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Last week’s shooting of an alleged marijuana-dealer at Harvard has exposed the elite university’s long-standing underground drug trade to the harsh light of day.

Justin Cosby — the 21-year-old victim of a May 18 murder believed to be an attempted robbery gone awry — is said to have been selling drugs to students. Two Harvard seniors, both women, have been connected with the incident.

Brittany Smith, 22, is the girlfriend of alleged shooter Jabrai J. Copney, 20. Chanequa Campbell, 21, is alleged to be connected to both Cosby and Copney. The two other alleged assailants have yet to be found.

On an otherwise quiet campus, this violent drug-related crime and the alleged student involvement has publicly bared what many at the college have been aware of for years:

“Everyone’s like, ‘What was this random guy doing on campus?’ It’s because Harvard students are buying drugs,” says a recent graduate, who requested anonymity. “There are people on campus who are supporting this operation.”

Harvard Student Expelled In Connection With Campus Murder, Claims Racism

Black Female Student Singled Out

According to this graduate and others, Campbell was long rumored to be a part of that scene.

“It was something that was whispered about on campus months before the shooting — that she sold cocaine, ecstasy, hard drugs,” says the source.

While Brittany Smith will still graduate in June, Chanequa Campbell, a sociology concentrator from Brooklyn who received National Merit Scholarship, as well as scholarships from The New York Times, Coca-Cola, and Goldman Sachs, has been banned from campus.

Campbell is suspected of being the link between Cosby, the victim and alleged marijuana dealer, and Copney, who has been charged with the shooting. Authorities also said someone gave Copney a Harvard access card, which allowed him to enter the Kirkland House dormitory, where the shooting took place.

Campbell states she wasn’t involved in last week’s events and is being wrongfully linked to the murder. She denies selling drugs to students, and says that it was not her card that Copney used to enter the dorm. Campbell told the Boston Globe in a telephone interview: “I do believe I am being singled out. . . . The honest answer to that is that I’m black and I’m poor and I’m from New York and I walk a certain way and I keep my clothes a certain way. . . . It’s something that labels me as different from everyone else.”

This isn’t the first time the university has been accused of racial profiling. Since the murder, black students have reported receiving extra scrutiny.

“Lately I’ve definitely been getting some interesting looks from white people, security guards and other security personnel,” said Malcolm Rivers, a black Harvard student and classmate of the Campbell and Smith.

“As a black man on campus, you understand that that’s part of the territory.”

Rivers went on to say that while black female students like Campbell and Smith might not be as overtly looked upon with suspicion, that they might face a different kind of stereotyping in the wake of the murder.

“People are going to be like, ‘These girls brought the hood with them,’” Rivers said.

Bringing The Streets To The Top Schools

Both Smith and Campbell are New York City natives, hailing from Harlem and Brooklyn respectively.

Campbell is an alumni of the Prep for Prep program, which takes students from tri-state area public schools and prepares them to attend elite private and boarding schools. The students in Prep are generally from poor families, and come from low-income neighborhoods in places like the Bronx and Brooklyn. After Prep for Prep, most of these students end up at the best colleges and universities—if not Ivy League, then certainly first tier. Prep for Prep works to prepare students not just academically, but also mentally and emotionally for the adjustment in environment. But leaving behind past lives, especially the pervasive drug culture, sometimes proves problematic.

“In these elite schools, there are organized activities that are not good. There are drugs and alcohol present. So it’s possible to continue whatever you were doing in the ‘hood, or even pick it up if you weren’t exposed to it,” says a source within Prep for Prep.

“Sometimes it’s not even the case that it’s bringing the ‘hood with you, so much as it’s you finding what you were exposed to in your neighborhood in a different environment,” the source continues.

“This Is Not The Wire

Indeed, students at Harvard who sought marijuana or, for those who could afford it, harder drugs like cocaine,  weren’t likely to run into any problems getting it. Students from all socioeconomic backgrounds , from athletes and elite social club members, to pre-law students and student newspaper reporters, have been known to indulge without too much concern for the consequences.

“People thought, ‘This is not The Wire. Guns are not going to come out. There aren’t going to be repercussions,” says a current student, who also asked for anonymity.

But the events of last week brought home the stark reality of the consequences of welcoming illegal drugs into the ivy gates: a young life extinguished, potential prison time, reputations called into question, and an academic career cut short.

The dean of Harvard College, Evelynn Hammonds, sent a letter to the university community last week pledging to address the situation that led to the shooting.

“I intend to work with student leaders and others to address the nature and risks of illicit drug use on campus, to underscore the importance of safety and security practices for the entire College community, and to examine the adequacy of existing policies relating to student life,” she wrote.

With finals completed and this year’s commencement ceremonies only a week away, the effects of any efforts to reform the campus drug culture will likely remain to be seen until this fall.

Tags: Crime, Drugs, Harvard University, Racial Profiling
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  • http://www.blackplanet.com/my9get8/ my9get8

    I really dont have an opinion on this story except for the fact that in it it says that the hood has been brought into the the top tier schools…are they trying to say that only drugs and murder happen in the hood.
    This is the kind of covert racism that most black ppl over look when dealing with the media. We are quick to jump to attention when someone calls us a n****r but sit back as if nothing has happen when those same ppl TREAT you like a n****r!!

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/specialkindalady/ specialkindalady

    Oh here we go [using the RACE card...] again! She got CAUGHT so now she wants SYMPATHY! Gedafugoutta herrrrrrre w/dat bulllsht!!! Had she been WHITE and poor but got scholarships to go..what would her excuse be? Also, its funny…she ain’t use that b.s assed excuse when she ACCEPTED the money from those scholarships to ATTEND!!!!

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/iluvgrits/ iluvgrits

    Lookahere, im tired of hearing people talking bout the hood being brought into this lilly white azz school. The hood was already in that school. The hood in this case is drugs. if that was a historical black college then it would of been said oh thats what they do. Well let me tell yall, I went to the top tier white school and now I’m employed at a historical black college and university and the only difference is the money the two school make. Both administrators do the same, as seen here both student bodies do the same. It no such thing as a hood thing when it comes to the hood. It starts off a white problem with the shipping docks and airplanes. Then it becomes a latino problem and in the end who is getting phucked– US the black people (the real hood). And on another note, i wish baby girl didnt involve herself in this schit with a punk like this. She just went from White House worker to the Dope House look out girl. She this (..) close to getting what she earned. God bless her for she only is book smart and did not know what this punk was really setting her up for.

  • http://newsone.blackplanet.com/nation/why-black-harvard-won%e2%80%99t-speak-up-for-chanequa/ Why Black Harvard Won’t Speak Up For Chanequa | NewsOne

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  • http://www.blackplanet.com/MisterMagnetic/ MisterMagnetic

    I laugh at how people get mad at the white institution’s characterization of black students. We know that no matter what, when where or how, whether on a college campus major corporation or elsewhere that black folks RARELY are going to get the benefit of the doubt in any situation. It is precisely why I put myself on a self imposed lockdown my final semester before graduating. I had to disassociate myself from anyone or anything that could possibly threaten my walk down the aisle. It is difficult to do but the price is high if you don’t. All of this young woman’s great accomplishments are up in smoke. They can’t take your education away from you get it but with her association with these so called “friends and associates” she lost sight of the finish line.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/suprabuddha/ suprabuddha

    The thing that troubles me is how other black people have so bought in to the negative stereotypes that they just assume that a young woman named Chanequa from Brooklyn is guilty. Would someone care to examine the facts before passing judgement???

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/TEE_OO7/ TEE_OO7

    keeping it real, hood, gully or street!?! what is the real meaning of these terms? do we as a people really believe that all we can ascribe to is to keep it hood? there is nothing new under the sun! we must be real with ourselves and understand our purpose in life and to one another.

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