Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The UC Davis pepper spray incident occurred on November 18, 2011, during an Occupy movement demonstration at the University of California, Davis.After asking the protesters to leave several times, university police pepper sprayed a group of student demonstrators as they were seated on a paved path in the campus quad.
Police began to leave the area around 4:10 pm as more students began to arrive. [51] Lieutenant John Pike and another unnamed UC Davis Police officer were placed on administrative leave shortly after the incident. [52] UC Davis Police Chief Annette Spicuzza was later placed on leave as well. [53]
A UC Davis campus police officer “unintentionally discharged” a firearm early Friday while detaining a person who was among multiple groups — including at least one UC Davis student ...
The officer who discharged the firearm was placed on administrative leave and UC Davis Police Chief Joe Farrow referred the incident to the UC Davis Police Accountability Board, an independent ...
The University of California, Davis Police Department is located in the campus Fire and Police Building at 625 Kleiber Hall Drive. The department is chiefly responsible for police activities on the school's campus and the medical center in Sacramento. The chief of the department is Joseph A. Farrow. [11] The department's officers are armed.
After video of police pepper spraying students went viral, UC Davis spent $175,000 to bury the story. But that attempt did more harm than good.
On April 25, students and faculty set up the encampment. They released a list of demands, including UCLA's divestment from companies that profit off the Israel-Hamas War, a disclosure of where the UC system is investing tuition money, the UC system to cut ties with city police departments who police student activism, an end to academic collaboration with institutions that are profiting and ...
Members include UC Davis Police Chief Joseph Farrow, the respected chair of the UC Council of Police Chiefs; Vickie Mays, UCLA professor of psychology and health policy and management; and Jody ...