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SPECIAL SERIES : Campus Controversy: Black Studies Professor Arrested |
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Team Appointed to Investigate Professor's Arrest
President urges campus to avoid "rush judgement"
October 31, 2005 12:01 PM
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When African American professor Antwi Akom drove to San Francisco State University to retrieve a book for his class the next day, he never imagined he would end up behind bars. Akom, who is 35 and on a tenure track, was arrested and charged with two felonies- resisting arrest and assaulting a police officer- after he was stopped and queried by a security guard around 11 p.m. The incident occurred Tuesday night on the way to his office in the College of Ethnic Studies. The police report released by the university portrays a different version as told by the security guard and three police officers involved in the incident. Two of the officers were black; the other was white, according to the statement released by the university. The white officer suffered minor injuries and was treated at a nearby hospital and released. He apparently was the first to encounter Akom. At that point the guard said he was frightened and went downstairs and called his supervisor who then informed police. The responding officers all acknowledge Akom told them he is a professor at the university. Akom, a tall, dark skinned man with long dreadlocks, has been teaching at SF State since Aug. 2004. He has no previous record, and according to those who know him, he is extremely calm, patient and good tempered. "The guy doesn't even have any parking tickets," said Shenoda. "The guy is as clean as it gets." Don Menn, a journalism lecturer at SF State said that he goes into his office after hours all the time and he has never had a problem. One of Akom's colleagues said he has experienced racial profiling in the past. Jeannine Villasenor currently works with him at Berkeley High School's Academic Pathways Project, a program Akom co-created to tutor urban youth and help them make a successful transition to college. She also worked with Akom at the Institute for the Study of Social Change from 1999 to 2004 where Akom was a research fellow. Villasenor said Akom is often the victim of racial profiling. "Antwi understands that he is often a target of racial profiling and he is overly nice and overly understanding to people who discriminate against him," she said. "He is extremely calm, extremely patient and extremely understanding." Villasenor said when she and Akom worked at UC Berkeley the police would often give him a hard time for walking on campus. "When we worked together there this happened to him often. The police would flash their lights on him and ask him what he was doing here," she said. "He has a history of this happening to him for no reason besides him being a young, urban, black man." Tonight a meeting will be held in order to organize a rally for Professor Akom on Tuesday Nov. 1. The specific room is still to be announced, but it will be held at 7 p.m. in the Cesar Chavez Student Center. [X]press staff writer and Oakland Tribune correspondant Jessica Jones wrote this story for both publications.
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COMMENTS
A.W. said October 31, 2005 12:38 PM
Great story...much better than the one in today's edition of SFgate.com. Nice work. Anonymous said October 31, 2005 4:42 PM
There are many sides to this story and this article seems to have only explored one of them. It fails to mention that there were two African-American cops there as well, not just the white one. It also fails to mention that Mr. Akom did not appropriately identify himself as a professor, so how would the security guard and police officers know whether or not to let him into the building. This is not a case of racism or an attack on personal and academic freedom. This is a case of misunderstanding. We have not yet heard all sides of the story, so there should be no judgement as to who did what yet and why. On a side note, I feel pity for Mr. Matthew Shenoda. To call the police "racist pigs" reduces him to no more than those who would even think to call African-Americans something they would not like to be reminded of. What kind of example is that for a university professor? Just so you know, I am a person of color, but that should not matter, should it? Leslie said October 31, 2005 4:43 PM
No one went to his car to keep the children safe until his friend arrived??!! Is this true?? If so, it is imperative that the investigators look into that as well. Black Thoughts said October 31, 2005 4:45 PM
"I doubt you will. You probably think you wrote a Pulitzer Prize winning piece which in reality has done nothing but paint student reporters as biased and divisive, something I've worked hard to live down." Bill said November 8, 2005 1:14 PM
The children in the car is THE story. How old are they? How long were they left alone at 11pm in SF State? The other stuff pales in comparison. I don't care if he's blue, he should be hauled into court for endangering his children.
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Great story...much better than the one in today's edition of SFgate.com. Nice work.