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University of Florida dean suspends anti-Israel protesters for years

The new administrator discarded lighter sentencing recommendations.

University of Florida Stadium
Ben Hill Griffin Stadium at the University of Florida. Credit: Pablo Corredor via Wikimedia Commons.

Chris Summerlin, dean of students at the University of Florida in Gainesville, chose not to offer slap-on-the-wrist penalties to pro-Hamas protesters arrested on campus on April 29.

Instead, Summerlin applied multiple-year suspensions of some students, the most severe penalty short of expulsion. The students in question will need to reapply should they wish to continue their education at the school, an option not allowed if expelled.

Summerlin, who began his position in April, rejected recommendations from hearing bodies that examined police videos and heard testimony. Tess Jaden Segal, 20, and Allan Hektor Frasheri, 21, received suggested sentences of one-year suspensions; Summerlin took it a step further and administered three- and four-year suspensions, respectively.

Segal said in a statement, “I stand in solidarity with Palestinians not in spite of my Judaism but because of it.”

Frasheri also faces criminal charges for allegedly spitting on a university police officer. The court scheduled a hearing for him on July 24.

Other students receiving three-year suspensions included Roseanna Yashoda Bisram, 20, and Augustino Matthias Pulliam, 20.

A lawyer for the suspect’s ex-wife stated that his client and her family were “detained 10.5 months for a crime their father/ex-husband committed.”
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