Federal Government Investigates Brown for Civil Rights Violations

The investigation previously covered activities at the Warren Alpert Medical School and is now expanded to the entire university from the period of Oct. 7, 2023 to the present

A person enters the Gaza solidarity sukkah on the lawn near University Hall on the Brown University campus in Providence, R.I. on Tuesday, October. 22, 2024.
A person enters the Gaza solidarity sukkah on the lawn near University Hall on the Brown University campus in Providence, R.I. on Tuesday, October. 22, 2024.
Raquel C. Zaldívar / New England News Collaborative
Share
A person enters the Gaza solidarity sukkah on the lawn near University Hall on the Brown University campus in Providence, R.I. on Tuesday, October. 22, 2024.
A person enters the Gaza solidarity sukkah on the lawn near University Hall on the Brown University campus in Providence, R.I. on Tuesday, October. 22, 2024.
Raquel C. Zaldívar / New England News Collaborative
Federal Government Investigates Brown for Civil Rights Violations
Copy

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has expanded its inquiry into Brown University for a Title VI Federal Rights Violation, according to a campus-wide email sent from Executive Vice President for Planning and Policy Russell Carey and the Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion Matthew Guterl.

Previously, the HHS investigation, which began in February, covered only a protest that took place at the Warren Alpert Medical School graduation last May. Now, the investigation covers the entire university for the period beginning with the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks to the present.

Brown had resolved previous charges of antisemitism brought against it through an agreement with the Department of Education’s Office of Human Rights last summer. In the resolution, the school agreed to take measures to combat antisemitism on campus.

Carey and Guterl wrote in their campuswide note that, over the next few weeks, “HHS will collect information through documentation from the University and interviews with members of the community that the agency has identified as having information that might aid its investigation.”

Brown says it is confident its response to protesters during the medical school graduation were in compliance with the Title VI chapter of the Civil Rights Act.

“Brown is resolved in its cross-campus efforts to ensure a community where all individuals feel safe and valued and where no instance of antisemitism, Islamophobia, or discrimination or harassment based on race, color or national origin is tolerated,” wrote Carey and Guterl.

Brown is among a small handful of universities whose administrators agreed to consider proposals to divest from companies that support Israel in its war against Gaza as a way to negotiate an end to encampments last year.

According to press releases from the federal government, at least 50 colleges and universities are under federal investigations for Title VI violations.

The news comes as the federal government told news outlets last week it was pulling back $510 million in federal funding from Brown. It also comes amid local visa revocations. The Rhode Island School of Design said this week one of its students had their visa revoked, while Brown University said one student and several recent alumni have had their visas revoked.

Superintendent Dawn Bartz is on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of a legal review that the Smithfield school district hired to investigate the incident of senior football players hazing a Jewish freshman
An independent monitor says the district and RIDE have met the terms of a 2023 settlement that required faster evaluations and placement for 3- to 5-year-olds with disabilities, effectively closing the federal class action case
Food insecurity is getting worse in Rhode Island, and the recent disruption of SNAP benefits is only partly to blame
Public health leader Amy Nunn talks about the ripple effects of federal policy shifts, the threat of SNAP cuts and rising insurance costs, and what Rhode Island can do to protect community health in the months ahead
Attorney General Peter Neronha is negotiating with Prospect Medical to keep the financially troubled hospitals open through the end of the year while a potential buyer works to finalize financing — or another steps in
Ørsted executives say they are ‘committed’ to finishing project despite financial headwinds