DOJ’s lawsuit against UCLA doesn’t just allege harassment; it seeks prescriptive remedies that could reshape disciplinary and investigative processes on campus. In requesting repayment of federal grants tied to alleged Title VI noncompliance and permission to halt remaining federal payments, the agency is pushing universities toward measurable compliance actions rather than policy statements. The requested orders include requiring “timely and meaningful” disciplinary action against discrimination targeting Jewish and Israeli students and requiring campus-police coordination when protesters allegedly block walkways or occupy buildings after dispersion orders. DOJ also seeks policies requiring prompt and meaningful investigation and resolution of antisemitism and anti-Israeli bias complaints. For the higher education sector, the immediate concern is operational—how institutions document incidents, adjudicate complaints, and coordinate with law enforcement under federally defined civil-rights requirements.