Yale: Cops Admonished White Student Who Reported Sleeping Black Student

NEW HAVEN, CT - JUNE 28: Yale University old campus is shown on the set of the latest "Indiana Jones" movie at Yale University Campus on June 28, 2007 in New Haven, Connecticut. (Photo by Bobby Bank/WireImage)

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Yale University police officers who responded to a call about a black graduate student who had fallen asleep in the common area of a campus residence admonished the white student who reported it, a university administrator said Thursday.

The officers interviewed both students and then told the complaining student that the other woman had every right to be there, according to Yale Vice President for Student Life Kimberly Goff-Crews, who said she found the episode deeply troubling.

“This incident and others recently reported to me underscore that we have work to do to make Yale not only excellent but also inclusive,” Goff-Crews said in a statement.

The black student, Lolade Siyonbola, posted two videos of the encounter Monday night on social media showing police interviewing her for more than 15 minutes. She told police she had fallen asleep while working on a paper.

Siyonbola, who said in the videos that the same student had called police months earlier on a friend who had gotten lost in a stairwell of the building, said she saw the statement from Goff-Crews as “a move in the right direction.” She said requests for action by the university are currently being drafted by black graduate students.

Goff-Crews said administrators and the Yale police chief are planning listening sessions with students in the months ahead to address the episode. She said she also plans to work with administrators and students to review suggestions on how to improve the university’s response to incidents of discrimination and harassment.

5
Show Comments

Notable Replies

  1. Yale ought to bloody well expel the racist.

  2. Totally! Why is she still there?

  3. Avatar for paulw paulw says:

    In the previous article it was said that the white student had a history of mental health issues.

    And yes, AP, telling someone that another person who has a perfect right to be there does in fact have a right to be there does not really count as admonishing. Admonishing would be something more like “this fits within the definition of filing a false police report, which is a crime. Have a good evening.”

    Note, btw, the very measured response from the victim in this episode. (Who no doubt mostly wants to get back to her studies, since this is pretty much the end of the academic year.)

  4. Sleeping while black. Just fortunate for Ms. Siyonbola that her sleep-provocation was not so threatening as to create some kind of stand-your-ground scenario.

Continue the discussion at forums.talkingpointsmemo.com

Participants

Avatar for system1 Avatar for paulw Avatar for bikerdad Avatar for krusher Avatar for shakerosalt

Continue Discussion