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UVA

The Torch March UVA Did Not Alert: 250 White Supremacists at the Rotunda and the Most-Criticized Silence in U.S. Campus Notification History

VAcivil unrestemergency notificationhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the evening of Friday August 11, 2017, approximately 250 white nationalists carrying tiki torches marched across UVA's Nameless Field and through the Lawn to the Rotunda, where they encircled and attacked roughly 30 counter-protesters — most of them UVA students — who had locked arms around the Thomas Jefferson statue. Despite UVA Police having intelligence of the planned march days in advance, no UVA Alert emergency notification was issued. The march was the eve of the Unite the Right rally that produced the August 12 vehicular attack killing Heather Heyer and prompted bipartisan calls for UVA to explain its silence.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
5
Institution
University of Virginia
Public R1 · VA
~25,600 studentsUVA Alerts
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

FOLLOW-UPEmail
[UVA President Teresa Sullivan issued a community message addressing the previous evening's torch march, condemning the violence at the Rotunda and announcing increased law-enforcement presence on Grounds for the Saturday Unite the Right rally. The message acknowledged that the speed of the march and the law-enforcement response shaped the decision not to issue a UVA Alert during the event itself.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

President Sullivan's morning-after message is the closest UVA came to a notification about the torch march; no real-time UVA Alert was pushed during the event
Sullivan's reasoning — that issuing an alert might have drawn additional protesters and counter-protesters — was widely criticized by faculty and student groups in the weeks that followed
The torch march occurred on the eve of the August 12 Unite the Right rally that produced the vehicular attack killing Heather Heyer in downtown Charlottesville
UPDATEEmail+3 h
[UVA Alerts issued a notification regarding the State of Emergency declared by the City of Charlottesville and the Commonwealth of Virginia. Affiliates were urged to avoid downtown Charlottesville and to remain on or near Grounds. Increased law-enforcement presence was announced; the rally itself had been declared an unlawful assembly.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The August 12 UVA Alert is the first emergency notification UVA issued in connection with the Unite the Right weekend — and it was reactive to the City and Commonwealth state-of-emergency declarations rather than to the torch march that had occurred the night before
Virginia State Police declared the rally an unlawful assembly at 11:22 AM EDT via megaphones, before the rally was scheduled to begin
The 24-hour delay between the torch march and the first UVA Alert is the most-cited specific failure in subsequent reviews of UVA's emergency communications response
Context

Background

The August 11, 2017 torch march at the University of Virginia is one of the most analyzed campus emergency-response failures in U.S. higher education history. The march was organized by white nationalist Richard Spencer and Identity Evropa leader Eli Mosley as part of the Unite the Right rally opposing the planned removal of a Robert E. Lee statue from a downtown Charlottesville park. Approximately 250 mostly young white men gathered at Nameless Field around 8:45 PM EDT, lit tiki torches, and marched in two lines toward the Rotunda chanting 'Jews will not replace us,' 'Blood and soil,' and 'White lives matter.' At the Rotunda, the marchers encountered approximately 30 counter-protesters — most of them UVA students — who had locked arms around the Thomas Jefferson statue. The marchers encircled the counter-protesters, threw lit torches, doused them in lighter fluid, and used pepper spray. Multiple students were injured; at least one suffered a stroke. UVA Police Chief Michael Gibson had received intelligence of the planned march days in advance, and UVA's senior administration had been warned by faculty as much as six hours before the rally. Despite this, no UVA Alert was issued during the march itself; the absence of an emergency notification is the single most-criticized institutional decision of the entire Unite the Right weekend. The reasoning offered by President Teresa Sullivan and University Police was that issuing an alert might draw additional protesters and counter-protesters and inflame the situation; the post-incident Margolis Healy independent review concluded the alert decision was a failure. The first UVA Alert in connection with the Unite the Right weekend was issued on the morning of August 12, after the City of Charlottesville and the Commonwealth of Virginia had declared states of emergency. That day's rally produced the vehicular attack that killed Heather Heyer and injured 35 others. UVA subsequently issued trespass warnings to 10 participants; a federal grand jury indicted several marchers in 2023. The case is significant for this archive precisely because of what did not happen: it is the single most-cited example of a university with full advance knowledge of a violent on-Grounds event choosing not to use its emergency notification system, and it shaped the Clery emergency-notification practice of dozens of peer institutions in the years that followed.
Analysis

Key Findings

UVA had advance intelligence of the planned torch march but did NOT issue a UVA Alert at any point on August 11, 2017 — the most-cited single failure of campus emergency notification in modern U.S. higher education
Approximately 250 marchers attacked roughly 30 counter-protesters at the Rotunda using lit torches, lighter fluid, and pepper spray; multiple injuries including at least one stroke
The first UVA Alert in connection with the Unite the Right weekend was issued the morning of August 12 — only after the City and Commonwealth declared states of emergency
The post-incident Margolis Healy independent review explicitly cited the alert decision as a failure and recommended the university issue notifications even when there is concern about drawing additional crowds
UVA's response shaped subsequent Clery emergency-notification practice at dozens of peer institutions, particularly the principle that emergency notifications must not be withheld for political reasons
Outcome
Multiple UVA students and counter-protesters were assaulted at the Rotunda, including struck with lit torches, doused in lighter fluid, and pepper-sprayed; one student suffered a stroke. The torch march concluded shortly before 10:00 PM EDT when Virginia State Police declared the gathering an unlawful assembly. UVA was widely criticized for not issuing a UVA Alert; a subsequent Margolis Healy review explicitly cited the alert decision as a failure. UVA later issued [trespass warnings to ten participants](https://news.virginia.edu/content/uva-issues-10-trespass-warnings-individuals-involved-august-2017-violence) and a federal grand jury indicted several marchers in 2023.
Provenance

Sources

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    UVA Alerts (UVA Emergency Management)
    uvaemergency.virginia.edu
Tags
civil-unrestwhite-supremacytorch-marchrotundauva-alertsabsent-alertuvavirginiapublic-r1unite-the-right2010salert-failure
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion