The original dispute occurred Nov. 12, 2002, when Hinkle, a member of the College Republicans, entered the Cal Poly Multicultural Center to post a flyer promoting an upcoming speech by Mason Weaver, a conservative and African American author of the book It's OK to Leave the Plantation The book analyzes the dangers of African Americans becoming too dependent on government programs.
Several students confronted Hinkle and told him he needed approval from the coordinator of the multicultural center before he could post anything. While Hinkle left to investigate the claims, one of the students called the campus police department.
According to the police report eventually filed in the case, "On 11-12-02...we were dispatched to the multicultural center to investigate a report of a suspicious white male passing out literature of an offensive racial nature."
On Jan. 29 of this year, Cal Poly charged Hinkle with disrupting a student meeting - a Bible reading - in the multicultural center's lounge area.
Sounds like someone filed a false claim with the police. If Hinkle left the area peacefully to inquire about permission needed to post the flyer, and then the racist pig students called the police to report a "suspicious white male handing out literature," that is a hate-crime because it is based on his race, and filing a false report with the police. Then you have the civil lawsuits that Hinkle could initiate against the racist pig students, and possibly the "university."