Judge Orders Federal Government to Restore Some Research Grants for UCLA

By Aldgra Fredly
Aldgra Fredly
Aldgra Fredly
Aldgra Fredly is a freelance writer covering U.S. and Asia Pacific news for The Epoch Times.
August 13, 2025Updated: August 19, 2025

A judge on Aug. 12 ruled that the federal government must restore portions of the funding it had suspended from the University of California–Los Angeles (UCLA).

In a 12-page order, U.S. District Judge Rita Lin of the Northern District of California stated that the National Science Foundation (NSF) had violated a preliminary injunction requiring the agency to restore research grants previously awarded to UCLA.

It is unclear how much of the suspended funding will be restored under the order. Lin noted in her ruling that UCLA research projects lost more than $324 million in grant funding this year.

The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit filed in June by lawyers representing UCLA researchers, alleging that the NSF had unlawfully terminated the grants by usurping Congress’s spending authority. Lin granted a preliminary injunction on June 23, ordering NSF to reinstate the grants.

On July 30, the agency sent out letters in “another round of en masse, form letter funding cuts” to UCLA researchers, saying the grants were suspended because they “no longer effectuate program goals or agency priorities,” according to the ruling.

NSF followed with another letter on Aug. 1, saying the suspension was in response to “alleged racism, antisemitism, and policies around transgender athletes at UCLA,” the court order stated.

NSF argued that the injunction doesn’t apply because the grants were suspended and not terminated, but Lin found on Aug. 12 that the effect is the same because the suspension has no specified end date.

“In other words, researchers have no guarantee that funding will ever be restored and no way to take action to increase the likelihood of restoration,” the judge stated.

Lin stated that NSF’s suspension of the grants would halt federally funded research projects, lead to job losses among UCLA staff and graduate students, and leave research papers unpublished.

“NSF claims that it could simply turn around the day after the preliminary injunction issued, and halt funding on every grant that had been ordered reinstated, so long as that action was labeled as a ‘suspension’ rather than a ‘termination,’” Lin stated. “This is not a reasonable interpretation of the scope of the preliminary injunction.”

Lin directed the government and the lawyers for UCLA researchers to file an update by Aug. 19, confirming that all steps to comply with the preliminary injunction “have been completed by NSF or, in the event that has not occurred, an explanation of why it was not feasible and description of the steps that have been taken thus far.”

Neither UCLA nor NSF returned a request for comment by publication time.

Aside from the NSF, the Department of Energy and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have also suspended grants they previously awarded to UCLA over its alleged failure to address campus anti-Semitism.

UCLA Chancellor Julio Frenk said on Aug. 6 that the federal government has suspended a total of about $584 million in funding. Frenk stated that the impact will be devastating for UCLA and Americans across the nation if the grants are not restored.

“The suspension of these funds is not only a loss to the researchers who rely on critical grants,” Frenk said in a statement. “It is a loss for Americans across the nation whose work, health and future depend on our groundbreaking research and scholarship.”

The Trump administration is seeking a $1 billion settlement from UCLA following a Department of Justice (DOJ) probe into campus anti-Semitism, a White House official told The Epoch Times on Aug. 8.

In a July 29 notice regarding its investigation of UCLA, the DOJ accused the university’s leaders of acting with “deliberate indifference” in creating a hostile educational environment for Jewish and Israeli students amid protests following the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led terrorist attacks on Israel and the war that ensued.

“UCLA failed to take timely and appropriate action in response to credible claims of harm and hostility on its campus,” Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon said in a statement at the time. “Its inaction constitutes a clear violation of our federal civil rights laws, and the Justice Department will hold UCLA accountable to their legal obligations so that all students can have equal protection under the law.”

Aaron Gifford contributed to this report.