Pennsylvania

Oklahoma Resident Linked to Racist Messages Sent to Black Penn Students Had Been Accepted to Penn

Officials say the person, who has not yet been identified, was still invited to join and access the private Facebook group created for Penn's Class of 2020.

An Oklahoma resident linked to racist messages that were sent to African-American students at the University of Pennsylvania last week had been accepted to Penn but chose not to go to the school, according to Penn officials.

UPenn officials released the update Tuesday afternoon.

"We have learned that one of the individuals being investigated in Oklahoma had been offered admission to Penn, accepted the offer in May, but chose, ultimately, not to attend," they wrote in the release.

Officials say the person, who has not yet been identified, was still invited to join and access the private Facebook group created for Penn's Class of 2020.

"Utilizing this access, he obtained the contact information of some Black first-year students who had shared their information with the Facebook group," officials wrote. "He added those individual students to the racist GroupMe message thread without their permission or knowledge."

The person was one of three Oklahoma residents, including a University of Oklahoma student, linked to the racist texts. The University of Oklahoma also announced the student was no longer enrolled at their school.

Students at The University of Pennsylvania are speaking out after African-American students received racist texts on Friday. Now, a tie to a university in Oklahoma is causing questions.

Black students at Penn received the texts Friday from an account on an app called GroupMe, with the messages and images causing fear among the student body.

"The account contains violent, racist and thoroughly repugnant images and messages," university spokesman Ron Ozio said in an email. "The University is taking every step possible to address both the source of the racist material and the impact it has had on Black students on campus."

More than 100 students were placed into a group "N----- Lynching" and sent a series of racial epithets and photos of African-Americans hanging from trees by nooses from users like "Daddy Trump." An event invitation called "Daily Lynching" also went out to the students added to the group message.

"I just felt uncomfortable," said freshman Nate Morris, one of the students who received the messages. "What was said was 'We're going to find and hunt down all African-Americans at this college."

Early Saturday morning, University of Oklahoma president David Boren posted a message on Twitter stating a student at his school was involved in the texts and was suspended as a result. He also said, however, the messages originated from somewhere other than the University of Oklahoma.

Sunday afternoon, the University of Pennsylvania announced that three Oklahoma residents, including the University of Oklahoma student, were linked to the messages. They also said no students at Penn were involved in the messages.

Penn Police, the FBI and authorities in Oklahoma continue to investigate the incident.

Students posted on social media about the fear and sadness that they felt upon reading the texts.

The Penn College Republicans called the incident "absolutely despicable" while university President Amy Gutmann called the messages "simply deplorable."

There has been a rash of hate speech and rhetoric across the country in the wake of the presidential election, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate crimes. President-elect Donald Trump spoke out against such incidents in a "60 Minutes" interview that aired Sunday.

A group gathered on the University of Pennsylvania campus Friday afternoon to support each other. Students then filed into Huntsman Hall for a town hall discussion. Media were not allowed to attend the event.

Following the town hall, dozens of students marched through campus in protest of the hate speech and white extremism. They were one of several groups that protested across Philadelphia Friday night connected with the presidential election.

The students marched over to Franklin Field where the Quakers hosted Harvard in a football matchup. They were allowed to enter the field and protest around halftime along the sidelines.

In their statement to students Sunday, Penn officials said that staff members are working with the students who received the messages and providing them the support they need.

Mayor Jim Kenney said in a statement that he "condemns in the strongest possible terms the racist activity taking place at the University of Pennsylvania."

https://twitter.com/JenLouiseWilson/status/797238558159409152

"It is heartbreaking to see this type of activity here in the birthplace of our democracy and the city of brotherly love," Kenney said. "I urge the Philadelphia Commission on Human Relations to investigate and hold all responsible parties accountable for this disgusting behavior."

A petition from UPenn alumni was created on change.org calling for Trump, who graduated from the Wharton School at Penn in 1968, to speak on the incident. It had nearly 5,000 supporters; Trump's interview was not aired until Sunday night.

The racist messages came one day after students in Bucks County's Council Rock High School North reported swastikas and threats linked to Trump to school officials.

And on Wednesday, pro-Trump graffiti was spraypainted in Queen Village while Nazi graffiti was found in another South Philadelphia neighborhood.

An African-American student at Villanova University reported she was attacked by a group of men who yelled, "Trump," as they ran towards her Thursday.

Chad Dion Lassiter, a leading race relations expert with the group Black Men at Penn, said the disturbing incident at the West Philadelphia Ivy League school appears to be "a microcosm of what we've been seeing in the larger democracy."

"It is no surprise this is occurring on the heels of the victory by President-elect Trump, who didn’t create this environment, but certainly stoked the flames," Lassiter said.

He said black students and white students should come together to support each other in the aftermath of this "very disappointing" episode.

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