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'Suspicious' noose found hanging near student housing in possible hate crime

‘A noose is recognised as a symbol of violence and racism directed against African American peoples’

Chiara Giordano
Wednesday 17 July 2019 08:55 EDT
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Hoover Tower on the Stanford University campus in California.
Hoover Tower on the Stanford University campus in California. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

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A university is investigating whether a noose found hanging from a tree on its campus should be treated as a hate crime.

The three-foot long rope, which had a loop in one end, was reportedly found near accommodation where summer students were staying at Stanford University over the weekend.

The university in California said the incident was being treated as a “suspicious circumstance” but it could be re-classified as a “hate crime” if more evidence came to light.

In a statement, published by KTVU, it said: “We feel it is important to state that a noose is recognised as a symbol of violence and racism directed against African American peoples.

“Such a symbol has no place on our campus.”

The university’s Department of Public Safety, which found the rope, said the incident was still under investigation on Wednesday, CNN reports.

The hangman’s noose can be viewed as threatening or intimidating in the US because of its historic association with the lynchings of black Americans.

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