News

The Department of Homeland Security will not enforce its May 22 letter revoking Harvard’s certification to host international ...
Harvard will turn over I-9 forms for nearly all employees in response to a subpoena and inspection by the Department of Homeland Security, the University’s human resources office wrote in an email to ...
Harvard has confirmed it will submit I-9 employment verification records for nearly 19,000 current and former employees ...
The Department of Homeland Security appears to be backing off threats in a May 22 letter to strip Harvard’s ability to host ...
The Trump administration has moved to dismiss Harvard University's lawsuit challenging efforts to block international ...
"If Harvard won't defend the interests of its students, then we will," DHS Secretary Kristi Noem posted to her X account. "We tried to do things the easy way with Harvard.
DHS said the university has repeatedly refused its past requests. The agency is now seeking to force Harvard to turn over ”relevant records, communications and other documents relevant to the ...
Harvard agreed to provide employee I-9 forms to DHS while withholding some student worker data protected by FERPA.
The university said it will comply with demands to turn over employment forms for thousands of university staff.
DHS sent a Notice of Inspection (NOI) and subpoena to Harvard on July 8, demanding records of all currently employed staff and those within the past 12 months.
Harvard provides Trump administration with thousands of employee records as part of federal review By Aidan Ryan and Anjali Huynh Globe Staff,Updated July 29, 2025, 4:19 p.m.