Two of the students, Ariel Agudio and Asha Burwell, were expelled from the school, and the third, Alexis Briggs, was suspended for two years, according to public statement from SUNY Albany President Robert J. Jones.
The three women ignited an emotionally charged firestorm on SUNY Albany's campus in January after Burwell tweeted they were the victims of a racially motivated attack on a city bus.
I just got jumped on a bus while people hit us and called us the "n" word and NO ONE helped us.
- Asha Burwell (@AshaBurwell) January 30, 2016
No one.
- Asha Burwell (@AshaBurwell) January 30, 2016
The incident garnered national attention. Even Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton weighed in, tweeting that there was "no excuse for racism and violence on a college campus."
There's no excuse for racism and violence on a college campus. https://t.co/ADVghl4iEv -H
- Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) February 4, 2016
"I especially want to point out that what happened on the bus was not a 'hate crime,'" University Police Department Chief J. Frank Wiley said in a statement, according to the Times Union.
The women were indicted and arraigned on 10 charges including assault and false reporting in early May.
After the claiming the trio were the victims of a hate crime in January, supporters rallied together to confront racism on campus. But now, with police providing evidence that the women lied, some question the damage already done to race relations.
"Did it occur to you that you weren't a woman of one (or three, since Ariel Agudio and Alexis Briggs are part of this, too) crying wolf, but rather your actions, your decisions, your choices will make people - the public, and otherwise - think many who come after you with their own legitimate, fair, honest claims of assault are also lying?" Kristi Gustafson Barlette wrote in a column in the Times Union.
The incident on SUNY Albany's campus follows months of racial unrest on other college campuses across the nation. Minority students at Ivy League universities have protested institutional racism at their respective schools, and the president of the University of Missouri resigned last fall amid intense protests about racism on campus.