College Media Network - Search the largest news resource for college students by college students Jobs and internships for students -

Right to Life group to press charges against protestors

Students plan vigil to protect display

By Sarah Loman, Amy Ehrnreiter and Amanda Joering

Print this article

Published: Monday, April 24, 2006

Updated: Wednesday, January 7, 2009

DSCN0486.jpg

Students remove crosses from the anti-abortion display Wednesday evening.

DSCN0503.jpg

Dr. Sally Jacobsen tears the "Cemetery of Innocents" sign on Wednesday evening.

DSCN0500.jpg

Broken crosses litter the ground in front of the Fine Arts building Wednesday.

Click here to view this slideshow

Members of the Northern Right to Life are camping out Thursday to protect their display of anti-abortion crosses, following the damage and removal of the display on Wednesday by protestors.

The group has decided to press charges against those responsible.

"We called the police and told them that we decided to press charges," said Julie Broering, treasurer for the group. The members reached their decision after a day-long deliberation.

According to University Police reports, several young females removed about 400 white crosses from the grass in front of the University Center plaza at about 5:30 p.m. on April 12.

Northern Kentucky University President James Votruba has confirmed that Dr. Sally Jacobsen said that she encouraged students to practice their freedom of speech by pulling down the crosses during her British Literature class, which meets on Wednesday evenings.

Jacobsen could not be reached by The Northerner deadline.

"I am very disappointed that this happened," Votruba said. "At a university, the opposing views should be able to bump up against each other. Responding with pamphlets or speeches would have allowed the power of ideas to compete."

Approximately 10 students accompanied Jacobsen to the crosses and helped her to remove them. The group knocked the crosses down and piled them in trashcans around the plaza, and removed the "Cemetery of Innocents" sign.

Police arrived at 7:15 p.m. and found the crosses in trash cans throughout campus, according to David Tobergte, an administrative sergeant with the University Police. Tobergte said once those responsible for the vandalism of the crosses are identified, they could face felony theft charges. If those responsible for the vandalism are students, then they will also face university sanctions, Tobergte said.

Dean of Students Kent Kelso said he learned of the incident a few hours after it occurred and asked the police to investigate. Kelso said that he is unaware of the identity of any person involved in the vandalism, but is talking with witnesses. If students are responsible for the vandalism, Kelso said that he will have to determine if they have violated the student code of conduct.

"I profoundly regret that the incident happened. My hope is that we can have a dialogue or discussion on what's happening on campus with some sense of civility," he said.

The newly formed Northern Right to Life group at NKU created the anti-abortion display on April 9, and after being notified of the vandalism, the group came to NKU that night to repair and replant the crosses.

In a letter to The Northerner, signed by Nancy Slonneger Hancock, a member of The Educators for Reproductive Freedom, Hancock said that the group "neither knew about nor participated in this act of vandalism, and we most certainly do not condone it." Hancock said that the group sees the cross display as "protected free speech, no matter how strongly we may disagree with the message. It is of the utmost importance that we all respect each others' free speech rights."

NKU officials and university police are currently investigating the vandalism. Police reports list damages at $600; group members stated they paid $1.50 for each cross.

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

3 comments

Lara
Tue Apr 28 2009 08:19
The story has a publishing date. Why should the Northerner do anything else. I think it's nice to have all old stories available. You can't get that without a pretty penny (or microfiche) from the local papers. Though, I think one of the local library has all the Enquirer articles since 1990 online. But still...a newspaper can't prevent stupidity on the reader's part.
Sara
Mon Apr 27 2009 19:53
Why is this story being posted, read and commented on as if it happened this year, this April???

This happened April--2006.

Dr. Jacobsen is no longer at NKU, Kent Kelso is no longer the Dean of Students (Jeff Waple is) and I am pretty sure that the crosses were displayed and remained undisturbed this year.

It appears that this year, 2009, the displays of both sides--those who disagree and those who agree with a woman's right to choose--stood without incidence. And I seem to remember the group Students for Choice releasing a request that no one bother the cross display. And again, it seems that no one did.

Why then, is this story being dug up 3 years later???

Is there something going on on-campus that many of us are unaware of...? Or does "Jacobsen Sux" need to read the date of this story (published April 24, 2006) and refrain from urging others to vandalize a "former" faculty member's car for something that happened 3 years ago?

Last time I checked, vandalism of a person's property is not protected free speech. If vandalism IS permissible (as you seem to suggest, i.e. Jacobsen's car) then why would you have a problem with the vandalism of the crosses?

And lastly, The Northerner should add some type of note to this section that this story is old. Obviously some people aren't getting that.

Jacobsen Sux
Mon Apr 27 2009 13:14
Hmmm, maybe someone should express their 1st Amendment Right of Free speech by writing Nazi-Baby Killer on
Dr. Silly Jacobsen pimpmobile.






log out