Yale Scholar Banned After A.I. News Site Accuses Her of Terrorist Link

Helyeh Doutaghi, a scholar in international law, began a new job in 2023 as the deputy director of a project at Yale Law School.As an activist who had championed pro-Palestinian causes in both published papers and public appearances, Dr.Doutaghi seemed to fit into the left-leaning mission of the Law and Political Economy Project, which promoted itself as working for “economic, racial and gender equality.”Last week, though, she was abruptly barred from Yale’s campus in New Haven, Conn., and placed on administrative leave.
She was told not to advertise her affiliation with the university, where she had also served as an associate research scholar.Yale officials cited the reason as allegations that she was tied to entities subject to U.S.sanctions.
It was an apparent reference to Samidoun, a pro-Palestinian group placed on the U.S.sanctions list last year, after the Treasury Department designated it a “sham charity” raising money for a terrorist organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.The decision came three days after a news site, powered at least in part by artificial intelligence, published a story about Dr.
Doutaghi’s connections to the group.The news site called her a member of a terrorist group, citing postings referring to appearances she made on panels at Samidoun-sponsored events, but a lawyer for Dr.Doutaghi said she is not a member of Samidoun, a global organization that sponsors meetings and protests supporting Palestinian causes.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.
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