEAA office to protest the administration’s lack of response to the hate crime.
Administration Meets with Giles, GUPR Organizers
University officials review a document with GUPR organizers that includes the university’s planned responses to each of GUPR’s demands. December 8, 2022
University Publicly Apologizes December 9, 2022
GUPR Announces End of Sit-Ins
After the university commits to sustained dialogue and action during the Spring semester, GUPR organizers post a statement telling the community the sit-ins are ending.
University Meets with GUPR Organizers Again
GUPR organizers meet with administration to review the suggested edits that the university failed to make in the final email sent to the community. Administration makes some updates to the online statement and promises to post it on the university’s Instagram page, according to GUPR organizers.
December 17, 2022
University Meets with Giles
Giles and GUPR organizers speak with university officials about the new evidence that a suspect submitted and the delay in the report release date.
Original IDEAA Hate Crime Report Release Deadline
The IDEAA fails to release its investigation report of the hate crime by the deadline that it promised it would be sent to Giles.
January 13, 2023 January 16, 2023
GUPR Community Meeting
Second IDEAA Hate Crime Report Release Date January 31, 2023
February 1, 2023
Third IDEAA Hate Crime Report Release Date
February 7, 2023
February 7, 2023
GUPR Informs IDEAA of Sit-Ins GUPR Announces that the Sit-Ins are Still On
Executive Editor
CW: This article references/discusses racism and hate speech. Please refer to this article on thehoya.com for onand off-campus resources. Editor’s Note: See a detailed timeline of events leading up to the Feb. 8 sitins on the left side of this page.
S
tudents reignited sit-in protests this week, gathering in Healy Hall to demand justice for LaHannah Giles (CAS ’23) and for the university to expel the student who committed a hate crime against them nearly a year ago. On April 29, Georgetown Day, a white male student called for the death of all Black people and shouted racial slurs at Giles, who is Black, from the window of New South Hall, a first-year dorm. Following the hate crime, Giles said they and five eyewitnesses identified the perpetrator from screenshots of security camera footage and
GOCard data during a university investigation, but the university failed to take disciplinary action against the student or inform the university community of the hate crime. Sit-in protests first took place from Dec. 5 to 9, pushing the university to acknowledge the hate crime and expel the perpetrator. The protests resumed on Wednesday following the conclusion of the Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity & Affirmative Action’s (IDEAA) two-month investigation of the hate crime, which yielded inconclusive results Feb. 7. In their report, which Giles said the university prohibited them from sharing publicly, IDEAA claims there was insufficient evidence to determine the perpetrator, even though Giles said they identified the student. “I don’t think any words can ever describe how I felt after receiving the investigation results yesterday,” Giles said at the Feb. 8 sit-in. “Just like I was denied justice 10 months ago, I am now
being denied justice once again today, this time with a stinging sense of finality.” A university spokesperson said IDEAA applied its “preponderance of the evidence” standard and was unable to identify the perpetrator — meaning IDEAA could not say if any suspects were more likely than not responsible for the hate crime. “Investigators carefully reviewed all submitted evidence and interviewed witnesses and potential suspects, including new evidence that was submitted and new witnesses who were identified in December, late January and early February,” the spokesperson wrote to The Hoya. Evidence included security footage, photographs, GOCard swipes, testimonial evidence and documents provided by suspects and witnesses, according to the spokesperson. Hundreds of students filtered through the sit-in organized by Georgetown University Protects Racists (GUPR), a group of stu-
dent activists demanding justice for Giles, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and participated in chants every hour, including “Justice for LaHannah,” “Expel the Racist Student” and “No Justice, No Peace.” The original sit-ins were organized by Giles and other GUPR leaders to demand accountability and acknowledgement from the university about the hate crime. “Shame on the entire institution of Georgetown, for constantly failing its marginalized communities, but especially its Black students — Black women in particular,” Giles said. “It is not on Black students to dismantle this university’s legacy of white supremacy; it is this institution’s job.” The Second Round of Sit-Ins In their 1 p.m. address at the Feb. 8 sit-in, Giles shared updates while surrounded by a crowd of supporters from the campus community. See GUPR, A4
December 9, 2022
The university has not done so as of Feb. 10. December 18, 2022
Students Demand Justice
Adora Zheng November 22, 2022
Giles, @guprotectsracists Posts Demands
MIRANDA XIONG/THE HOYA
LaHannah Giles (CAS ’23) addresses a crowd of student supporters at the Feb. 8 sit-in protest outside University President John J. DeGioia’s (CAS ’79, GRD ’95) office on the second floor of Healy Hall.
University Releases IDEAA Hate Crime Report February 8, 2023
Sit-Ins Resume
GU272+ Descendants Discuss History, Future Julia Butler
City Desk Editor
Descendants of the GU272+ joined Georgetown University’s Department of African American studies Feb. 2 for a conversation on the legacy of the GU272+: the 314 enslaved people the Maryland Jesuits, who operated Georgetown in 1838, sold to financially sustain the university. Adam Rothman, history professor and principal curator of the Georgetown Slavery Archive, a repository of materials relating to GU272+. Rothman moderated the event, which focused on the development of the GU272 Memory Project, an organization dedicated to tracking the ancestry of the enslaved people affiliated with Georgetown and honoring their legacy in the community. Rochell Prater and Carlos Scott, two GU272+ descendants, led the discussion. “I want to thank our ancestors really for their resilience, their intestinal and spiritual fortitude, their formidable courage,” Scott said at the event. “I know they could not see a day like today or a night like tonight happening. But man, this is really special. And I’m so proud to be a part of it.” Prater said that after experiencing so much familial
GU272 MEMORY PROJECT
Descendants of the GU272+ gather for a photo together in the 1980’s. loss and grief in her life, finding out that she was a part of the GU272+ network through a 2016 The New York Times article was life-changing. “To me, it felt like I had hit the lottery,” Prater said at the event. “Not a monetary lottery. Hear me, right? I had family, y’all. I had family all over the place.” Prater and Scott grew up in Maringouin, La., the same region where Maryland Jesuits sold their ancestors
and around 314 other enslaved people in 1838. The sale amassed $115,000, equivalent to about $3.3 million today, in what was one of the largest sales of human beings in U.S. history. The Jesuits then used the profits to pay off their debts and fund the development of Georgetown University. In response to this history, Georgetown University President John DeGioia (CAS ’79, GRD ’95) formed the Work-
ing Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation — a group dedicated to exploring the university’s past involvement with the institution of slavery — in September 2015. The establishment of this group followed the reopening Mulledy Hall and McSherry Hall, named for Rev. Thomas F. Mulledy, president of Georgetown who managed the sale, and Rev. William See GU272+, A7
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