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The Tufts Daily
Where you read it first | Friday, April 26, 2024

Freshman admits to racial incident with KSA members

Freshman Daniel Foster admitted on Friday to making racial slurs toward, threatening to kill and spitting at a group of Korean students, as part of an apology in the framework of an agreement between him and the 13 members of the Korean Students Association (KSA) whom he accosted during the early-morning hours of April 9.

Foster and the KSA members reached the agreement over the past week outside of university channels, although Dean of Student Affairs Bruce Reitman largely accepted the terms of the deal.

Click here to view a PDF of the agreement.

As part of the agreement, Foster, who is white, said he would request that the university suspend him for next semester and he would write asigned apology that he would "cause to be published" in the Daily, not join a fraternity as an undergraduate at Tufts, attend Alcoholics Anonymous sessions and "anti-bias/anti-hate" courses, and enter into and receive treatment from a therapist or mental health counselor.

Click here to view a PDF of Foster's apology.

"Mr. Foster wishes to make amends to the extent which is possible for his inappropriate, offensive, and hurtful behavior, and all parties wish to resolve this matter without litigation or other proceedings," reads the agreement, which Foster and the KSA members signed on Friday.

The agreement comes after a fight broke out between Foster and some of the 13 KSA members shortly before 2 a.m. on April 9, as the Korean students practiced for a culture show in the Lewis Hall main lounge. KSA members initially alleged that Foster uttered racial slurs, made threats and spat at them members after the violence ended.

Foster said in a statement later that day, though, that he shouted obscenities and that a Korean student first pushed him. Until Friday's agreement, Foster had not publicly admitted to making racial slurs toward, spitting at or threatening to kill the students. And Reitman said that Foster also admitted drinking before the incident; Foster is underage.

The agreement and Foster's apology did not mention the fight, however. Instead, "[a]dvocates for the two sides said that all of the students wished to dismiss their previous statements about any physical altercation," Reitman said in his statement; he told the Daily yesterday that the university counsel had questioned the parties about this aspect after noticing its omission from the document.

As part of the agreement, both sides said they would not take further action, unless the document's stipulations were breached.

In his statement, Reitman also said that the university would accept the deal as long as Foster also completes an anger-management program and, upon completion of his suspension, satisfies the Office of the Dean of Student Affairs "that he has learned from this experience and will contribute positively to the community."

Reitman said his office respected the outcome of the parties' deliberations, even though they occurred outside of university channels, as "such efforts are often more meaningful than those reached in fact-finding hearings."

His office was thus reluctant to diverge from Foster's and the KSA members' decision, he said, but still decided that more had to be done.

"[G]iven the seriousness of the behavior to which the one student has admitted, I do not feel that his automatic return to the university community after the suspension is appropriate," Reitman said in the statement.

Outgoing KSA Co-President Tom Moon, one of the 13 KSA members who signed the agreement, said that Foster first met with and admitted guilt to the KSA members on Thursday. At first, Moon said, the Korean students were not sure if Foster was sincere. TThe freshman said he sobbed the night of the incident, according to Moon.

"We thought that yes, we thought that he could be sorry for what happened … but he didn't understand the extent of what he did and how it affected the people," Moon said, adding that the KSA members asked Foster why he portrayed himself as a victim in his original statement to the Daily.

"I'm just relieved that it's all over now, because now I can finally get back to studying for finals," Moon said. "I think that what happened was the right outcome. I think that he should go to classes, he should have some disciplinary mark to show what he did, to show how much he affected our community."

On the morning of April 9, Foster approached the students and mocked a dance five of them were practicing; tensions rose and the KSA members asked Foster to leave.

A short scuffle broke out, and both sides told the Daily later that day that the other had started it. Foster said on April 16 that he received injuries to his elbows, one shoulder, an area behind his ear, his neck and one of his knees. At least one KSA member's shirt was ripped, and one's face was scratched. Both parties have said the other side started the scuffle.

In his apology, Foster admitted to bothering members of the KSA who were practicing a dance in the main lounge of Lewis Hall and spitting at the KSA members.

He also admitted that he called the KSA members "‘chinks,' told them to ‘go back to China,' told them that I would ‘get them,' said ‘I am going to kill you all,' and probably other words that I do not remember.

"My guilt and shame have been eating me away inside," Foster said in the written apology, which appears in today's Daily on page 20. "I am genuinely sorry for the pain I have caused not only to the people directly involved in the incident, but for every one [sic] else who was affected by the words I said that night."

Foster declined to comment further for this article.

"How many of us feel is, though he emotionally scarred us for our lives, this is just another incident for him," Moon added. "I feel like we got the worst of it, because what we're gaining through this agreement is basically nothing, and this agreement is all about him getting better."

The agreement came on Friday morning as five panelists gathered in a room in Dowling Hall to convene an administrative hearing that would examine whether the university's code of conduct was breached during the April 9 confrontation.

That administrative hearing never took place. Instead, Reitman received the details of the outside agreement and on Friday and Saturday considered whether the university should accept it; the school was under no obligation to do so, as the parties involved did not officially arrange it through Tufts.

Since the incident occurred earlier this month, the KSA has orchestrated a campaign to spread the word about what happened. Hundreds of students, faculty members, administrators and others on April 16 attended a rally on the Tisch Library patio in response to the incident, which some called a hate crime, and over 2,000 people have joined a Facebook.com group devoted to it.

KSA members, other students and some faculty members have called on the administration to take stronger action directly in response to the incident, with many demanding diversity-related curriculum changes.

Administrators have spoken out against bias incidents in general but had largely been careful not to comment directly about this incident until an ongoing judicial investigation had wrapped up.

Moon, the outgoing KSA co-president, said that the whole incident has left him and his fellow group members hurt, as well as angry at the administration.

"We actually wanted the administration to send the apology letter out through the university e-mail," he said. "They haven't really … tried to support us at all. And the reason that we decided to go through with the outside agreement is because [the administration] didn't do enough about it early enough."