Julio Cesar Pino was born in Havana, Cuba in 1960, the year after Fidel Castro's rebel forces first entered the city during Cuba's Communist Revolution. His conversion story is featured in "Latino Muslims: Our Journeys to Islam."
Political controversies
Pino has been involved in a long series of anti-Semitic controversies relating to American foreign policy, Islam, suicide bombing, jihad, and Israel. These include a 2012 newspaper column praising the actions of the terrorist who carried out the Kiryat Yovel supermarket bombing, and a letter critical of American policy that read, in part, "You attack, and continue to attack, us everywhere... The ill done to the Muslim nations must be requited." In 2011 he was investigated by the Secret Service after calling president Bush a "cocaine cowboy." In November 2007, Kent State demoted the chair of the history department for failing to follow procedure when it authorized a fully paid, mid-semester, 6-week trip to the United Arab Emirates where Pino wished to study Arabic. Pino was recalled to his teaching post before completing the 6 weeks. In 2011 a public controversy ensued after Pino shouted "Death to Israel" during a talk given at Kent State by Ishmael Khaldi, an Israeli diplomat. University President Lester Lefton condemned Pino's behavior as "reprehensible, and an embarrassment to our university," defending Pino's right to free speech but finding his behavior, "deplorable." Pino has been involved in a series of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic actions, writing an open letter in 2014 asserting of Israeli Jews that, "The Chosen drain the blood of innocents."
Julio Pino returned to the headlines in January 2016 when information surfaced that the FBI was interviewing students and professors for possible ties between Pino and ISIS. Pino denied the allegations against him in an email to Inside Higher Ed, saying, "My only commitment is to serve my students as guided by the light of knowledge. I have no ties to any political organization, nor do I recruit for any cause." A university spokesperson confirmed that he is still teaching at this time. Kent State said in a statement that it is cooperating with an ongoing investigation, and said the FBI had assured it there was no threat to the campus. Pino said neither the FBI nor Homeland Security has notified him of any sort of investigation.
2018 charges
Pino was charged in April 2018 by federal prosecutors with one count of making false statements to law enforcement, relative to a separate 2016 investigation into his connections with a man in St. Louis who had threatened a family court judge. Pino plead guilty to the charges, with a plea agreement for a prison term between 10 and 16 months. He is scheduled to be sentenced on August 23. As a result of the indictment, Kent State suspended Pino and banned him from all of the university's eight campuses in Northeast Ohio. He stated that he had already planned to retire from the university at the conclusion of the Spring 2018 semester.