Ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt booed at Arizona commencement over AI, sex harassment claims from much-younger girlfriend

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt was roundly booed by students at the University of Arizona’s graduation Saturday — following backlash over his selection as commencement speaker over sex abuse allegations from his much-younger ex girlfriend.Tech billionaire Schmidt, 71, was discussing artificial intelligence and automation when students began jeering him, Business Insider reported.However, he had been expecting a hostile reception regardless of what he said following allegations of rape and sexual harassment made in a lawsuit by ex Michelle Ritter.Multiple left-wing and feminist student groups handed out flyers at Friday night’s commencement detailing the allegations made against Schmidt by 32-year-old tech entrepreneur Ritter, who was Schmidt’s lover and business partner.Students were urged to “turn their backs to the stage” when Schmidt came on, “and/or boo to make it clear that the University of Arizona and greater community that we represent, whether from Tucson or beyond, do not support abusers being platformed,” reported the Arizona Daily Star.Ritter filed a lawsuit in November alleging that Schmidt “forcibly raped” her on a yacht off the coast of Mexico in 2021.She also claimed he initiated sex without her consent during 2023’s Burning Man festival in Nevada, according to court documents.Ritter further alleged that Schmidt spied on her via a “backdoor” to Google’s servers that he built with a team of company engineers, according to the lawsuit.She argued that the alleged digital surveillance of her electronic devices and surveillance by private investigators amounted to sexual harassment.Ritter’s lawsuit was sent to arbitration by a Los Angeles judge in March, the LA Times reported.She alleged that a 2022 post-#MeToo federal law, intended to end forced arbitration of sexual assault and harassment claims, allowed her to have the case heard in open court.But Superior Court Judge Michael Small disagreed and said the law didn’t apply...