UBC, Guelph look into posts made by profs after Trump shooting
Profs at UBC and University of Guelph have hidden posts made to social media platform X
Two Canadian universities are investigating posts made to social media following the assassination attempt at a Donald Trump rally on Saturday.
University of Guelph biology Prof. Shoshanah Jacobs posted on X, formerly Twitter, a video of the aftermath of the shooting along with the words, "When 4 inches really matters."
In response, Karen Pinder, who is listed as a professor of teaching at UBC's faculty of medicine, said, "Damn, so close. Too bad," and then later, in response to a comment, "What a glorious day this could have been!"
Pinder's account has since been deleted, while Jacobs' has been set to private.
The University of British Columbia says it is "aware" of the posts and is "looking into" them, while saying it "does not condone violence of any kind."
Pinder did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CBC News.
The University of Guelph, meanwhile, has released a statement confirming it is investigating the incident, saying that it's taking the professor's social media post "seriously and are currently looking into the matter."
"The University of Guelph does not condone violence of any kind. Our thoughts and deepest sympathies are with those affected by the events of Saturday," reads the statement.
Jacobs replied to a handful of people in her comments, saying her post was taken out of context and was meant to be a comment on the closeness of the bullet to Trump, not a statement of a desired outcome.
"Four inches towards the centre of his head would have killed him. Therefore, they really mattered," one of Jacobs's replies said.
CBC News reached out to Jacobs and her lawyer. Both said they would not comment on the situation.
Guelph police report at least one physical threat in response to the social media posts.
"There were some comments that were received by operators at the university, essentially just negative comments," said Guelph police spokesperson Scott Tracey.
"The only specific threat that I'm aware of was a threat to cause harm, and it was sent by email from an unknown sender,"