SAN FRANCISCO — University of California San Francisco police officers arrested six people at the UC Board of Regents meeting today, after they refused to disperse upon repeated police requests.

All six were protesting the presidential appointment of Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. They were arrested for unlawful assembly and disturbing the peace, said Elizabeth Fernandez, UC San Francisco spokeswoman.

Two of the six were also arrested for resisting arrest, Fernandez said. They will all be cited and released, she added.

It is unclear at this time whether any of the arrestees are UC students.

Following the public comment portion of the regents’ special session to appoint Napolitano as the next UC president, two members of the public section jumped over a rope barrier and ran toward the regents table. They were arrested.

Public commenters – members of the undocumented community who claim Napolitano is unfit for the UC presidency because of her record on immigration reform – then burst into chants of “Undocumented is not a crime, Napolitano it’s not your time,” forcing the regents’ meeting into a temporary recess.

UCSF police ordered the commenters to disperse with a five-minute warning. After five minutes, the police proceeded to put zip ties on the protesters’ wrists and make the arrests.

Compiled by Katherine Hafner, Bruin senior staff.

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2 Comments

  1. It actually is a crime, I’m pretty sure there’s something in the US Constitution that specifically deals with crossing the borders

    1. No, there isn’t. Although the Constitution’s 14th Amendment mentions citizenship, that was more of a response to the Civil War and the end of slavery. What you are probably referring to is the intersection of immigration in our federal laws, which you should consult the link below because it uses actual facts, and doesn’t just make uninformed, flawed assumptions.

      https://www.aclu.org/files/assets/FINAL_criminalizing_undocumented_immigrants_issue_brief_PUBLIC_VERSION.pdf

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