Trump
official wants students prosecuted for Israel protests
19
September, 2018
The
Trump administration’s top civil rights enforcer at the US
Department of Education wanted students who did nothing but hold a
noisy protest in support of Palestinian rights to be criminally
prosecuted.
Kenneth
Marcus was
captured on camera during a September 2016 meeting with an undercover
reporter working on Al Jazeera’s explosive
documentary about
the US Israel lobby.
The
documentary has never been broadcast due to censorship
by Qatar,
which funds Al Jazeera, following pressure from pro-Israel
organizations.
The
above video obtained by The Electronic Intifada is the latest excerpt
to leak from
the documentary. It shows Marcus speaking to the undercover reporter.
At
the time, Marcus was director of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for
Human Rights Under Law, an Israel lobby group unaffiliated with
Brandeis University. The Brandeis Center specializes in lawfare –
the use of legal proceedings to harass and silence Israel’s
critics.
In
that role, Marcus spearheaded the Israel lobby strategy of filing
complaints to the Department of Education under Title
VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act,
claiming that universities fail to protect Jewish students by not
cracking down on Palestine solidarity activism.
In
June, Marcus was confirmed as
the director of the Office for Civil Rights at the US Department of
Education. This means he is now in charge of investigating alleged
violations of the civil rights law.
He
has quickly fulfilled the worst fears of civil liberties defenders
by reopening
a bogus complaint against
Rutgers University made by the Zionist Organization of America.
That
complaint was thrown out by the Office for Civil Rights in 2014 for
lack of evidence.
Marcus
also informed the ZOA by letter that he has decided to enforce an
official definition of anti-Semitism that conflates criticism of
Israel and Zionism with anti-Jewish bigotry.
The
move, made without public discussion or congressional notice, could
have a profoundly chilling effect on academic freedom and free
speech.
Demonizing campus activists
In
the leaked video that can be watched at the top of this page, Marcus
explains his lobby group’s strategy, which he is now using his
government position to implement.
“Right
now, the challenge is that there are people who say, ‘you know
what, anti-Israel politics have nothing to do with anti-Semitism,’”
Marcus states. “What you gotta show that they’re not the same,
but they’re not entirely different either.”
“The
goal is to have the federal government establish a definition of
anti-Semitism that is parallel to the State Department definition,”
Marcus adds.
The
full documentary shows how Marcus’ organization aims to demonize
campus groups like Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) that
support BDS – boycott, divestment and sanctions – to hold Israel
accountable.
“You
have to show that they are racist hate groups, and that they are
using intimidation to get funded, and to consistently portray them
that way,” Marcus states.
The
so-called State Department definition of anti-Semitism was originally
adopted in 2010 and
updated in early 2018.
It
is substantially
the same as
the IHRA
definition of anti-Semitism that
Israel lobby groups pressured
the UK’s Labour Party to adopt as
part of their campaign to oust leader Jeremy Corbyn and curtail
expressions of support for Palestinian rights.
The
definition has been widely opposed for conflating criticism of Israel
and Zionism, Israel’s state ideology, with anti-Jewish bigotry.
Even
the definition’s lead
author,
former American Jewish Committee executive Kenneth Stern, strongly
opposes efforts
to enshrine the definition in legislation or university rule books,
or to use it for enforcement, arguing that this
would unconstitutionally infringe
on free speech.
Criminal prosecution
Not
all the footage of Marcus obtained by Al Jazeera’s undercover
reporter has been included in the censored documentary.
A
transcript of the full meeting seen by The Electronic Intifada shows
that Marcus also spoke about a May
2016 protest at
the University of California, Irvine.
The
UC Irvine protest sparked accusations that students from groups
including Students for Justice in Palestine had harassed, threatened
and intimidated attendees at a campus film screening and discussion
featuring a panel of Israeli soldiers.
The
screening was co-sponsored by Students
Supporting Israel,
a chapter of a campus organization funded by
anti-Palestinian financier Adam
Milstein.
Earlier
leaked footage from the censored Al Jazeera documentary published
by The Electronic Intifada names
Milstein as the secret funder of Canary
Mission,
the anonymous website that smears and harasses student activists,
especially from Students for Justice in Palestine.
But
after a three-month
investigation,
UC Irvine issued a 58-page
report concluding
that the most troubling allegations against the Palestine solidarity
activists were untrue.
False accusations
Pro-Israel
groups had claimed falsely that the protesters had blocked the exits
to the screening room and denied people entry.
The
investigation found that the doors were held shut from the inside,
keeping out Students for Justice in Palestine members and at least
one pro-Israel student.
As
The Electronic Intifada reported at
the time, the university investigation refuted claims made by
Students Supporting Israel, the Orange County Hillel chapter, the
Zionist Organization of America and Marcus’ Brandeis Center which
tried to paint the protesters as threats to Jewish students on
campus.
One
of the most serious allegations Marcus repeats in the Al Jazeera
transcript is that “a Jewish pro-Israel student was chased across
campus when they saw that she was one of the pro-Israel students, and
had to hide in a kitchen until security could come.”
But
this lurid claim was also refuted by the university’s
investigation. By her own account, that student had been denied
access to the screening room because the door was being held shut
from inside.
The
students who allegedly “chased” her were simply trying to find
another way into the screening room, the investigation concluded. In
their effort to do so they entered an adjacent room several minutes
after the pro-Israel student did and “were not chasing” her, the
report states.
The
only charge that the university substantiated was that the student
protest had “more likely than not” generated so much noise as to
disrupt the viewing of the film, a documentary about Israeli
soldiers.
Making
noise is inherent to speech and protest. But administrators found the
protesters in violation of one policy on student conduct:
“Obstruction or disruption of teaching, research, administration,
disciplinary procedures, or other university activities.”
As
a sanction, the university gave Students for Justice in Palestine a
warning and an assignment to host an educational event.
Marcus
told the undercover reporter that this sanction was “not enough.”
“I’d
like to see the students prosecuted, but the DA [district attorney]
has not been amenable,” Marcus said.
“But
we’ll keep pushing them so that if we don’t get these students
prosecuted this time, we’ll get the DA at least sensitized to the
issue and [they] should know that there will be pressure on them next
time.”
During
the investigation, the Brandeis Center, the Zionist Organization of
America and other pro-Israel groups wrote to UC Irvine administrators
to find the protesters in violation of codes of conduct and to urge
them to refer the incident to the Orange County District Attorney’s
office for criminal prosecution.
The
Zionist Organization of America cited as precedent the
2011 convictions of
the Irvine 11 students for protesting a speech by Michael Oren when
he was Israel’s ambassador in the United States. While the students
could have faced prison time for disruption of a public meeting, they
were sentenced to community service.
But
as noted, Marcus spoke to Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter in
September 2016 – more than a month after the UC Irvine
investigation debunked the serious accusations against Students for
Justice in Palestine members over the film screening protest.
Yet
Marcus continued to advance false accusations and insist that
students who did nothing more than hold a campus protest in support
of Palestinian rights should face the full weight of the American
criminal legal system.
Students
across the United States now face the perverse and dangerous
situation where the most senior federal official entrusted with
protecting their civil rights may use his position – in the
interests of a foreign state – to press for their criminal
prosecution merely for exercising their First Amendment rights.
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