Examples of harassment detailed in the report included frequent slurs and racist imagery, as well as a hostile environment where students racial slurs against Black students, displayed confederate flags and Nazi symbols and gave Nazi salutes.
The U.S. Department of Justice reached a settlement with the Elmore-Morristown Unified Union School District in Vermont to resolve allegations of racial harassment against Black and biracial students.
Vermont investigators concluded that students, primarily at the middle school level, faced frequent slurs and racist imagery.
Vermont Business Magazine The Justice Department today announced a settlement agreement with the Elmore-Morristown Unified Union School District (EMUU) in Vermont to resolve its investigation into allegations that the district failed to adequately respond to student-on-student racial harassment.
The U.S Department of Justice and the Elmore-Morristown Unified Union School District have entered an agreement to improve policies and practices.
A Vermont school district’s inadequate response to serious and widespread harassment of Black and biracial students has led to a
The Justice Department has reached an agreement with the owner of the DoubleTree Hilton Hotel at SeaWorld in Orlando for allegedly discriminating against people of Arab descent by canceling a conference at the hotel.
WASHINGTON, Jan 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden pardoned five people on Sunday, including the late civil rights leader Marcus ... Kemba Smith Pradia, a criminal justice advocate who ...
The lengthy Department of Justice Civil Rights Division investigation centered ... issues and safeguarding against violations of the United States Constitution. “The rule of law must be followed ...
“I assume you will agree with me that withholding disaster relief, by President Trump or any other chief executive of the United States ... Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department ...
This executive order is plainly unconstitutional,” Vermont Attorney General Clark said in a statement Tuesday announcing the lawsuit.
Legal experts said the president’s executive order would upend precedent and is unlikely to pass constitutional muster.