School President Daniele Struppa said the negotiated exit ends a “challenging chapter.”
—OC Register
John Eastman, an endowed law professor at Chapman University who last week repeated false claims of election fraud to an angry crowd just before they stormed the U.S. Capitol, is retiring.
Chapman President Daniele Struppa issued a statement late Wednesday saying the school and Eastman negotiated an exit, and that their agreement “closes this challenging chapter for Chapman.”
The deal comes as hundreds of students and professors at Chapman are calling for Eastman’s dismissal, citing a range of issues ranging from his accusations about Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ qualifications for office to his legal work for President Donald Trump in which he has made false claims that the election was rigged to help President-elect Joe Biden.
Eastman most recently generated controversy with a speech he gave on Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C. While standing next to Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, Eastman told the crowd about a chaotic — and false — vision of election fraud.
“They were unloading the ballots from that secret folder, matching them, matching them to the unvoted voter, and voilà, we have enough votes to barely get over the finish line,” Eastman said. Giuliani also spoke to the crowd, encouraging them to engage in “combat.”
Later, hundreds of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol, delaying congressional certification of the Electoral College and engaging in fights with police that led to at least five deaths.
On Jan. 7, in an interview, Eastman described the march as “a wonderful rally of people that were there to express their views that what they saw on Election Day was not right.”
Struppa later issued a statement condemning Eastman’s role in events that “jeopardized our democracy.”
The New York Times has since reported that Eastman was in the Oval Office with Trump the day before the Capitol riot, arguing to Vice President Mike Pence that Pence had the power to block certification of Biden’s Electoral College victory. Other constitutional experts and members of congress have pointed out that the vice president has no such power….
—OC Register
John Eastman, an endowed law professor at Chapman University who last week repeated false claims of election fraud to an angry crowd just before they stormed the U.S. Capitol, is retiring.
Chapman President Daniele Struppa issued a statement late Wednesday saying the school and Eastman negotiated an exit, and that their agreement “closes this challenging chapter for Chapman.”
The deal comes as hundreds of students and professors at Chapman are calling for Eastman’s dismissal, citing a range of issues ranging from his accusations about Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ qualifications for office to his legal work for President Donald Trump in which he has made false claims that the election was rigged to help President-elect Joe Biden.
Eastman most recently generated controversy with a speech he gave on Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C. While standing next to Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, Eastman told the crowd about a chaotic — and false — vision of election fraud.
“They were unloading the ballots from that secret folder, matching them, matching them to the unvoted voter, and voilà, we have enough votes to barely get over the finish line,” Eastman said. Giuliani also spoke to the crowd, encouraging them to engage in “combat.”
Later, hundreds of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol, delaying congressional certification of the Electoral College and engaging in fights with police that led to at least five deaths.
On Jan. 7, in an interview, Eastman described the march as “a wonderful rally of people that were there to express their views that what they saw on Election Day was not right.”
Struppa later issued a statement condemning Eastman’s role in events that “jeopardized our democracy.”
The New York Times has since reported that Eastman was in the Oval Office with Trump the day before the Capitol riot, arguing to Vice President Mike Pence that Pence had the power to block certification of Biden’s Electoral College victory. Other constitutional experts and members of congress have pointed out that the vice president has no such power….
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5 comments:
CU Boulder has also cancelled Eastman's spring classes due to single digit enrollment:
https://www.denverpost.com/2021/01/13/john-eastman-cu-boulder-classes-canceled/
Many faculty and students don't want him there either.
So one of my Chapman colleagues has often said. How can an attorney and law professor I g n o r e evidence?
And how can so many educational institutions enable such destructive ignorance?
The false comparison between last summer’s protests and what happened at the Capitol, Washington Post
Trump should remain isolated. And let him be angry. He's earned it. What a sham of a man and a bilker of many. The con man of the first part of the 21st century.
He'd do well at Guantonimo.
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