Ivy League President Held Hostage Inside Car By Radical Student Mob

May 5, 2026 - 16:28
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Ivy League President Held Hostage Inside Car By Radical Student Mob

Cornell President Michael Kotlikoff said he was subjected to “harassment and intimidation” by anti-Israel student protesters who followed him across the campus and surrounded his vehicle after a debate event.

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The confrontation took place Thursday night following a campus-sponsored “Israel-Palestine Debate Series.” According to Kotlikoff, a group of students began trailing him as he left the event, shouting questions and recording him on their phones.

“These individuals followed me from the event space and across campus, while loudly shouting questions and recording,” Kotlikoff said in a statement released Friday. After briefly engaging, he said he declined to continue and asked them to stop recording.

Kotlikoff said the situation escalated when the group followed him to his car. “They continued to follow me to my car and then surrounded the car, banging on the windows, blocking the car, and shouting,” he said.

Video released by the university appears to show students crowding around Kotlikoff’s vehicle as he attempts to leave. The school said the footage reflects a coordinated effort to block his exit, describing the incident as one of “harassment and intimidation.”

Kotlikoff said he waited for an opening before slowly reversing out of the space. “I waited until I saw space behind the car and then … was able to slowly maneuver my car from the parking space and exit the parking lot,” he said.

Student activists, however, are telling a sharply different story.

Students for a Democratic Cornell, which organized the protest, posted a video on social media claiming Kotlikoff struck at least one protester while backing up. In the footage, a student can be heard accusing the university president of running over his foot.

“When we tried to discuss campus speech policies, he hit us with his car,” the group wrote in a statement. “Kotlikoff’s violent response to student inquiry is just another example of his administration’s repressive crackdown on student speech.”

The university disputes that claim, saying its own video shows students continuing to move around normally after the incident, with no clear indication of serious injury.

The clash followed what Kotlikoff described as an otherwise “vigorous and civil” debate event, part of a broader effort to encourage open discourse on campus surrounding the conflict.

The series brought together speakers and student groups from across the ideological spectrum, including pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian organizations.

Kotlikoff drew a firm line between the formal debate and what occurred afterward. “The behavior I experienced last night is not protest,” he said Friday. “It is harassment and intimidation, with the direct motive of silencing speech. It has no place in an academic community, no place in a democracy, and can have no place at Cornell.”

The incident comes amid heightened scrutiny of elite universities’ handling of campus protests, particularly those related to Israel. The Trump administration previously suspended more than $1 billion in federal funding to Cornell while investigating alleged civil rights violations tied to antisemitism on campus.

The university later reached an agreement with the federal government to restore funding, committing tens of millions of dollars toward compliance measures and academic programs. Kotlikoff, who assumed the presidency in 2025, had previously pointed to a relative period of calm following earlier waves of campus unrest. Thursday’s confrontation, however, suggests tensions remain close to the surface.

With competing narratives, backed by dueling video clips, the incident remains unresolved. But the images themselves — a university president boxed in by a crowd of students, phones raised, voices shouting — underscore how quickly even structured academic debate, a key aspect of free speech on college campuses, can spill into something far less controlled.

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