Judge Orders Penn to Give Info on Jewish Staff to Feds

EEOC wants the records as part of a probe into alleged antisemitic discrimination on the campus
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 1, 2026 12:30 AM CDT
Judge Orders Penn to Give Info on Jewish Staff to Feds
University of Pennsylvania signage is seen in Philadelphia, May 15, 2019.   (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

A federal judge on Tuesday ordered the University of Pennsylvania to hand over records about Jewish employees on campus to a federal agency as part of an investigation into antisemitic discrimination but said it did not have to reveal any employee's affiliation with a specific group, the AP reports. US District Judge Gerald Pappert said employees can refuse to take part in the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigation but the agency "needs the opportunity to talk to them directly to learn if they have evidence of discrimination." He mostly upheld a subpoena but said Penn does not have to disclose any worker's affiliation with a Jewish-related organization nor must it provide information about three Jewish-affiliated groups.

A university spokesperson said in an emailed response that the school is committed to confronting antisemitism and all forms of discrimination and has "taken multiple steps to prevent and address these despicable events." Penn plans to appeal. "While we acknowledge the important role of the EEOC to investigate discrimination, we also have an obligation to protect the rights of our employees. We continue to believe that requiring Penn to create lists of Jewish faculty and staff, and to provide personal contact information, raises serious privacy and First Amendment concerns. The University does not maintain employee lists by religion," the university's statement read.

It is not unusual for federal investigators looking into employment discrimination to request identities of employees of a particular religion, to facilitate outreach to people who may have been victims, according to a former federal official who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation. Pappert wrote that the university and others who joined the litigation "significantly raised the dispute's temperature by impliedly and even expressly comparing the EEOC's efforts to protect Jewish employees from antisemitism to the Holocaust and the Nazis' compilation of 'lists of Jews.'" The judge called that "unfortunate and inappropriate."

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