George Washington University’s plan to arm campus police ignites concerns over racially motivated violence


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George Washington University students haven’t always had the best rapport with their campus police force.

In early 2020, a student accused campus law enforcement of pushing her down a set of stairs at the former university president’s on-campus home, where she was protesting. Just a few months later, the Black Student Union publicly demanded the George Washington Police Department enforce a zero-tolerance policy against officers who act on racial biases. The union said at the time it was “tired of every Black student being able to recall a negative or frightful encounter they’ve had with GWPD.”

Now, a proposal to arm a contingent of the campus officers threatens to further fray the student-police relationship. Mark Wrighton, interim university president, told the campus last month that trustees directed the administration to craft such a plan. Wrighton said though officials “are not aware of any heightened threat to our university,” they had grown concerned with recent shootings at Michigan State University, the University of Virginia and an elementary school in Nashville, Tennessee.

Students, and later faculty, balked at the prospect, arguing that arming campus officers — who they say mostly handle incidents like intoxicated minors and other low-level crime — wouldn’t fortify campus safety.

Disputes over arming university police aren’t contained to just George Washington University, in Washington, D.C. College students and administrators nationwide have engaged in intense tugs-of-war over how much to scale up police presence and power on campuses. 

GWU administrators say they’re paying close attention to student and employee opinion. 

“The university values all of our stakeholders’ perspectives,” GWU spokesperson Julia Metjian said in an emailed statement. “We have launched an effort to gain community input on the implementation of our reimagined public safety plan. Members of our community are expressing support, concerns, and ideas for implementation in a variety of ways. We will continue to provide opportunities for additional engagement as our implementation plans take shape.”

What’s going on GWU?

Days after the interim president announced the trustees’ wishes, more than 100 student organizers and other demonstrators who opposed the plan marched through the private nonprofit’s campus and gathered outside Wrighton’s home, which is just down the street from the White House.

Leaders from student organizations like the Black advocacy group GW Black Defiance spoke, referencing police shootings on or near colleges. More than 20 student groups signed onto a statement demanding officials reverse their decision.

Even students uninvolved in the demonstrations aren’t for arming security. 

In an interview on the campus Thursday, first-year student Charlotte Davie questioned the need for armed campus officers when D.C. Metropolitan Police are available.

Davie said the administrators didn’t appear to be listening to student concerns, citing their plans to move forward with the proposal even while they say they are accepting campus feedback.

Another first-year student, Jonny Thibodeau, said the plan doesn’t appear to be financially prudent. 

“Maybe it’ll be necessary at some point in the future, but not now,” Thibodeau said.

Administration hasn’t disclosed the cost of equipping officers. Metjian did not respond to a question about the price or how much GWU spends annually on public safety. Few details of the plan have emerged, though the university’s student newspaper, The GW Hatchet, reported the institution intends to arm about 20 of the roughly 50 officers with 9 mm handguns.

Daniel Turner, who graduated from GWU last year and now works with the campus ministry, said given the student blowback, proceeding with the plan isn’t worth the trouble. Turner as a student had poor experiences with campus police, saying officers aren’t always great at interacting with students.




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Jeremy Bauer-Wolf

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