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'Violent Protest': UC Irvine's Disputed zotALERT During the Physical Sciences Lecture Hall Occupation

CAcivil unrestemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On May 15, 2024, UC Irvine issued a zotALERT labeling a pro-Palestinian encampment expansion into the Physical Sciences Lecture Hall as a 'violent protest' near the Physical Science Quad. The alert was followed by classroom alarms reminiscent of an active shooter notification, and police from at least 22 agencies converged on Aldrich Park. By 8:33 p.m. PDT, 47 protesters had been arrested.

Alerts
4
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of California, Irvine
Public R1 · CA
~36,000 studentsRavezotALERT
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

4 messages in sequence · 3 verified verbatim

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSMS
zotALERT: Protest has escalated near Physical Science Quad. Avoid the area. If you are in the area shelter in place for your safety until further notice.
Posted to UC Irvine's official X account at 2:51 p.m. PDT on May 15, 2024
An accompanying alarm tone was activated in classrooms, leading some students to believe an active shooter was on campus
The 'violent protest' phrasing was disputed by the Irvine Faculty Association in a public letter as 'dangerously inaccurate'
UPDATESMS+1h 32m
zotALERT: All classes will be canceled for the remainder of the day.
Verbatim text of the second zotALERT push, sent at 4:23 PM PDT — about 90 minutes after the initial 'violent protest' / shelter-in-place alert at 2:51 PM PDT
Class cancellation via emergency notification was unusual at UCI in 2024 — typically reserved for active threats or facility emergencies, not protest events
Police forces from at least 22 different agencies, including UCPD and OCSD, were involved in the dispersal that followed
UPDATESMS+5h 34m
zotALERT UC Irvine will move to remote instruction on Thursday, May 16. Unless specifically noted, all employees should work remotely. Resident students may still access dining facilities. Protest activity continues. Please avoid area until further notice.
Sent at 8:25 p.m. PDT on May 15, 2024, as police were completing the encampment clearance — this update communicates two things: (1) next-day remote instruction and (2) that protest activity was still ongoing and the area should still be avoided
The 'unless specifically noted, all employees should work remotely' reflects UCI's choice to not specify department-by-department exceptions in the emergency notification itself
This is the fourth zotALERT in the sequence; a separate earlier update at 8:13 p.m. announced remote instruction for May 16
ALL CLEARSMS
Approximate reconstruction131 chars
zotALERT: All clear. Aldrich Park has been cleared and the area is safe. Police activity may continue. Thank you for your patience.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed from New University reporting that Aldrich Park was cleared by 8:33 p.m. PDT on May 15, 2024
All-clear followed the sequence of four or more zotALERTs sent across the afternoon and evening
Marks the end of UCI's most intensive emergency notification sequence of the 2024 protest cycle
Context

Background

The May 15, 2024 zotALERT marked an inflection point in how UC Irvine communicated with its community during the Gaza Solidarity Encampment. The encampment had been established on April 29 in Aldrich Park, the university's central green. On May 15, protesters expanded the occupation by entering the Physical Sciences Lecture Hall shortly after 2:30 p.m. The university's response—a zotALERT labeling the action a 'violent protest' and the activation of classroom alarms typically associated with active shooter drills—was widely criticized. The Irvine Faculty Association issued a public letter calling the alert 'dangerously inaccurate' and saying many students believed there was an active shooter on campus. By the end of the night, 47 people had been arrested, 26 of whom were students, and classes were held remotely the following week. The episode became a national reference point in debates over how universities classify and communicate about campus protests.
Analysis

Key Findings

The 'violent protest' framing combined with active-shooter-style alarms created widespread confusion about the nature of the threat
Use of mass notification systems for protest dispersal blurred the line between Clery emergency notifications and general campus communications
47 arrests during a single afternoon represented one of the largest single-incident protest-related arrest counts at any UC campus during the 2024 cycle
Faculty pushback (Irvine Faculty Association letter) became a template for similar critiques at other UC campuses
Outcome
47 arrests. The alert's 'violent protest' framing was later disputed by faculty groups and acquittals followed for two protesters in 2025. The encampment was cleared and Aldrich Park was vacated by 8:33 p.m. PDT.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. Social
  3. Source
  4. Source
  5. News
Tags
civil-unrestcampus-protestgaza-encampmentuc-systemcaliforniairvinezotalertshelter-in-placealert-language-controversy
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion