Inside the Univ. of Virginia gun incident that drew DOJ's ire
U.S. NEWS
Inside the Univ. of Virginia gun incident that drew DOJ's ire
In a letter released after President Jim Ryan resigned, the Justice Department questioned U.Va.'s handling of an alleged hate crime against a Jewish student.

- New details shed light on how Jewish advocacy groups have pushed the Justice Department to get involved in campus conflicts.Leila Register / NBC News; Getty Images
July 10, 2025, 5:00 AM EDT / Updated July 10, 2025, 6:06 PM EDT
By Tyler Kingkade
University of Virginia President James Ryan resigned last month amid a Justice Department investigation into allegations the school failed to wipe out its diversity programs. But a letter the agency sent U.Va., released last week as part of a public records request, reveals another reason the Justice Department targeted the university.
In it, the department zeroed in on allegations that a fourth-year Jewish student had endured antisemitic bullying and that U.Va. had mishandled the case.
The facts surrounding this specific controversy and of the UVas alleged deliberate indifference and retaliatory treatment of the victim in response are, in a word, disturbing, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon wrote May 2.
What the letter doesnt say was just what happened among the students involved or that it led to a young mans arrest on gun and hate crime charges.
The details of the incident, covered by local news outlets
at the time, have largely gone unnoticed since Ryan announced his resignation on June 27. But additional records obtained by NBC News show how the dispute at an off-campus house escalated into a criminal case that attracted federal attention. They also shed light on how Jewish advocacy groups have pushed the Justice Department to get involved in campus conflicts and how successful theyve been in making that happen.
The University of Virginia didnt respond to questions about the incident or the Justice Departments response, citing ongoing criminal proceedings and federal privacy laws. The University opposes antisemitism and all forms of bigotry, and we take swift action to support students who experience threats or harassment and to hold offenders accountable, the school said in a statement.
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