DOJ Sues UC System Alleging Antisemitic Hostile Work Environment for Jews at UCLA

Understanding the DOJ's Title VII Lawsuit Against UCLA

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Photo by Gaétan Marceau Caron on Unsplash

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has filed a landmark lawsuit against the University of California (UC) system, specifically targeting the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), for allegedly fostering a hostile work environment for Jewish and Israeli employees through unchecked antisemitism.8078 Filed on February 24, 2026, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, the complaint invokes Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits employment discrimination based on race, religion, and national origin. This action marks a significant escalation in federal scrutiny of campus climates amid rising reports of antisemitism following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel.77

The suit details a 'pattern or practice' of discrimination, claiming UCLA administrators ignored dozens of complaints, failed to investigate incidents, and neglected to discipline perpetrators, creating an atmosphere where Jewish faculty and staff felt compelled to take leave, work remotely, or even transfer departments.79 It seeks injunctions to halt these practices, policy overhauls, mandatory training, and compensatory damages for affected individuals.

UCLA Royce Hall during 2024 pro-Palestinian protest encampment

Post-October 7 Surge: The Spark for Campus Tensions

The lawsuit traces the roots of UCLA's issues to the immediate aftermath of the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attacks on Israel, which killed over 1,200 people and took 240 hostages. Pro-Palestinian protests erupted nationwide, but at UCLA, they allegedly crossed into antisemitism with chants like 'kill the Jews,' 'Jews=KKK,' and 'death to Israel.'80 Masked demonstrators tore down posters of Israeli hostages, and a piñata effigy of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was beaten amid cries of 'Beat that fucking Jew!'

By spring 2024, these escalated into an illegal encampment at Royce Hall, where protesters erected physical barriers excluding Jews and Israel supporters. Swastikas were graffitied on buildings, Nazi comparisons proliferated, and assaults occurred, including shoves and kicks targeting Jewish individuals. UCLA allegedly provided barriers and disabled sprinklers to aid the encampment, leading to over 200 arrests but no student disciplines for antisemitism.76

This pattern persisted, with vandalism like a pig statue adorned with a Jewish star in winter 2024 and ongoing disruptions into 2026. UCLA's own Antisemitism Task Force Report from October 2024 confirmed a hostile environment, documenting over 50 faculty/staff victims of vandalism, 122 witnesses to threats, and nearly 100 to attacks.78

Faculty Stories: Professors Holloway and Shamsa at the Center

Central to the complaint are Professors Ian Holloway and Kamran Shamsa, whose experiences exemplify the allegations. Professor Holloway, a Jewish faculty member at the Luskin School of Public Affairs and former Faculty Executive Committee Chair, signed a letter condemning terrorism post-October 7. Retaliation followed: antisemitic chalkboard messages in his classroom, a Luskin Students for Justice in Palestine (LSJP) letter denouncing him as biased, and threatening 'WE SEE YOU' notes. His multiple complaints to UCLA's Discrimination Prevention Office (DPO) were closed without investigation, citing 'insufficient evidence.' He resigned his chair role and transferred to the Nursing School.80

Professor Shamsa, at the David Geffen School of Medicine, endured Nazi swastikas on Royce Hall, physical obstruction by protesters yelling 'Zionist go away,' and a shove to the ground by a masked demonstrator during the encampment. Security guards stood by as a Jewish woman was kicked and bled. He faced 15-20 protests blocking his workplace and ongoing disruptions into 2025. Like Holloway, his reports yielded no action.79

Other faculty reported Holocaust jokes, colleagues calling Regents 'Jewish pigs,' and disruptions like a Hamas supporter's lecture forcing attendance. These cases highlight how anti-Zionism blurred into antisemitism, affecting professional duties and mental health.Explore faculty experiences across U.S. campuses.

UCLA's Alleged Policy Shortcomings and Reforms

The DOJ accuses UCLA of systemic failures: an untrained workforce on anti-discrimination policies, EDI office dismissing complaints without merit review, and non-enforcement of time, place, and manner (TPM) rules for protests. Interim Chancellor Darnell Hunt testified to hundreds of ignored complaints, with zero investigations or disciplines.77

  • Flawed reporting: Mandatory reporters ignored obligations; victims saw processes as futile.
  • Encampment tolerance: Provided aid despite violations.
  • Retaliation: 'Preservation' emails signaling EEOC charges; denied promotions.

UCLA counters it has implemented changes: a dedicated Title VI/VII officer, Office of Campus Safety, mask bans during violations, SJP suspension (despite continued protests), and Chancellor Julio Frenk's anti-antisemitism initiative. Vice Chancellor Mary Osako affirmed, 'Antisemitism is abhorrent... we will vigorously defend our efforts.'76UCLA Antisemitism Task Force Report.

National Statistics: A Campus-Wide Crisis

UCLA's case reflects a broader surge. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) reported record antisemitic incidents in 2024, with 83% of Jewish college students experiencing or witnessing antisemitism by early 2025.58 ADL's Campus Antisemitism Report Card gave 13 universities 'F' grades in 2025 for poor responses.62

Post-October 7, incidents climbed: harassment, vandalism, assaults. U.S. Commission on Civil Rights briefed on federal responses in February 2026. Hillel and ADL data show pervasive fear, with Jewish students hiding identities.Career advice for navigating challenging campus environments.

Chart of antisemitic incidents on US college campuses 2023-2026

Federal Crackdown: DOJ's Broader Campaign

This suit stems from EEOC charges by Andrea Lucas (June 2024), Holloway, and Shamsa, leading to DOJ's March 2025 pattern/practice notice and July 2025 determination. Trump admin actions include Columbia's $21M settlement, funding cuts (later restored), and probes at other schools like Lincoln Memorial.29

AG Pam Bondi: 'This DOJ stands strong against hate.' AAG Harmeet Dhillon called alleged acts a 'mark of shame.'77 Critics like AAUP's Todd Wolfson decry politicization undermining academic freedom.78 DOJ Press Release.

Implications for U.S. Higher Education

The lawsuit signals heightened Title VII risks for universities, shifting focus from student (Title VI) to employee protections. Institutions must bolster complaint systems, train staff, enforce TPM neutrally, and distinguish protected speech from harassment.80

Potential fallout: Damages, oversight, reputational harm affecting faculty recruitment. Amid enrollment pressures, campuses balance free speech with safety. Pro-Palestinian groups argue conflation stifles activism; Jewish advocates demand accountability.

Path Forward: Actionable Solutions for Campuses

To mitigate risks:

  • Implement robust training on antisemitism recognition and Title VII.
  • Enforce neutral protest policies with swift investigations.
  • Appoint dedicated civil rights officers reporting independently.
  • Foster dialogue via task forces including all stakeholders.
  • Monitor via anonymous surveys and third-party audits.

UCLA's reforms offer a model, though DOJ deems insufficient. For faculty facing bias, resources like career advice and peer reviews aid resilience. ADL Audit 2024.

Stakeholder Perspectives and Future Outlook

EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas emphasized eradicating workplace antisemitism. UC President Michael Drake previously noted funding cuts' devastation, now facing litigation. As cases proliferate, expect policy standardization, potential class actions, and legislative pushes like expanded reporting.

For higher ed leaders, proactive compliance protects missions while upholding First Amendment values. Jewish communities urge vigilance; universities seek balanced enforcement. Ongoing X trends highlight polarized views, with supporters praising DOJ and critics fearing overreach.0

Explore higher ed jobs and university opportunities amid evolving climates. Share insights in comments below.

Frequently Asked Questions

⚖️What is the basis of the DOJ's lawsuit against UCLA?

The suit alleges Title VII violations for a hostile work environment due to antisemitism targeting Jewish/Israeli employees since Oct 2023.

👨‍🏫Who are the key professors named in the complaint?

Professors Ian Holloway (Luskin School) and Kamran Shamsa (Medical School) detail harassment, assaults, and uninvestigated complaints.

🚫What specific incidents are cited at UCLA?

Swastikas, 'death to Jews' chants, Royce Hall encampment assaults, graffiti, and faculty targeting post-Oct 7 protests.

🛡️How has UCLA responded to the allegations?

UCLA defends reforms like a Title VI officer, SJP ban, safety office, and vows to fight while condemning antisemitism. UCLA site.

📊What are national stats on campus antisemitism?

ADL: 83% Jewish students affected; record 2024 incidents. Task Force at UCLA noted 50+ faculty victims.

📜What remedies does DOJ seek?

Injunctions, policy changes, training, damages for victims, and ending pattern of discrimination/retaliation.

🏛️How does this fit federal campus actions?

Part of Trump DOJ probes/settlements (e.g., Columbia $21M); prior UCLA funding cuts restored by court.

⚖️What Title VII means for universities?

Protects employees from religious/national origin harassment; requires prompt investigation/remedy.

🛠️Steps campuses can take against antisemitism?

Training, neutral TPM enforcement, dedicated officers, audits. See advice.

💼Implications for faculty careers?

Heightened scrutiny may spur safer environments but risks politicization. Check faculty jobs.

📈Is antisemitism rising on other campuses?

Yes, ADL reports record highs; 13 unis 'F' graded. USCCR briefed Feb 2026.