Wayne State University police dismantle encampment; 12 arrested

2 min read
  • Wayne State University dismantled a week-old encampment erected to protest the Israel-Hamas war
  • University police arrested 12 people
  • Students have moved their protest to a nearby street

Wayne State University police officers moved in early Thursday and dismantled an encampment set up by protestors opposed to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. 

University spokesperson Matt Lockwood told Bridge Michigan that Wayne State Police made a total of 12 arrests. 

By mid-morning Thursday the camp had been cleared and the site blocked off with caution tape, but students moved their protest to a street nearby, outside the university’s STEM Innovation Learning Center. The protesters, made up of students, faculty and alumni, were heard chanting slogans such as “Free, Free Palestine.” 

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“We need your energy, we need your vision, we need your guidance because clearly the people in charge do not know what … they are doing,” Jessica Moorman, an assistant professor of communication at WSU, told students in the crowd. 

“This is a public institution. You have the right to ask ‘Where is my money? How is it being spent?’,” Moorman said. “The faculty sees you. We are here, we support you,” she said. “Please know you are not alone.”  

By noon Thursday, the group had dispersed, though several police cars and campus security guards remained stationed in the area. 

Protesters set up their encampment one week ago, erecting roughly 30 tents outside of State Hall. 

“Since the encampment was established on May 23, it presented legal, health and safety, and operational challenges for our community,” President WSU President Kimberly Andrews Espy said in a letter to the community

Espy said university leadership had “repeatedly engaged with occupants of the encampment,” and communicated that the protestors were trespassing. 

“No individual or group is permitted to claim campus property for their own use and deny others access to that property.”

The university announced it was switching to remote operations Tuesday. Espy said in her Thursday announcement that Thursday would remain remote and she would announce later Thursday what Friday’s operations will be. 

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