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Saturday, February 28, 2026

Court pauses UF law student’s return to campus after expulsion for antisemitic posts

Preston Damsky’s court battles ensue following antisemitic social media posts

<p>The UF Levin College of Law located at 309 Village Drive in Gainesville, Fla., Friday, Nov. 4, 2022.</p>

The UF Levin College of Law located at 309 Village Drive in Gainesville, Fla., Friday, Nov. 4, 2022.

An appellate court ruled a UF law student’s ban from campus can temporarily remain in place as the court continues to consider the appeal.

The administrative stay is the latest development in an ongoing battle between UF and Preston Damsky, which began when the university issued a trespass order against Damsky in April after he made a series of antisemitic posts on X. 

In his posts, Damsky had called to abolish Jews “by any means necessary.” He also wrote two seminar papers arguing the U.S. “was founded as a race-based nation and should be preserved as such,” according to court documents.

When UF later expelled Damsky, he sued, arguing the expulsion violated his First Amendment rights.

Last month, a federal judge ruled the university must reinstate Damsky to normal standing while his case is pending; a final ruling will determine whether he can return to UF permanently. 

In his decision, U.S. District Court Judge Allen Winsor wrote defendant Chris Summerlin, UF’s dean of students, did not show how “Damsky’s speech constituted a true threat or was otherwise proscribable.” Damsky's suit had been filed against Summerlin in his official capacity as dean. Winsor ordered Summerlin to reinstate Damsky by Dec. 1.

Summerlin appealed to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to pause the injunction. The pause was granted Dec. 3, according to court records. Damsky’s reinstatement is now on an administrative stay until the 11th Circuit has time to consider the motion. His trespass order was re-issued the same day, according to the university’s trespass catalog.

Damsky must file his response by Friday. Soon, the appellate court will decide whether to continue pausing his reenrollment until the full appeal is resolved or lift the stay and allow Damsky to return to normal standing.


Contact Zoey at zthomas@alligator.org. Follow her on X @zoeythomas39.

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Zoey Thomas

Zoey Thomas is a UF media production senior and the Spring 2026 editor-in-chief of The Alligator. She has previously been data editor and engagement managing editor, as well as a reporter for three semesters. She was also a intern at the Orlando Sentinel. In her sparse free time, Zoey enjoys reading a good book, going for a run or waking up her roommates with the sound of her espresso machine.


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