SOUTHFIELD, Mich. — Pro-Palestinian graffiti spray-painted on the exterior of a Michigan law firm is being investigated as a hate crime, police in suburban Detroit said Monday.
University of Michigan regent and attorney Jordan Acker called the vandalism ''antisemitic'' and said staff at the Goodman Acker law firm's Southfield headquarters discovered it Monday morning.
Splotches of red paint were left on the ''Goodman Acker'' sign above the building's doors. ''FREE PALESTINE'' was spray-painted in black upon the building's walls, while ''DIVEST NOW'' and ''U-M KILLS'' — a reference to the University of Michigan — were spray-painted in red upon at least one window and a sidewalk.
Southfield Police Chief Elvin Barren said investigators believe the graffiti was left between 1:39 and 1:46 a.m. Monday. The FBI and other agencies are assisting in the investigation.
''Make no mistake that targeting individual Jewish elected officials is antisemitism,'' Acker, who is Jewish, told reporters.
''This has nothing to do with Palestine or the war in Gaza or anything else,'' Acker continued. ''This is done as a message to scare Jews. I was not targeted here today because I am a regent. I am a target of this because I am Jewish.''
Acker was elected to the university board in 2018 and is one of eight regents. Other board members have also been the targets of recent protests.
Protest camps have sprung up across the U.S. and in Europe in recent weeks. Students have demanded their universities stop doing business with Israel or companies they say support its war in Gaza. Organizers seek to amplify calls to end Israel's war with Hamas, which they describe as a genocide against the Palestinians.