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Harvard ‘doxxing truck’ parks outside homes of students who blamed Israel for Hamas attacks

Harvard 'doxxing truck' parks outside homes of students who blamed Israel for Hamas attacks

The truck’s giant LED screens displayed the words “Harvard’s Leading Antisemites” in gothic script over a headshot of the Ivy Leaguer who reportedly lived in the home.

The “doxxing truck” that circled Harvard University’s campus to expose Ivy Leaguers who allegedly signed a letter blaming Israel for Hamas’ attacks has been beaming the photos of some student leaders outside their homes, The Post has learned.

Adam Guillette — the president of news watchdog Accuracy in Media, which deployed the vehicle — told The Post that his organization “expanded our fight against antisemitism at Harvard” by selecting student leaders of the 34 Harvard groups that co-signed a statement saying Israel is “entirely responsible” for Hamas’ attacks, and parking the digital billboard-bearing box truck near their residences.

“We only focus on leaders of these organizations rather than members,” Guillette said Thursday, adding the students’ home addresses “were very easily publicly available.”

On Wednesday, the truck idled in front of the Boston-area home of a 20-year-old female Harvard student who leads one of the groups that did not explicitly condemn Hamas, he said.

The truck’s giant LED screens — hung on the sides and back of the truck — displayed the words “Harvard’s Leading Antisemites” in gothic script over a headshot of the Ivy Leaguer who reportedly lived in the home, with her name in bold, red block letters.

The Harvard “doxxing truck” parked outside of the Massachusetts home of one of the student leaders allegedly involved in a student group that co-signed a letter blaming Israel for Hamas’ attacks.
Adam Guillette
The homeowner called the police, who said that the truck wasn’t breaking any laws by parking outside of the residence.
Adam Guillette

“The homeowner called law enforcement” once they spotted the truck outside, Guillette said.

“As is always the case, authorities explained that we’re not breaking any laws,” Guillette said of the truck, which was deployed “so everyone in the community can learn who the antisemites are among them.”

Law enforcement officers at the scene even told the homeowner “not to threaten the mobile billboard driver,” he claimed.

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