WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is suing Harvard University, saying it has refused to provide admissions records that the Justice Department demanded to ensure the Ivy League school stopped using affirmative action in admissions.
In a lawsuit filed Friday in federal court in Massachusetts, the Justice Department said Harvard has ''thwarted'' efforts to investigate potential discrimination. It accused Harvard of refusing to comply with a federal investigation and asked a judge to order the university to turn over the records.
Harmeet Dhillon, who leads the department's Civil Rights Division, said Harvard's refusal is a red flag. ''If Harvard has stopped discriminating, it should happily share the data necessary to prove it,'' Dhillon said in a statement.
A statement from Harvard said the university has been responding to the government's requests. It said Harvard is in compliance with the Supreme Court decision barring affirmative action in admissions.
''The University will continue to defend itself against these retaliatory actions which have been initiated simply because Harvard refused to surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights in response to unlawful government overreach," the university said.
The suit is the latest salvo in President Donald Trump's standoff with Harvard, which has faced billions of dollars in funding cuts and other sanctions after it rejected a list of demands from the administration last year.
Trump officials have said they're taking action against Harvard over allegations of anti-Jewish bias on campus. Harvard officials say they're facing unconstitutional retaliation for refusing to adopt the administration's ideological views. The administration is appealing a judge's orders that sided with Harvard in two lawsuits.
The Justice Department opened a compliance review into Harvard's admissions practices last April on the same day the White House issued a series of sweeping demands aligned with Trump's priorities. The agency told Harvard to hand over five years of admissions data for undergraduate applicants along with Harvard's medical and law schools.