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Professor banned from teaching following verbal confrontation

PSU econ professor accused student of trying to incite violence and of spying

By Virginia Vickery and Theodora Karatzas

Vanguard staff

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Published: Thursday, February 4, 2010

Updated: Friday, February 12, 2010

hall

Photo courtesy of PSU

John Hall

zaki

Adam Wickham/Portland State Vanguard

Zachary Bucharest

A tenured Portland State economics professor is currently suspended from teaching after he publicly accused a student during a class lecture of being an FBI informant and of trying to sell guns to students.

Professor John Hall, during his 2 p.m. “Economics 445/545: Comparative Economic Systems” class on Jan. 14th, verbally harangued student Zachary Bucharest for nearly half an hour, according to students in the class.

Hall, who has taught at PSU for 24 years, began the class with a lecture relevant to the course material but about halfway through the two-hour long class, he began to describe his experiences with law enforcement in other countries including Eastern Europe, according to a student who wished to remain anonymous.

Hall claimed to have been surveilled at times throughout his life and then told the class that an FBI informant and agent provocateur was in their midst. Hall said this person served as a sniper in the Israeli army and called him a killer with access to a personal arsenal.

He then pointed at Bucharest and identified him as the informant in question, according to the unnamed student.

Bucharest, a student at PSU since the fall of 2006 and the current chief of staff for ASPSU, sat silently throughout the ordeal, according to students in the class.

Hall accused Bucharest of trying to organize students to participate in violent acts against the university, according to the unnamed student.

Hall also said he believed that Bucharest is at times armed while on campus. He then put a letter on the document projector that he wrote to the FBI’s Portland Field Office. In the letter, Hall claims to know Bucharest’s identity as an agent. He then handed Bucharest a copy of the letter and told him to give it to his superiors.

After a time of silence, Bucharest got up and said that some of Hall’s claims about his military background were true, but that other claims the professor made were not. Bucharest left the classroom after being told by Hall to leave and not to come back to PSU, according to students.

In an e-mail to students in the class on Jan. 17, economics department chair Randall A. Bluffstone said that he was aware of Thursday’s incident.

“I would especially like to assure you that this incident is being taken seriously and that the appropriate university administrators are fully involved,” he said.

On Tuesday, Jan. 19—the next day the class was scheduled to meet—Bluffstone, Mary Beth Collins, director of Student Health and Counseling, and Carol Mack, vice provost for Academic Administration and Planning, met with the class. Hall was not present.

According to students in the class, many asked administrators why Hall was not there and what the administration would do to keep students safe. They were told that if they feel unsafe, they should contact the Campus Public Safety Office.

Students were encouraged by Bluffstone during the class and later via e-mail to meet with himself, Mack or Dr. Marvin Kaiser, Dean of the College Of Liberal Arts and Sciences, for private 30-minute meetings to discuss the incident.

Bluffstone reportedly said that the FBI informed the university that Bucharest does not work for them.

A formal complaint has been filed against Hall since the incident, according to PSU Communications Director Scott Gallagher.

“Hall has been relieved of teaching duties but he has not been suspended,” Gallagher said.
EC 445/545 is now taught by Dr. Charles Grant, according to Bluffstone in an e-mail to students on Jan. 25.

“There are no sanctions out on [Hall] as of yet because the situation is under investigation,” Gallagher said. 

Hall is still classified as a paid employee while the incident is under investigation, though he is not allowed on campus. He is still working on university-related projects, said Phil Lesch, executive director of PSU’s chapter of American Association of University Professors.

According to Hall, he has been verbally banned from campus.

Lesch said it’s not uncommon for someone to be barred from coming to campus during an investigation so that the outcome is not influenced by the person’s presence.

 “He had his reasons for doing what he did and I can't speculate or put words in his mouth,” said Lesch, who identified himself as Hall’s union spokesperson. “The investigation will determine if he acted appropriately.”

Students were told that they could drop EC 445/545 for a full-tuition refund or register for another class without penalty. According to students still enrolled in the class, only a handful of the nearly 40 original students remain.

No determination has been made whether or not Hall will be back to teach in the spring, Lesch said.

“Based upon my students’ reports, I cannot help but to think that the process currently is being shaped in order to end my tenure at PSU,” said Hall in a statement delivered to the Vanguard by Allison Faris, a student enrolled in one of Hall’s classed.

“I decided to take a stand. I observed the situation becoming extremely dangerous, not only for me but for about eight of my very finest students,” Hall said in the statement. “I felt that what I had to do should not have been my responsibility.”

Faris said Hall is one of the best professors she has had in her five years at PSU and that “any allegations [against Hall] of instability are absolutely ludicrous.”

“I understand the students’ privacy is to be respected, as defined by the codes governing PSU,” Hall said in the statement. “I felt the level of danger had grown to such an acute level that I felt it fully in order to engage in an ‘emergency exemption’ of student privacy.”

The unnamed student said Hall was just trying to protect his students.

“Zaki seemed normal,” said Brett Condron, EC 445/545 student. He believed Bucharest posed no threat.
Bucharest made a statement made through his attorney, Elden Rosenthal.

“I have never been affiliated with the FBI in any way, and I have never been an informant,” the statement reads. “I have never in any way done anything to incite violence at PSU. I have admired Professor Hall since I first took a class from him, and cannot imagine what I did or said to cause him to treat me the way he did. I truly hope that the university will take steps to clear my name, and I also hope that something like this will never again happen to a PSU student.”




 
 

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27 comments

Anonymous
Fri Mar 12 2010 16:56
Israelis/Jews are evil?

Nice. That's some tolerant culture ya gots, PSU.

Anonymous
Fri Mar 12 2010 13:00
It looks like PSU is crawling with Zio-informants.
An ornery mouse
Thu Feb 25 2010 11:17
A "Protector" who is "protecting" those who don't desire his "protection" is just a bully.

You call him a big softie; I've met him and I just think he's a jerk.

Christopher
Thu Feb 25 2010 05:45
I have known and worked with Zaki since last June. I have found him to be honest, caring, trust worthy, deeply committed to education and learning, a passionate advocate for students and all under represented communities, and most importantly I consider him a friend. It deeply saddening to see that this has happened to him. My thoughts go to him and his family and I hope that with the support of his friends and those closest to him that he will emerge from this terrible situation with an even stronger heart and valued experience. To Zaki I say I wish you the very best, you are an amazing friend to so many.
Anonymous
Wed Feb 24 2010 02:56
I have worked with Zaki since September. From my experience with him, he is a caring, charismatic guy who will walk the extra mile for his friends and family. Also, he is a big softie at heart. For someone to call him a killer is ludicrous and has their head shoved far up their ass. I feel safe around Zaki. He is more of a protector than a killer. Why not grow some balls and get a chance to know the guy? He may just talk to you in his funny accent.
Anonymous
Thu Feb 18 2010 20:32
These foreign soldiers on our soil that think they are still fighting a war should go back home and leave the USA out of their conflict.
Erica Charves
Thu Feb 18 2010 03:51
Meeks- I second that. All of it. What up? I forgot you were sandy side up again... oh I would love to travel w// Mercy Corps. Get back safe and drop us a line.

Zaki is the same amazing person I've known for 3 years. My husband and I consider him a friend of the family... and a close confidant.
He did not deserve the slanderous and false accusations in a public learning institution.

Anonymous
Wed Feb 17 2010 13:48
Sketchy?? I read this article, its not the student who's sketchy. Any prof who uses his classroom authority to out a student on ANYTHING needs to be off the podium. Its called Exploiting a Position of Unique Authority....and its unethical at any school.
Leafblower
Wed Feb 17 2010 00:55
I'm seriously scare, I'm a student at PSU and I really don't feel safe that someone may have a gun on campus and that the university chose to do nothing about it....if only we have Chuck Norris to protects us all!
Anonymous
Mon Feb 15 2010 08:28
I'd be demanding my tuition back if this happened in one of my classes. There's more than one loonie-toon student on this campus...and I'll rent the DVD of "The Nutty Professor" if I an in dire need of "entertainment. What HS, IMHO.
Jacob Meeks
Sat Feb 13 2010 04:55
Well.....I have to say this is an amusing thing to read (and I'll explain why) about one's former home when one is so far away from home. My name is Jacob Meeks and I am the former President and founder of the Student Veterans Association at PSU, and I am currently serving as an Operations Manager for Mercy Corps Sudan...in a very remote region of Sudan. I have known Zaki for almost two years when he decided to become a part of the Student Veteran Association at PSU. During this time I have known Zaki to be a good and honorable man and I am proud to call him my friend.

For people in these posts that call him "sketchy" or this thing or that thing, it is simply not right. It is true Zaki has a military background. Many of us do. And many of us have seen or experienced things which affect our behaviors and maybe we behave in such a way that you find "sketchy" or "dangerours" when realistically many of you without these experiences or others of the like don't have a clue what "sketchy" or "dangerous" is. Not all of us live in your little plastic bubbles in Portland, Oregon. You know...many people that stay at home in the USA and live there lives in their bubbles have far more guts in certain things than people like myself or Zaki. But in certain things...those of us that leave and do what we do...for whatever reasons...have a different kind of guts and clarity that you know nothing about. We are different, let me make that one clear. But we are the same, because we are all human and we all percieve and react according to our experiences and we need to understand that with each other and live with each other in whatever way is best for the both of us.

As to this situation....I know little about it true because I am so far away, but I can read and I know Zaki. I think the Professor (who I do not know), handled this in a completely wrong way. It seems he reacted from whatever fear or perceptions that he may have had, and his perceptions do not seem correct. This should have been consulted directly with Zaki and the professor and another person providing arbitration. Zaki is a paying student at PSU and a professor cannot simply tell him to go and not come back in this manner. It is not right.

All that being said, hopefully the professor is not let go as well. He sounds like a good man...and I think he made a mistake. If this is true hopefully this thing could be negotiated and then let go afterword and everyone learns from the experience.

You know...I spent yesterday negotiating a situation, in a language that was my own, in a culture that was far older than mine. We didn't have the rules or laws or procedures how you know them. It was much different for us..but we came to a solution the best we could...and you can do this as well....with this case. I don't even want to sound pompous on this one...but its true...if we can do it here then you can do it there and there should be no problems.

And then everyone who is commenting or involved on this needs to sort out there own heads and think about why they percieve things the way they do because wrong perceptions and communication are the causes of many of our problems in this life.

Finally to my friend Zaki....I hope you are well and not taking this thing to seriously, people have slandered your name, which I know to be good and this is bad. But I've always found you to be a good man and I am proud to call you my friend. I hope that one day in a year or so when I come home on leave I can find you in Portland and we can drink a beer together and discuss everything that has happened to both of us. You will find me much changed on the outside (i've lost a lot of weight...and my skin much darker...and my eyes? agggghh..) (and even some on the inside) but at my core I am still the same man I have always been and will always be. Be well.

That is all I have to say on this one. I hope a good solution is provided for all parties.

Jacob Meeks

PS. To the Student Veteran Association at PSU

It is very bad when I hear about this from another former member of ours, on-line, who is in Iraq, he and I both have more problems then you know right now to be worrying about this.....so I hope in the future you can sort this out before it goes on-line...because if I know...well then the Godfather has to get angry...and who wants to make the Godfather angry...k-dawg, k-dawg, k-dawg....we'll have many things to discuss when I return.

Be safe brothers. Peace!

PPS.

To the person who commented that the professor was taking a stand on Israel-Palestinian conflict with his actions towards Zaki...well without looking at the overarching issues...to that person? Go fuck yourself.

Troy
Wed Feb 10 2010 11:25
Oh noes!!1! This is for all the people with their tin-foil hats bitching about how the article was 'removed' and all the comments 'deleted': Take a look at the very bottom of the page, see how it says it's "Powered by MTVU and MTV Networks"? Do a little looking, even just one intelligent search, and you'll learn that this site is hosted by College Publisher (http://unhub.com/collegepublisher), and if you look at some of their public communications (http://twitter.com/collegepublish), you can see why shit disappeared: "Hey guys just to clarify - not a virus on the server. It was a malicious attack of intense traffic that corrupted a database the server uses"

But go ahead and ignore all the facts and information available... It's painfully obvious that the Vanguard is working for "The Man", and trying to keep you down!!!

...jackasses.

John Norris
Wed Feb 10 2010 01:23
I met Zach and found him to be out of place with the group we were hanging with. I go to Portland state, but am not an Economics major.

That said, I do not think Hall should have dealt with the situation in-class.

Anonymous
Tue Feb 9 2010 23:59
What we can gather from a few minutes of research and all of the comments on this article: Vangaurd editors are leaving out much of the story. Why would a tenured professor suddenly go nuts (given that he has been at PSU for longer than I have been alive, I think there is more to the story)? Why would he want to risk his job for this? Regardless of who is right and who is wrong, this is clearly a one sided article. Have a little integrity and tell the whole story. It is irresponsible to scare the sh#t out of everyone with an article on a student who may potentially be an armed threat, while giving no real background information on this. This is really scary stuff to be glossing over. Not a very good way to advertise our school, huh? I don't know the answer to this mystery, but I think we can start by asking some important questions....something that aspiring PSU journalists are failing to do.
Anonymous
Tue Feb 9 2010 21:39
anonymous - I agree that dangerous people should be investigated before they are able to cause mass casualties, but this is not the case here. This case seems to be about a person who was inserted into a vulnerable environment for the purpose of creating dangerous people and leading and inciting people to take steps towards violence that they would not otherwise do.

If this person was, indeed, an agent of some agency as you seem to agree is a strong possibility, should he be actively promoting violence and hatred trying to maybe cause someone to do what he is promoting? I would compare this to a drug pusher. Would you think it was ok if your daughter was befriended by a drug dealer and he got her trust and then pushed cocaine, heroin, and crystal meth on her every day telling her that it was safe and fun? Because that is exactly what we have here if the agent story is true - we have a pusher of violence pushing this violence on vulnerable kids that he befriended. And make no mistake about it - war is a business - same as drugs. If you have no enemy - you can't make any money off of war - just like if you have no drug users, you can't make money selling drugs. The intentions of the government are likely not good.

So what is the line that the government shouldn't cross when trying to find dangerous people... Well, in my opinion, this clearly would be crossing the line - it is the same as in the drug pusher analogy. This is not acceptable behavior.

Anonymous
Tue Feb 9 2010 11:14
@Surprised: They obviously place enough merit in these "anonymous blog style comments" to print them in the paper every day, to the point where they've changed "letters to the editor" to "what you're saying online" or something to that effect. So yes, if they bother to take the time to read, approve, and print these comments, then it seems reasonable the newspaper SHOULD respond to the question: why was this article deleted and then reposted with all comments removed? Those comments that were reposted were not done so by the newspaper itself, but by yet another anonymous commenter who took the time to find a cached version of the article.
truth seeker
Tue Feb 9 2010 09:31
it all goes back to the bankers......jefferson said if we ever allow a central bank (federal reserve is the 3rd time) to get established in these united states, the bank and the cottage industries (industrial complexes...military, education, news, food, healthcare, energy, ...) and the artificial cycles of inflation and deflation (current housing bubble and bust) will leave the sons of the revolution homeless on the continent their forefathers conquered.....this is just one small act in that play
Anonymous
Tue Feb 9 2010 03:37
"Anonymous" = slander and gossip. If you haven't heard, slander and defamation are against our civil laws. Any student or school official who gives their opinion as fact and does so maliciously and with intent to defame can be subject to legal action. This is not a free speech issue. I have seen first hand the way professors abuse their position of authority -and this is a perfect example.
If you look in the student handbook and online at the instructor's website, there is no process for holding instructional staff accountable. Nothing like the school lays out for students. When I had a complaint, I had to go to the Vice Provost who told me to go to the graduate school dean, who told me to go to HR, who told me to go back to the graduate school!
Change is coming to PSU. There's going to be an accountability system for professors who abuse their authority.
It's about time...and think about the logic he was using when making this FBI statement. If Mr. Bucharest was an FBI informant then what is the problem with that? If a student wants to join a "cabal" of violence then they deserve to be caught in the act. The last time I looked, the FBI was our government- not a foreign terrorist organization.

PSU security will respond to requests from faculty. They respond to every request that I have seen. Even if the request is completely outrageous or paranoid. It's their job to respond to the needs of the professor and students.
There will be more stories like this coming from PSU as people gather the courage to speak out.

Patriot
Tue Feb 9 2010 03:15
A rabid professor turns 8 students into his personal covert spy-ops team to procure 'evidence' to frame a U.S. dual citizen and veteran who has honorably served one of our allies, who volunteers his valuable time as Chief of Staff of the Student Assn. team to help PROTECT the university and teaching jobs from corporate takeover while keeping up his studies on limited means?

The core issue - WHY A UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR IS DOING COVERT OPS ON HIS EMPLOYER'S DIME - is the real question we need to be asking. Is this PSU's idea of a liberal education? What's next for this professor, outing a closeted AIDS victim for his own good? The professor is clearly obsessed with the FBI, however, last time I checked, working for a government agency is not a crime.

If you people understood anything about veterans, I'm sure your posts would have been more compassionate. Like ANY veteran on a small civilian campus, Bucharest's experiences would likely be shared at formal and informal gatherings. Like EVERY veteran I've ever met, he would advocate for the exercise of our constitutional right to bear arms (and don't naively pretend we're still using pistols). Also, like EVERY veteran I have ever known, Bucharest's understanding of the politics and mechanics of war, along with his responses to queries from the wide-eyed, would position him naturally as a leader - a position that undoubtedly chapped the Professor to no end.

Your grave disrespect toward a young man whose patriotism you cannot possibly fathom, whose sacrifices were made to uphold global freedoms you take for granted, and whose learning curve in civilian life is still forming, disgusts me.

You may not always agree with democracy and how its achieved, but its freedoms exist because of the sacrifices of veterans everywhere who are willing to die for your right to stand on your soapbox and denigrate one of our own. Shame on you.

Anonymous
Mon Feb 8 2010 19:52
What "student" is able to hire a prominent civil rights attorney and get his side of the incident put on the television and throughout the print / internet major media players. Not any "normal" student, that is for sure. And the news stories that are coming out are as one sided as one can expect from a media that is anything but unbiased and free.

This story will give you Portland State students a very good idea who controls the media, the education system, and yes, even the police departments. The lies will continue, truth will be subverted, and those in power will continue. Has anyone here heard of "Megaphone"? Look it up. You will start to see a pattern emerging as to all the people commenting on this story on different sites. They use the same techniques. It is a Cabal. Organized crime is another word for it.

You will get a real education about the world with this incident.







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