Former Cornell student pleads guilty to making threats to kill, rape Jews on campus
Patrick Dai faces up to five years in federal prison after posting messages online saying Jewish students would be stabbed or shot; attorney says he never actually intended harm
SYRACUSE, New York — A former Cornell University student accused of posting violently threatening statements against Jewish people on campus shortly after the start of Israel’s war against Hamas in the fall pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday.
Patrick Dai, from the Rochester, New York, suburb of Pittsford, was accused by federal investigators of posting anonymous threats to shoot and stab Jewish people on a Greek life forum in late October. Dai, a junior, was taken into custody October 31 and was suspended from the Ivy League school in upstate New York.
The threats came amid a spike of antisemitic and anti-Muslim rhetoric related to the war and unnerved Jewish students on the Ithaca campus. New York Governor Kathy Hocul and Doug Emhoff, the husband of US Vice President Kamala Harris, traveled separately to Ithaca in the wake of the threats to support students. Cornell canceled classes for a day.
As part of his guilty plea, Dai admitted that on October 28 and October 29, he threatened to bomb, stab and rape Jews. He faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison to begin on August 12, a fine of up to $250,000, restitution to victims and a maximum of three years of supervised release, according to the US attorney’s office for northern New York.
“This defendant is being held accountable for vile, abhorrent, antisemitic threats of violence levied against members of the Cornell University Jewish community,” Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said in a prepared release.
One post from October included threats to stab and slit the throats of Jewish males and to bring a rifle to campus and shoot Jews. Another post was titled “gonna shoot up 104 west,” a university dining hall that caters to kosher diets and is located next to the Cornell Jewish Center, according to a criminal complaint.
He also threatened to rape and throw off a cliff any Jewish women he saw on campus, and behead Jewish babies.
Authorities tracked the threats to Dai through an IP address.
Dai’s attorney said outside of court that he had no intention of carrying out violent acts but decided during a depressed time in his life to pose online as Hamas to change the minds of people who sympathize with the organization.
“It was a bad decision on a very bad day,” federal public defender Lisa Peebles told WHEC-TV. “He’s very remorseful. He accepts responsibility.”
Dai’s mother, Bing Liu, told The Associated Press in a phone interview in November she believed the threats were partly triggered by medication he was taking to treat depression and anxiety. She said her son posted an apology calling the threats “shameful.”
Liu said she had been taking her son home for weekends because of his depression and that he was home the weekend the threats went online. Dai had earlier taken three semesters off, she said.
There has been a spike in antisemitic sentiment in the US since the terror group Hamas’s October 7 onslaught on Israel, which saw terrorists kill nearly 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and kidnap 253. The Hamas-run Gaza health ministry says more than 33,000 people in the Strip have been killed in the ensuing Israeli offensive against Hamas so far, a figure that cannot be independently verified and includes some 13,000 Hamas gunmen Israel says it has killed in battle. Israel also says it killed some 1,000 terrorists inside Israel on October 7.
Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.