Education

Online threats heighten tensions at University of Missouri

Online threats heighten tensions at University of Missouri

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

University of Missouri students clap while the co-chair of the Forum on Graduate Rights introduces speakers during a rally for graduate student rights at Traditions Plaza at the University of Missouri campus on Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, in Columbia, Mo. Photo: AP

COLUMBIA: University of Missouri police said Wednesday they have arrested a suspect accused of making online threats against black students and faculty, after racial tensions on campus resulted in the departure of two senior university officials. Police identified the man arrested as 19-year-old Hunter M. Park. He is being held on a preliminary charge of suspicion of making a terrorist threat and hasn't been formally charged. His bond is $4,500. The online posts on the anonymous location-based messaging app YikYak and other social media Tuesday threatened to 'shoot every black person I see.' Missouri University of Science and Technology confirmed that Park is a student there. He was arrested at a residence hall on its campus. The school said no weapons were found. The school's online emergency information center tweeted, 'There is no immediate threat to campus.' It has been a tumultuous week for the flagship campus of the University of Missouri system. The student government president reported in September that people shouted racial slurs at him from a passing pickup truck, galvanizing the protest movement. A graduate student went on hunger strike to demand the resignation of university system President Tim Wolfe over his handling of racial complaints, and more than 30 members of the Missouri football team went on strike in his support. Wolfe resigned Monday. Hours later, the top administrator of the Columbia campus, Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin, was forced out. David Wallace, a spokesman for the student government group Missouri Students Association, said the group asked university officials to cancel classes Wednesday in light of the threats. 'It's really disheartening and proves the point of why these protests and boycotts were necessary,' Gaby Rodriguez, a senior, said. Some students, faculty and alumni have said the protests and top leaders' resignations are the culmination of years of racial tension. The university has promised changes. Chuck Henson, a black law professor and associate dean, was appointed Tuesday as the university's first-ever interim vice chancellor for inclusion, diversity and equity.