University of Virginia bans Richard Spencer and others from campus
Education
University of Virginia bans Richard Spencer and others from campus
By Joe Heim
October 26 at 1:50 PM
The University of Virginia on Friday imposed a four-year ban from campus on Richard Spencer and nine other people who participated in a white-supremacist march on the schools grounds last year.
Spencer, a U-Va. graduate, led the torchlight procession of 150 to 200 marchers chanting Our blood, our soil and Jews will not replace us! through campus on Aug. 11, 2017. The march culminated with participants surrounding and attacking a much smaller group of counterprotesters who had circled a statue of Thomas Jefferson, the universitys founder.
The following day, Spencer and the others took part in the white-supremacist Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville that led to violent clashes and the death of counterprotester Heather Heyer, who was run over by a car allegedly driven by a man with neo-Nazi ties.
{Charlottesville timeline: Recounting a day of rage, hate, violence and death}
The trespass warnings issued today reflect our commitment to ensuring the safety of our community while upholding the principles of freedom of speech and assembly, U-Va. President Jim Ryan said in a statement. ... Spencer, in a written response to a request for comment, said: Ideas have no jurisdiction and ultimately cant be censored. That said, I have no immediate plans to engage in activism on campus, at U-Va. or anywhere.
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Joe Heim joined The Washington Post in 1999. He is a staff writer for the Metro section. He also writes Just Asking, a weekly Q&A column in the Sunday magazine. Follow
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