‘New sheriff in town’: DOJ to enforce anti-trans Trump orders

An article from site logo ‘New sheriff in town’: DOJ to enforce anti-trans Trump orders

A joint Title IX Special Investigations Team will shift some civil rights investigations and enforcement from the Education Department to the Justice Department.

Published April 4, 2025 Naaz Modan Senior Reporter A person is seated as a desk. They are waving their left hand. A name plate sits in front of them and people are seated in row in the background. Linda McMahon, seen above being confirmed as U.S. secretary of education Feb. 13, 2025, in Washington, D.C., announced changes to civil rights enforcement in schools on Friday. Win McNamee via Getty Images

First published on

K-12 Dive Listen to the article 5 min This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

The Trump administration on Friday announced a major change in Title IX enforcement at schools and colleges, tapping the U.S. Department of Justice to help investigate and ultimately enforce the separation of transgender students from girls' and women's athletics teams and spaces in schools and colleges. 

The Title IX Special Investigations Team shifts some civil rights investigations and enforcement from the U.S. Department of Education to the Department of Justice — both of which are a part of the newly minted unit.

waitToLoadAds.push(function() { googletag.cmd.push(function() { if (window.dfp_visibility == 'mobile' ) { googletag.display('dfp-hybrid1-mobile'); googletag.pubads().addEventListener('slotRenderEnded', function (event) { var adUnitPath = '/21662595662/highereddive/highereddivehybrid1'; var onProformative = false; if (onProformative && event.slot.getAdUnitPath() === adUnitPath && !event.isEmpty ) { var adUnitPathWithVisibility = adUnitPath + '-mobile'; var selector = '.pf-comments__ad-wrapper [data-container-ad-unit-id="' + adUnitPathWithVisibility + '"]'; if (!$(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').hasClass('borders')) { $(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').addClass('borders') } } }); } }); }); waitToLoadAds.push(function() { googletag.cmd.push(function() { if (window.dfp_visibility == 'desktop' ) { googletag.display('dfp-hybrid2-desktop'); googletag.pubads().addEventListener('slotRenderEnded', function (event) { var adUnitPath = '/21662595662/highereddive/highereddivehybrid2'; var onProformative = false; if (onProformative && event.slot.getAdUnitPath() === adUnitPath && !event.isEmpty ) { var adUnitPathWithVisibility = adUnitPath + '-desktop'; var selector = '.pf-comments__ad-wrapper [data-container-ad-unit-id="' + adUnitPathWithVisibility + '"]'; if (!$(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').hasClass('borders')) { $(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').addClass('borders') } } }); } }); });

The move is part of a Trump administration effort to push through a backlog of complaints at the Education Department's Office for Civil Rights. These investigations usually take months — sometimes years — to complete. The process typically includes interviews and other tools and ultimately ends in resolution agreements to bring schools into compliance.  

Instead, the department will rely on a rapid resolution process to address sex discrimination complaints, framing the move as a way to protect cisgender girls and women, according to a Friday announcement. Rapid resolution is "an expedited case processing approach," according to the Trump administration's case processing manual, which was updated in January. 

There are certain requirements before rapid resolution is an option, including having the complainant initiate the expedited process and having schools on board with that plan of action to resolve a complaint. The tool can be tapped when schools have already taken action to resolve the complaint on their own accord. It was used under the previous administration as well to address the increasing volume of complaints.

"OCR under this Administration has moved faster than it ever has, and the Title IX SIT will ensure even more rapid and consistent investigations," U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said in Friday's announcement. "To all the entities that continue to allow men to compete in women’s sports and use women’s intimate facilities: there’s a new sheriff in town. We will not allow you to get away with denying women's civil rights any longer.”

waitToLoadAds.push(function() { googletag.cmd.push(function() { if (window.dfp_visibility == 'mobile' ) { googletag.display('dfp-hybrid2-mobile'); googletag.pubads().addEventListener('slotRenderEnded', function (event) { var adUnitPath = '/21662595662/highereddive/highereddivehybrid2'; var onProformative = false; if (onProformative && event.slot.getAdUnitPath() === adUnitPath && !event.isEmpty ) { var adUnitPathWithVisibility = adUnitPath + '-mobile'; var selector = '.pf-comments__ad-wrapper [data-container-ad-unit-id="' + adUnitPathWithVisibility + '"]'; if (!$(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').hasClass('borders')) { $(selector).closest('.pf-comments__ad-wrapper').addClass('borders') } } }); } }); });

Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in an accompanying statement that "protecting women and women's sports is a key priority" for the Department of Justice. The agency will " take comprehensive action when women’s sports or spaces are threatened," she continued. The administration has often used that language to separate transgender students from programs spaces aligning with their gender identities with blanket bans. 

The department's formal announcement that it is handing off Title IX enforcement to the Justice Department and joining forces on investigations comes after weeks of collaboration between the two agencies, confirming suspicions from education civil rights attorneys that DOJ involvement will be the new normal.

It was also expected, considering that Education Department layoffs gutted half of OCR enforcement offices nationwide, and the department was already relying on the DOJ in the layoffs' wake. 

The Education Department already tapped the Justice Department in an investigation the Trump administration launched into the Maine Department of Education over the state's transgender athlete policy.

"Why would they continue to administratively enforce when they're trying to put themselves out of jobs?" Kayleigh Baker, a Title IX attorney for TNG Consulting, an education civil rights consultant group, surmised late last month in wake of the Maine case. "And so I think leaning on DOJ makes sense." 

Prior to this administration, the DOJ was rarely called off the bench to enforce civil rights protections in schools, and its involvement was usually only reserved for complex and high-profile cases.

The move to more heavily involve the Justice Department in education civil rights enforcement also comes as the administration aims to shift other Education Department responsibilities to outside agencies. In March, for example, the administration announced that it intends to move special education oversight to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Lawsuits challenging the Education Department's mass layoffs claim they have compromised the agency's ability to continue statutory responsibilities such as civil rights enforcement. But the department told K-12 Dive in a March email that would not be the case.

"We are confident that the dedicated staff of OCR will deliver on its statutory responsibilities," said department spokesperson Madi Biedermann at the time.

Recommended Reading
  • USDA restores funding to University of Maine System By Ben Unglesbee • March 13, 2025
  • OCR to Maine: Define sex by reproductive systems or lose funding offsite link K-12 Dive
Filed Under: Policy & Legal 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. Daily Dive newsletter example Editors' picks
  • Johns Hopkins University Image attribution tooltip Jon Bilous via Getty Images Image attribution tooltip ‘Perplexing and distressing’: Johns Hopkins warns of budget cuts amid Trump-era funding chaos

    The institution is grappling with the “unexpected stoppage” of $800 million in funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development.

    By Ben Unglesbee • March 5, 2025
  • Large brick building with turrets on St. Norbert campus with flagpole at center of frame. Image attribution tooltip The image by Jhansen23 is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 Image attribution tooltip St. Norbert College to cut over 2 dozen faculty positions and 20 programs

    The Catholic institution in Wisconsin is still trying to cut $7 million from its fiscal 2026 budget after previously initiating multiple rounds of layoffs.

    By Ben Unglesbee • March 18, 2025
Email: Sign up A valid email address is required. Please select at least one newsletter. var siteName = 'Higher Ed Dive' || null; if (siteName) { setupFormCallbackAndCreateFormIfSub(siteName, 'inline'); } $(document).ready(function () { // copy the contents of the generic_signup partial into the desktop_signup_spot $desktop_signup_spot = $("#desktop-inline-signup"); $desktop_signup = $("#inline-signup-html-desktop").children(); $desktop_signup_spot.append($desktop_signup); $("#inline-signup-html-desktop").remove(); }); Glass polygon building with students sitting and walking in front. . A large metal bell sits in the courtyard in front of the U.S. Department of Education building. An entrance to a National Institutes of Health building is lit by the sun on a clear day. Street shot of New York University building in Manhattan . Senators Tim Scott and Elizabeth Warren converse during a Senate Banking Committee hearing. window.carouselData = {}; window.carouselData.carouselStories = [{"title": "UC San Diego preps budget for up to a $500M hit from federal cuts", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/uc-san-diego-preps-budget-for-up-to-a-500m-hit-from-federal-cuts/744534/", "pub_date": "Apr 04, 2025"}, {"title": "Harvard University faces funding ultimatum from Trump administration", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/harvard-university-federal-funding-ultimatum-trump-administration/744532/", "pub_date": "Apr 04, 2025"}, {"title": "Education Department plans to propose regulatory changes to student aid programs", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/education-department-negotiated-rulemaking-public-service-loan-foriveness/744427/", "pub_date": "Apr 04, 2025"}, {"title": "Researchers sue NIH over mass cuts to DEI grants", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/researchers-sue-nih-dei-purge-grant-funding/744424/", "pub_date": "Apr 03, 2025"}, {"title": "Scholar warns of chilling speech in higher ed after NYU canceled her presentation", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/scholar-warns-of-chilling-speech-in-higher-ed-after-nyu-canceled-her-presen/744294/", "pub_date": "Apr 02, 2025"}, {"title": "Trump administration suspends dozens of Princeton University\u2019s research grants", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/trump-administration-suspends-dozens-of-princeton-universitys-research-gra/744155/", "pub_date": "Apr 01, 2025"}, {"title": "Northwestern University touts decline in antisemitic harassment amid lawmaker scrutiny", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/northwestern-university-touts-decline-in-antisemitic-harassment-amid-lawmak/744137/", "pub_date": "Apr 01, 2025"}, {"title": "Democratic senators call for probe of Trump Education Department cuts", "link": "https://www.highereddive.com/news/democrat-senators-ask-inspector-general-trump-education-department-layoffs/743917/", "pub_date": "Apr 01, 2025"}] // For each carousel story in our object, add the HTML contents of the corresponding .proximized_carousel_image DIV as a property // This will be used in the carousel.mustache.html template to display the image for (i=0; i < $('.proximized_carousel_image').length; i++) { window.carouselData.carouselStories[i].proximizedImage = $('#carousel_' + i).html().trim(); } // Remove the DOM elements for the proximized images since we already have what we need from them $('#carousel_images').remove(); window.carouselData.preferredTopic = "Policy & Legal" window.carouselData.preferredTopicLink = "/topic/policy/" window.carouselData.storylineTitle = ""

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/education-justice-department-DOJ-Title-IX-taskforce-OCR-investigations/744554/