Faculty groups question DOJ’s Yale admissions claims, balk at potential deal

An article fromsite logoDive Brief Faculty groups question DOJ’s Yale admissions claims, balk at potential deal

“Yale has the resources, stature, and responsibility to stand firm,” the American Association of University Professors and other groups said.

Published July 8, 2026Ben Unglesbee Senior Reporter

The campus of Yale University.

Yale University's campus in New Haven, Conn., is pictured on April 4, 2015. Faculty groups have called on the Ivy League institution to reject any settlement with the Trump administration that might compromise its independence. Getty Images Dive Brief:

  •  The American Association of University Professors and other related faculty groups on Monday called on Yale University to reject any potential deal with the Trump administration to resolve probes into the Ivy League institution’s admissions practices.
  • In May, the U.S. Department of Justice alleged that Yale illegally gave admissions advantages to Black and Hispanic medical school applicants. Attorneys for Yale’s AAUP chapter this week sent university leaders a scathing analysis of the agency’s findings, arguing it relied on “cherry-picked” and “statistically weak" evidence, leading to “bogus” findings.
  • “Yale has the resources, stature, and responsibility to stand firm," the faculty coalition said Tuesday in a statement, warning that concessions to the government would compromise Yale’s academic freedom, shared governance and independence.

if (window.dfp_visibility === 'mobile' ) googletag.cmd.push(function() googletag.defineSlot( '/3618/highereddive/highereddivehybrid1', [[300, 250], 'fluid'], 'dfp-hybrid1-mobile' ).addService(googletag.pubads()); ); waitToLoadAds.push(function() googletag.cmd.push(function() if (window.dfp_visibility === 'mobile' ) window.onDvtagReady?.(() => googletag.display('dfp-hybrid1-mobile')); googletag.pubads().addEventListener('slotRenderEnded', function (event) var adUnitPath = '/3618/highereddive/highereddivehybrid1'; var onProformative = false; if (onProformative && event.slot.getAdUnitPath() === adUnitPath && !event.isEmpty ) var adUnitPathWithVisibility = adUnitPath + '-mobile'; var selector = '.pf-comments__ad-wrapper #dfp-hybrid1-mobile'; if (!$(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').hasClass('borders')) $(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').addClass('borders') ); ); ); if (window.dfp_visibility === 'desktop' ) googletag.cmd.push(function() googletag.defineSlot( '/3618/highereddive/highereddivehybrid2', [[300, 250], 'fluid'], 'dfp-hybrid2-desktop' ).addService(googletag.pubads()); ); waitToLoadAds.push(function() googletag.cmd.push(function() if (window.dfp_visibility === 'desktop' ) window.onDvtagReady?.(() => googletag.display('dfp-hybrid2-desktop')); googletag.pubads().addEventListener('slotRenderEnded', function (event) var adUnitPath = '/3618/highereddive/highereddivehybrid2'; var onProformative = false; if (onProformative && event.slot.getAdUnitPath() === adUnitPath && !event.isEmpty ) var adUnitPathWithVisibility = adUnitPath + '-desktop'; var selector = '.pf-comments__ad-wrapper #dfp-hybrid2-desktop'; if (!$(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').hasClass('borders')) $(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').addClass('borders') ); ); ); Dive Insight: 

The Trump administration has upended decades of civil rights enforcement by cracking down on efforts meant to address historical inequities and practices it regards as reverse discrimination, often citing the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2023 ban on race-conscious college admissions in the process. Yale is one of the first universities to publicly come under fire in the latest front of that crusade — medical school admissions. 

The national AAUP, together with its Yale chapter and the national and Connecticut American Federation of Teachers, called on university leaders to defend Yale and its admissions practices. 

In a Tuesday letter to Yale President Maurie McInnis and General Counsel Alexander Dreier, lawyers representing the Yale AAUP with a firm hired by Yale AAUP, Sher Tremonte, said the DOJ’s allegations had “significant factual and legal deficiencies” and urged university leaders to reject “what is a transparent DOJ effort to strong-arm Yale.”

The “purported evidence” that formed the basis of the DOJ’s findings was “paper-thin and amounts to little more than speculation,” wrote the attorneys, from the firm Sher Tremonte.

They pointed in part to the DOJ’s citation of an admissions guidance slide from 2024 simply titled “Admissions post-SCOTUS.” In the May letter, Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general of the DOJ’s civil rights unit, wrote that the slide “suggests that admissions personnel are given verbal instructions during this presentation encouraging the use of race/ethnicity in admissions.”

The Sher Tremonte attorneys wrote that Dhillon’s conclusion is “unsupported by any facts and is based on pure speculation.”

They also attacked Dhillon’s claim that admitted applicants to Yale’s medical school show “significant differences across racial lines” on the Medical College Admission Test as well as differences in their GPAs, with White and Asian students having higher median scores and grades than Black and Hispanic students.

“The tables show extremely minor variations at the very highest range of the GPA and MCAT distributions,” Sher Tremonte attorneys wrote. “Although the DOJ Letter describes these differences as ‘significant,’ the numbers themselves belie that description.”

Moreover, they argued that the DOJ ignored all other possible factors contributing to the differences, such as socioeconomic background, home states and past work experience. “By isolating race alone and omitting all other explanatory variables, the DOJ’s statistical analysis falsely inflates the relationship between race and admissions statistics.”

The analysis follows shortly after The New York Times reported in late June that Yale could cut a deal with the Trump administration to resolve the probe, which by then had spread to the university’s law school and undergraduate admissions. 

Citing anonymous sources, the publication reported that Yale was in talks with the Trump administration and had offered a potential settlement proposal to resolve the widening admissions probe.

“Yale’s quick moves to try to reach an agreement with the government suggest it does not want a high-profile, drawn-out fight,” the Times reported, pointing to the Trump administration’s prolonged, multi-faceted attacks on Harvard University and the ensuing legal battle. 

A Yale spokesperson said Wednesday that the university doesn’t discuss the specifics of ongoing legal matters. 

“That said, we stand firm in the university’s commitment to students’ free expression, academic freedom, and Yale’s ability to determine who is admitted in accordance with the law,” the spokesperson said in an email. 

Since the DOJ took aim at Yale, it has announced similar findings about admissions at the University of California, Davis’ medical school and said it has opened at least 15 additional probes into other unnamed institutions.

Filed Under: Federal Policy, Faculty & Staff /* Keep this hidden until we need to show the v2 challenge. */ .captcha-container display: none; (function () )(); Higher Ed Dive news delivered to your inbox

Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts

Email:

Sign up A valid email address is required. Please select at least one newsletter.Newsletter example on mobileEditors' picks

  • In a large room, a sign in the foreground reads "Welcome International Students!". Multiple groups of students chat amongst themselves in the background. Image attribution tooltipThe image by Kent State University Libraries is licensed under CC BY 2.0Image attribution tooltipDeep Dive The state of international enrollment in 6 charts

    We're examining major trends impacting foreign enrollment, including early data on the Trump administration's tighter visa policies.

    By Laura Spitalniak • June 8, 2026
  • A student sits on the lawn of the University of Texas at Austin's campus with buildings in the background. Image attribution tooltipBrandon Bell via Getty ImagesImage attribution tooltipTracker Here’s a list of the biggest donations to colleges in 2026 so far

    Drexel University landed a $112.6 million from a trustee and his family to expand the university’s engineering and computer science college.

    Updated June 11, 2026

ES by OMG

Euro-Savings.com |Buy More, Pay Less | Anywhere in Europe

Shop Smarter, Stretch your Euro & Stack the Savings | Latest Discounts & Deals, Best Coupon Codes & Promotions in Europe | Your Favourite Stores update directly every Second

Euro-Savings.com or ES lets you buy more and pay less anywhere in Europe. Shop Smarter on ES Today. Sign-up to receive Latest Discounts, Deals, Coupon Codes & Promotions. With Direct Brand Updates every second, ES is Every Shopper’s Dream come true! Stretch your dollar now with ES. Start saving today!

Originally posted on: https://www.highereddive.com/news/faculty-groups-question-dojs-yale-admissions-claims-balk-at-potential-dea/824755/