Judge Pappert, of the Philadelphia Federal District Court, ruled that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is within its constitutional rights to collect the information. The university, which has been fighting this subpoena since last summer, must turn over the requested information by May 1. The subpoena includes lists of Jewish students, faculty, and organizations, as well as their contact information, as part of a discrimination investigation. The judge argued that the charge of discrimination is valid and dismissed concerns about safety, rejecting comparisons to the Third Reich.
The university, while required to provide the information, is not obligated to include employees' affiliation with specific Jewish organizations. The Trump administration has gone after several universities over accusations of antisemitism, from Ivy League institutions like Penn and Harvard to state schools like the University of California. The EEOC has not issued a comment on the judge's decision. This ruling could give the federal government more tools for antisemitism investigations into other educational institutions.