Protesters wearing masks pitched tents and placed fake bloody corpses outside, and left a list of demands on the door, of the home of a University of Michigan board member Wednesday, raising tension with the school.
Sarah Hubbard, chair of the university's governing board, said the 6 a.m. demonstration at her home in Okemos involved 30 people.
“They approached my home and taped a letter to my front door and proceeded to erect the tents. A variety of other things were left in the front yard,” Hubbard told The Associated Press. "They started chanting with their bullhorn and pounding on a drum in my otherwise quiet neighborhood."
She and her husband stayed inside. Okemos is 60 miles (100 kilometers) from the Ann Arbor campus.
The protesters left 30 to 45 minutes later when Meridian Township police arrived, Hubbard said. No arrests were made. Three tents and fake corpses wrapped in red-stained sheets were left behind.
Jordan Acker, another member of the Board of Regents, said someone with a face covering left a list of demands at his home at 4:40 a.m.
Protesters at the Ann Arbor campus have an encampment on the Diag, a prominent public space.
The group is demanding that the university's endowment stop investing in companies with ties to Israel. The university insists it has no direct investments and less than $15 million placed with funds that might include companies in Israel, less than 0.1% of the total endowment.
“There's nothing to talk about. That issue is settled," Hubbard said.
The university's regents have said endowment investments are shielded from political pressure — though the university has divested from controversial holdings in the past.
In social media posts, a coalition calling for divestment acknowledged the protest and said it would “remain relentless in the struggle for a free Palestine.”
“Please stop complaining on Twitter and come to the encampment to actually negotiate,” the group said, referring to Hubbard.
The university said the protest at her home was not protected free speech. “The tactics used today represent a significant and dangerous escalation," spokesperson Kim Broekhuizen said.
School officials have not disclosed any plans to break up the encampment on campus, which was created in April.
“We would prefer that they would leave on their own,” Hubbard said.
Editor's note: The University of Michigan holds Michigan Public's broadcast license.