Orders to Investigate Columbia Protesters Raised Alarms in Justice Dept.
Last edited Thu May 1, 2025, 08:49 PM - Edit history (1)
Orders to Investigate Columbia Protesters Raised Alarms in Justice Dept.
Behind the scenes, a top department official pressed employees to gather a list of activists and investigate them, people familiar with the matter said.

The Trump administration is seeking to crack down on student protesters amid accusations of rampant antisemitism on college campuses. Dave Sanders for The New York Times
By Devlin Barrett
Reporting from Washington
May 1, 2025
Updated 4:56 p.m. ET
A top Trump appointee in the Justice Department ordered an aggressive investigation in the last several months of student protesters at Columbia University, raising anger and alarm among career prosecutors and investigators who saw the demand as politically motivated and lacking legal merit, people familiar with the episode said.
The demand for the inquiry into students who protested Israels conduct of the conflict in Gaza also prompted pushback from a federal magistrate judge, who believed some of the steps being sought by the official, Emil Bove III, were unjustified and might violate the First Amendment, the people said.
The breadth of the investigation, conducted by the Justice Departments civil rights division, has not been previously reported. The ensuing clash highlights the tensions roiling the department as administration officials seek to enact President Trumps agenda. That bid includes redirecting the civil rights division away from its traditional approach of protecting the rights of minority groups to a new mission of fulfilling a campaign promise to crack down on student protesters amid accusations of rampant antisemitism on college campuses.
Those types of demands from political appointees at the Justice Department are part of the reason there has been an exodus of lawyers from the division in recent weeks, according to current and former officials.
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Devlin Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.