12 Pro-Hamas Terrorists Face Felony Charges After Stanford Vandalism
In a significant action to crack down against terror on campus, felony charges have been filed against 12 pro-Hamas protesters accused of vandalism at Stanford University. The charges stem from a June 2024 incident where demonstrators occupied and defaced the university president’s office, marking a turning point in the ongoing wave of student terrorism over the Israel-Palestine conflict.
The terrorists, part of a group demanding Stanford divest from companies linked to Israel, allegedly barricaded themselves inside Building 10—home to the offices of President Richard Saller and Provost Jenny Martinez. What began as a demonstration quickly spiraled into chaos and terror, with reports of extensive damage, including graffiti scrawled across sandstone walls and a veteran’s memorial defaced with slogans like “F- AmeriKKKa.” Authorities say the occupation ended after three hours when law enforcement intervened, arresting 13 individuals in total. One of those arrested, a student journalist from The Stanford Daily, will not face charges, as the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office recently cleared him, citing his role as a reporter.
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The 12 remaining protesters now face felony burglary charges, with bail set at $20,000 each. Stanford has taken a firm stance, suspending the involved students and barring seniors among them from graduating. The university condemned the actions as crossing “the line from peaceful protest to actions that threaten the safety of our community,” pointing to an injured campus safety officer and the “vile and hateful” nature of the graffiti.
The charges come as the Department of Education suspends and revokes funding for universities not addressing anti-semitism on campus including Columbia and UPenn. Students have terrorized campuses and demanded administrations sever institutional ties to Israel amid the ongoing war in Gaza. At Stanford, the protesters’ demands—divestment, financial transparency, and amnesty for prior arrests— gained momentum after Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack on Israel and the subsequent military response, which has claimed thousands of lives. The charges come as the Department of Defence revokes student visas for participating in this level of terrorism.
For the accused, the stakes are high. Beyond legal consequences, the felony charges could derail academic and professional futures, raising questions about the balance between activism and accountability. Meanwhile, Stanford’s decision to reinstate SAT/ACT requirements for fall 2025 admissions, announced days after the charges, signals a shift back to merit based admissions.