Graffiti including swastikas, N-word and threats scrawled in bathroom at Cal State Northridge
Anti-Semitic and racist messages and threats scrawled in black marker in a building at Cal State Northridge on Wednesday prompted campus police to boost patrols.
The graffiti was reported about 4:45 p.m. inside a men’s restroom on the third floor of Sierra Hall. The messages and symbols were written in four or five locations in the bathroom, said Cal State Northridge Police Capt. Alfredo Fernandez.
People on campus posted photos of the messages on Twitter late Wednesday.
“Mass shooting in Sierra Hall 12/12/18,” one read, above a swastika. Another included the N-word.
Fernandez said authorities had not identified a suspect. “We’re just going to investigate it to try to determine what kind of threat we have, if it’s credible,” he said.
In a statement on Twitter, the university condemned the “hateful language and symbols” and said it was working to remove the graffiti. Shortly before 11 p.m., Fernandez said the graffiti had been cleaned up.
“CSUN is aware of the hateful and offensive graffiti in Sierra Hall. CSUN Police are investigating this use of hateful language and symbols and threat against our community,” the university said. “CSUN condemns this in the strongest possible terms.”From CSUN's student newspaper, The Sundial:
CSUN police investigate mass shooting threat
CSUN police have begun investigating reports of a mass shooting threat being made against CSUN on Wednesday.
CSUN Chief of Police Anne Glavin stated in a press release that they are aware of the message, “Shooting in Sierra Hall 12/12/18,” posted on a wall in Sierra Hall and the similar hate language made last week in the same building.
Why is this stuff always in the men's restroom? Rebel Girl asks. She thinks she knows the answer.
4 comments:
Trump and others set the stage. How this will end is, well, still up in the air. Sad.
At least CSUN has the capacity and leadership to respond swiftly to such incidents.
Roy, are you ok in Trabucco Canyon? Read that canyon residents were required to evacuate.
Trabuco Creek is raging, but we live quite a bit up from there, far from such threats. We're safe.
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