Head of the NAACP Asks FBI to Investigate PC Bottle Incident as a Hate Crime

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Head of the NAACP Asks FBI to Investigate PC Bottle Incident as a Hate Crime

The incident involving Providence College minority women students being denied entry at an off-campus party and then having bottles thrown at them by white students may be a hate crime and the head of the Providence Chapter of the NAACP has contacted both the Boston and Providence offices of the FBI. Specifically, Jim Vincent has asked the FBI to investigate.

GoLocal has also learned that Providence College has been contacted by FBI agents regarding the incident.

As GoLocal initially reported on February 4 that Providence College and Providence Police are investigating reports that beer bottles were thrown at black students who say they were targeted after being turned away from an off-campus party -- and Vincent said after the incident that "enough is enough."

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PC President Fr. Brian Shanley sent a letter after the incident to the college community saying police investigations are ongoing, and that he was "deeply saddened by the incident" that he said left the women feeling "fearful, devalued, angry, and humiliated."

Professor Julia Jordan-Zachery, Director of Black Studies at PC, spoke with GoLocal about the incident -- and aftermath.

"It's a pretty consistent story about what happened.  These women went to the house to get a friend of theirs, and said the young man at the door supposedly told them, 'We don't want your people here,' and pointed in the direction of Chad Brown," said Jordan-Zachery. 

"Then the women say they saw white students being let in, which is when the real trouble started. I heard they called them 'black bitch'. There's a race-gender connotation of being called that.  The only thing worse they could have been called is nigger bitch.  Then they had bottles thrown at them. I don't think they were actually hit with water, but that's not the point."

Jordan-Zachery said she has concerns about what she heard about how the incident was reported to police. 

The bottle throwing incident helped to trigger the sit-in at President Shanley’s Office which lasted for more than 13-hours and lead to an agreement between a group of students and Shanley.

Shanley agreed to make "progress" on demands for redress on racial issues on campus, following a day-long occupation on Tuesday of his office by nearly 50 students. 

The group of students had pledged to stay the night -- and as long as necessary -- to get Shanley to agree to their demands.  The groups tweeted the agreement that Shanley signed late on Tuesday, which calls for convening a standing Campus Diversity Committee on campus, addressing curriculum and faculty issues, and a dedicated multicultural center at the school.


Legacy of Racism in New England

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