News U.S. FBI probes Ohio professors alleged ties to ISIS Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | January 22, 2016 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. A professor at Kent State University with a history of anti-Israel activity is under FBI investigation concerning possible ties to the Islamic State. The FBI confirmed that professor Julio Pino is being investigated, the Akron Beacon Journal reported Jan. 19. The Cuban-born Pino, a convert to Islam who is also known as Assad Jibril Pino, has denied connections to the Islamist group. “I can only imagine, given my past record at Kent State dealing with controversial issues about the Middle East, some people may be favorable or unfavorable. Rumors start, and that’s the only thing I can think would draw attention from a government agency,” Pino told the Beacon Journal. The FBI has questioned Pino’s colleagues and students, according to the newspaper. Pino, a tenured history professor, has courted controversy for years, writing an opinion column in 2002 in the Kent Stater, the student newspaper, in which he praised a Palestinian suicide bomber. He later wrote letters to the Kent Stater criticizing American policy in the Middle East. In 2009, he was interviewed by the Secret Service about his beliefs. In 2011, he shouted “Death To Israel” during a lecture at the university by Ishmael Khaldi, the former deputy consul general at the Israeli Consulate in San Francisco. In a 2014 letter issued to “academic friends of Israel,” he accused the pro-Israel academic community of being “directly responsible for the murder of over 1,400 Palestinian children, women and elderly civilians,” and called Israel “a regime that is the spiritual heir to Nazism.” He signed the open letter “Jihad until victory!” — jta J. Correspondent Also On J. Israel Exclusive: Why Israel turned to archaeologists in its search for the Oct. 7 missing Bay Area Israeli professors at UC Berkeley reflect on a tumultuous year Books ‘The Scream’ exposes Israeli pain through poetry, art, prose Local Voice One year after Oct. 7, how do we maintain Zionist unity? Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes