Current:Home > MarketsFormer Cornell student gets 21 months in prison for posting violent threats to Jewish students -Keystone Capital Education
Former Cornell student gets 21 months in prison for posting violent threats to Jewish students
View
Date:2025-04-16 23:35:23
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) — A former Cornell University student arrested for posting statements threatening violence against Jewish people on campus last fall after the start of the war in Gaza was sentenced Monday to 21 months in prison.
Patrick Dai, of suburban Rochester, New York was accused by federal officials in October of posting anonymous threats to shoot and stab Jewish people on a Greek life forum. The threats came during a spike in antisemitic and anti-Muslim rhetoric related to the war and rattled Jewish students on the upstate New York campus.
Dai pleaded guilty in April to posting threats to kill or injure another person using interstate communications.
He was sentenced in federal court to 21 months in prison and three years of supervised release by Judge Brenda Sannes, according to federal prosecutors. The judge said Dai “substantially disrupted campus activity” and committed a hate crime, but noted his diagnosis of autism, his mental health struggles and his non-violent history, according to cnycentral.com.
He had faced a possible maximum sentence of five years in prison.
Dai’s mother has said he she believes the threats were partly triggered by medication he was taking to treat depression and anxiety.
Public defender Lisa Peebles has argued that Dai is pro-Israel and that the posts were a misguided attempt to garner support for the country.
“He believed, wrongly, that the posts would prompt a ‘blowback’ against what he perceived as anti-Israel media coverage and pro-Hamas sentiment on campus,” Peebles wrote in a court filing.
Dai, who was a junior at the time, was suspended from the Ivy League school in Ithaca, New York.
veryGood! (92252)
Related
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Ariana Grande Gives Glimpse Into Life in London After Dalton Gomez Breakup
- Roundup Weedkiller Manufacturers to Pay $6.9 Million in False Advertising Settlement
- Love is Blind's Lauren Speed-Hamilton Reveals If She and Husband Cameron Would Ever Return To TV
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Stanley Tucci Addresses 21-Year Age Gap With Wife Felicity Blunt
- Regardless of What Mr. Bean Says, EVs Are Much Better for the Environment than Gasoline Vehicles
- America’s Forests Are ‘Present and Vanishing at the Same Time’
- Sam Taylor
- Climate Resolution Voted Down in El Paso After Fossil Fuel Interests and Other Opponents Pour More Than $1 Million into Opposition
Ranking
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- With Revenue Flowing Into Its Coffers, a German Village Broadens Its Embrace of Wind Power
- More Than a Decade of Megadrought Brought a Summer of Megafires to Chile
- Record Investment Merely Scratches the Surface of Fixing Black America’s Water Crisis
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Environmental Justice Advocates Urge California to Stop Issuing New Drilling Permits in Neighborhoods
- Warming and Drying Climate Puts Many of the World’s Biggest Lakes in Peril
- Revisit Sofía Vergara and Joe Manganiello's Steamy Romance Before Their Break Up
Recommendation
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Potent Greenhouse Gases and Ozone Depleting Chemicals Called CFCs Are Back on the Rise Following an International Ban, a New Study Finds
Where There’s Plastic, There’s Fire. Indiana Blaze Highlights Concerns Over Expanding Plastic Recycling
States Test an Unusual Idea: Tying Electric Utilities’ Profit to Performance
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
As Water Levels Drop, the Risk of Arsenic Rises
EPA Spurns Trump-Era Effort to Drop Clean-Air Protections For Plastic Waste Recycling
Global Warming Could Drive Pulses of Ice Sheet Retreat Reaching 2,000 Feet Per Day