Latest news with #OfficeoftheGeneralCounsel
Yahoo
09-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Trump administration investigating foreign donations at University of Pennsylvania
The Department of Education opened a foreign funding investigation into the University of Pennsylvania on Thursday. The department's Office of the General Counsel is requesting records from the university after a review allegedly revealed 'inaccurate and incomplete disclosures.' The university has 30 days to produce documents such as tax information back through 2017, admission agreements with foreign entities for international students, information on those involved with admitting foreign students and those working with non-U.S. research institutions, and a list of grants or gifts that came from foreign sources. 'UPenn has a troubling Section 117 compliance history, having failed to disclose any foreign funding until February of 2019 despite a decades-long statutory obligation to do so. Although the previous Administration degraded the Department's enforcement of universities' legal obligations to disclose foreign gifts and contracts, the Trump Administration will vigorously uphold the law and ensure universities are transparent with their foreign gifts and investments,' Education Department acting General Counsel Tom Wheeler said. Universities have an obligation to disclose foreign gifts or contracts with a value of $250,000 or more annually to the federal agency. The Hill has reached out to the university for comment. Penn has already seen $175 million in funding pulled by the Trump administration for alleged violations in its transgender student athlete policies. The school contends it is in compliance with the NCAA, which does not allow transgender women to compete on the women's teams now. The Trump administration has also opened a foreign funding investigation into Harvard. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


The Hill
09-05-2025
- Business
- The Hill
Trump administration investigating foreign donations at University of Pennsylvania
The Department of Education opened a foreign funding investigation into the University of Pennsylvania on Thursday. The department's Office of the General Counsel is requesting records from the university after a review allegedly revealed 'inaccurate and incomplete disclosures.' The university has 30 days to produce documents such as tax information back through 2017, admission agreements with foreign entities for international students, information on those involved with admitting foreign students and those working with non-U.S. research institutions and a list of grants or gifts that came from foreign sources. 'UPenn has a troubling Section 117 compliance history, having failed to disclose any foreign funding until February of 2019 despite a decades-long statutory obligation to do so. Although the previous Administration degraded the Department's enforcement of universities' legal obligations to disclose foreign gifts and contracts, the Trump Administration will vigorously uphold the law and ensure universities are transparent with their foreign gifts and investments,' said acting General Counsel Tom Wheeler. Universities have an obligation to disclose foreign gifts or contracts with a value of $250,000 or more annually to the federal agency. The Hill has reached out to the university for comment. Penn has already seen $175 million in funding pulled by the Trump administration for alleged violations in its transgender student athlete policies. The school contends it is in compliance with NCAA, which does not allow transgender women to compete on the girls' teams now. The Trump administration has also opened a foreign funding investigation into Harvard.


Boston Globe
14-04-2025
- Politics
- Boston Globe
Nine people affiliated with MIT have had visas revoked, university president says
Advertisement One of them independently has filed a lawsuit against the federal government. MIT is not a party to the suit, the letter said, but school officials have been in touch with the student directly. 'We are extremely concerned that there appears to have been no notice or explanation from the government for the revocation,' Kornbluth wrote. 'Our concern extends to all the members of our community who face such unexpected revocations, and we know that our international community — indeed our campus community broadly ― is alarmed by the possibility of future actions,' the letter continued. The letter directed concerned students to guidance documents prepared by MIT's Office of the General Counsel, as well as the International Students Office or the International Scholars Office. 'To live up to our great mission, MIT is driven to pursue the highest standards of intellectual and creative excellence,' Kornbluth wrote. 'That means we are, and must be, in the business of attracting and supporting exceptionally talented people, the kind of people with the drive, skill and daring to see, discover and invent things no one else can.' Advertisement 'To find those rare people, we open ourselves to talent from every corner of the United States and from around the globe,' the letter continued. 'MIT is an American university, proudly so — but we would be gravely diminished without the students and scholars who join us from other nations.' Separately, On Friday, the Department of Energy announced that for grants to universities, it would no longer cover indirect costs at previously agreed-to rates, according to the letter. The new rate was set at 15% and the department said it would terminate all grants unless they conformed to the new blanket rate, the letter said. Such grants support the work of nearly 1,000 members of the MIT community, Kornbluth's letter said. The lawsuit filed Monday in federal court in Boston named the Department of Energy and its secretary, Chris Wright. 'If DOE's policy is allowed to stand, it will devastate scientific research at America's universities and badly undermine our Nation's enviable status as a global leader in scientific research and innovation,' the 41-page suit said. MIT joined 10 higher education associations and universities, including Brown and Princeton, in the lawsuit. A one-size-fits-all approach to the new rate won't work and 'the harm will be immediate and irreparable,' the lawsuit said. Advertisement 'Because universities cannot sustain DOE-funded programs at the 15% indirect cost rate ... myriad critical projects — often the product of years or decades of effort — are in jeopardy of being stopped in their tracks,' the letter said 'Progress on a safe and effective nuclear deterrent, novel energy sources, and cures for debilitating and life-threatening illness will be obstructed,' the letter said. 'America's rivals will celebrate, even as science and industry in the United States suffer.' Tonya Alanez can be reached at