January 17, 2026
Back to all stories

Federal Judge Orders Ohio State to Expunge Disenrollment of TikTok Critic Over Anti‑Israel Videos

U.S. District Judge Edmund A. Sargus Jr. has granted a preliminary injunction ordering Ohio State University to remove from former student Guy Christensen’s academic record any notation that he was "involuntarily disenrolled" after administrators kicked him out over anti‑Israel TikTok videos. Sargus found the 19‑year‑old, represented by the ACLU of Ohio, is likely to succeed on claims that OSU violated his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by summarily disenrolling him in May 2025 without a hearing, after he praised the killer of two Israeli embassy staffers in Washington, D.C., as a "resistance fighter" and called Rep. Ritchie Torres a "Zionist scumbag" who would face a future "Nuremberg" trial. The university first imposed an interim suspension, then days later disenrolled him under a separate policy, citing his social‑media posts and community concerns that he posed a "significant risk of substantial harm," despite the fact that he had already left campus for summer break and did not identify himself as an OSU student online. Christensen denied inciting violence or making true threats, and the judge’s order does not resolve the underlying case but bars OSU, for now, from stigmatizing him in his transcript with the forced‑withdrawal label. The ruling lands amid a national wave of litigation over how public universities treat pro‑Palestinian and anti‑Israel speech, and will be closely watched as a test of how far officials can go in sanctioning inflammatory but political expression that some Jewish advocates view as threatening or antisemitic.

Campus Speech and Civil Liberties Courts and Higher Education Discipline

📌 Key Facts

  • Judge Edmund A. Sargus Jr. issued a preliminary injunction ordering Ohio State to remove 'involuntarily disenrolled' from Guy Christensen’s academic record.
  • Christensen, a 19‑year‑old former OSU student and TikTok creator, was disenrolled in May 2025 over anti‑Israel videos about the killing of two Israeli embassy staffers and criticism of Rep. Ritchie Torres.
  • OSU imposed an interim suspension citing a 'significant risk of substantial harm,' then disenrolled him without a hearing under a different policy, prompting an ACLU of Ohio First and Fourteenth Amendment lawsuit.

📊 Relevant Data

Antisemitic incidents on US college campuses reached a record high of 2,334 during the 2024-2025 school year, with a drop in violent attacks compared to previous years.

US campuses see record levels of antisemitism, but drop in violent attacks — The Times of Israel

The number of antisemitic incidents on US college campuses increased by 84% between 2023 and 2024, accounting for 18% of all reported antisemitic incidents in the US.

Antisemitic incidents, partly fueled by campus protests, reached record high in 2024, ADL finds — CNN

Jewish undergraduate students at Ohio State University number approximately 2,777, representing about 6% of the total undergraduate population of 44,617.

Ohio colleges boast robust Jewish communities — Cleveland Jewish News

More than 600 students or student organizations at US colleges have been penalized for protected speech since 2020, with many cases involving investigations or censorship.

FIRE: 600 Students Punished for Protected Speech Since 2020 — Inside Higher Ed

Jewish undergraduate enrollment at universities like Harvard, Columbia, Cornell, and the University of Pennsylvania decreased by 3 to 5 percent from 2023 to 2025.

College-Age Jews Are Heading South — The Atlantic

📰 Source Timeline (1)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time