Black Columbia student physically restrained by Barnard Public Safety requesting to see school ID
New York April 14 2019 Barnard Public Safety officers pinned Alexander McNab, CC ’19, against a counter after he declined to show his Columbia ID inside the Milstein Center for Teaching and Learning on Thursday night.
According to McNab, who is black, officers first began to follow him into the Milstein Center when he declined to show his Columbia ID at Barnard’s main gates despite entering after 11 p.m., when students are required to show their IDs to Public Safety in order to enter campus. In an interview with Spectator, McNab said he was aware of the rule mandating students show their IDs, but expressed his frustration with what he cited as inconsistent enforcement of the rule, as he had noticed that white students were often not asked.
According to McNab’s account, after he entered the gates, an officer followed him into the Milstein Center, continuing to request his ID, and when McNab declined, more officers were called to the scene. Multiple videos taken by witnesses show that, after trying to compel McNab to leave the building, two officers physically pinned him down to the counter at Peet’s Coffee, after which he handed them his ID.
“I didn’t violate anybody; get your hands off of me,” McNab can be heard saying repeatedly in the video while the officers hold him down.
“Let’s walk outside,” one officer said in response. McNab clarified with Spectator that he wanted to stay inside the building so that witnesses would be able to see and corroborate what unfolded.
The officers confiscated McNab’s ID, saying they needed to verify that he was an “active” Columbia student. A total of at least six officers surrounded McNab by the end of the incident.
In the video, Public Safety officers said they followed McNab because he ran past a Public Safety van and through Barnard gates without showing his ID to the officer, and continued running across the lawn. However, both McNab and multiple witnesses at the scene corroborated that he was walking at a normal pace when officers began to follow him.
Concern over Public Safety’s relationship with students of color came to a height at a recent Barnard Student Government Association meeting in March, where representatives said to Public Safety Executive Director Antonio Gonzalez that there have been multiple incidents of officers catcalling or harassing women of color on campus.
While speaking to SGA, Gonzalez emphasized that Public Safety officers act as civilians on campus and have no authority over students that is comparable to that of the New York Police Department or any other police force.
According to McNab, Barnard Public Safety officers have approached him twice in the past year, both times when he was in Barnard Hall for dance practice. McNab claimed that the first time, Public Safety requested his ID as he was leaving the building, and the second time, he was drinking water at the water fountain barefoot during rehearsal and Public Safety wanted to verify that he was not a homeless man. Barnard declined Spectator’s request to provide further comment regarding these accounts of the conduct of Public Safety officers.
“Because of all of that, I said ‘Nah, that’s not happening again this time,’” McNab told Spectator in regard to showing his ID.
Even so, McNab emphasized that the physical nature of the encounter shocked him.
“What I didn’t see coming was when they got the other Public Safety officer to come to the side and pin me to the counter,” he said. “I hadn’t made any threats; all I said was I’m not going to show you my ID. I don’t understand where that came from.”
“It’s like I was resisting arrest or something. It was very much like an NYPD police officer-type interaction,” McNab added.
According to witnesses, when students approached Public Safety officers to correct their view of McNab’s actions, clarifying that he had not been running away, the officers also responded negatively.
“When I corrected them, they started screaming at me,” Norah Hassan, BC ’21, said. “It was so shocking that as a student and a witness, that the people supposed to serve and protect me were pointing at me and screaming. They were trying to police the way that we were responding to them, policing our actions because we didn’t agree with them.”
Hassan’s account was corroborated by Caroline Cutlip, BC ’20, who witnessed and filmed the incident.
In a statement sent to students on Friday morning, Barnard President Sian Beilock expressed “deep regret” aboutfor the “unfortunate incident,” which she said “raised concerns about our safety and security policies and how they are enforced.” However, Beilock did not specify any details of what occurred during the incident.
The statement also added that the college is hosting a listening session at 5 p.m. on Friday in the James Room in Barnard Hall with representatives from Public Safety, the deans of the college, the Furman Counseling Center, and the Office of Title IX and Equity to garner student feedback.
Additionally, in an email sent to Columbia College and School of Engineering and Applied Science students Friday afternoon, Dean of Undergraduate Student Life Cristen Kromm announced there would be a reflection session at 6 p.m. on Friday in 505 Lerner Hall. Kromm also referred to what happened on Thursday as an “unfortunate incident” and added that “we recognize the hurt and pain that many students may be feeling.”
In an earlier statement to Bwog, a college spokesperson emphasized Barnard’s commitment to the safety of students, reiterating the college’s policy that students show IDs after 11 p.m., but did not reference the conduct of the Public Safety officers.
It is unclear if any disciplinary measures will be taken against the Public Safety officers involved in this incident, but the college said it is currently undertaking a “thorough review” of Public Safety officers’ actions. A number of Barnard student witnesses have submitted reports to the college’s Office of Title IX and Equity with accounts about the incident.
columbiaspectator.com