San Francisco State College known as Thursday’s protests of former collegiate swimmer Riley Gaines on its campus “peaceable” — in the future after the swimmer stated that she was bodily assaulted by a person in girls’s clothes on the occasion.

Jamillah Moore, SFSU’s vp for Pupil Affairs & Enrollment Administration, emailed a press release Saturday to the college group that didn’t tackle any of Ms. Gaines’ accusations of violence.

The previous swimmer was on campus to discuss why girls’s sports activities ought to be restricted to organic girls.

“Thanks to our college students who participated peacefully in Thursday night’s occasion. It took great bravery to face in a difficult house. I’m pleased with the moments the place we listened and requested insightful questions,” Ms. Moore wrote within the assertion.

“I’m additionally pleased with the moments when our college students demonstrated the worth of free speech and the appropriate to protest peacefully. These points don’t go away, and these values are very a lot at our core,” she stated.

Ms. Gaines shot again at SFSU’s assertion late Saturday evening over Twitter.


SEE ALSO: Riley Gaines says she was hit by activist, ambushed by pro-trans mob at San Francisco State


“I’m sorry did this simply say PEACEFUL,” she requested.

“I used to be assaulted. I used to be extorted and held for [ransom]. The protestors demanded I pay them if I wished to make it residence safely. I missed my flight residence as a result of I used to be barricaded in a classroom,” the previous swimmer for the College of Kentucky wrote.

“We should have completely different definitions of peaceable,” she stated dryly.

Ms. Gaines required a police escort to go away campus after the occasion, which is when she stated she was “ambushed and bodily hit twice by a person,” based on her personal assertion Friday.

The swimmer additionally stated she needed to barricade herself in a room for 3 hours after her speech because of the mob that was chasing her.

Movies of the scene confirmed protesters shouting “trans girls are girls” and “trans rights are human rights.”

In one other video, a protester may be heard saying “Inform her to pay us. Inform her to pay us and she will go. Ten bucks every.”

SFSU stated in a press release that the College Police Division didn’t detain any protesters. The incident remains to be being investigated.

Ms. Gaines first started talking about this subject when she raced in opposition to Lia Thomas, who was on the College of Pennsylvania’s males swimming staff earlier than transitioning and competing within the girls’s division.

They tied for fifth within the 200 freestyle on the 2022 NCAA Division I girls’s swimming championships.