UCLA says Trump administration has frozen $584 million in grants, threatening research

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By JULIE WATSON, Associated Press

The Trump administration has suspended $584 million in federal grants for the University of California, Los Angeles, nearly double the amount that was previously thought, the school’s chancellor announced Wednesday.

UCLA is the first public university whose federal grants have been targeted by the administration over allegations of civil rights violations related to antisemitism and affirmative action. The Trump administration has frozen or paused federal funding over similar allegations against private colleges.

“If these funds remain suspended, it will be devastating for UCLA and for Americans across the nation,” Chancellor Julio Frenk said Wednesday in a statement, noting the groundbreaking research that has come out of the university.

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The departments affected rely on funding from the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Energy, Frenk said.

The U.S. Department of Education did not immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press requesting comment.

The Trump administration recently announced the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division found UCLA violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 “by acting with deliberate indifference in creating a hostile educational environment for Jewish and Israeli students.”

The announcement came as UCLA reached a $6 million settlement with three Jewish students and a Jewish professor who sued the university, arguing it violated their civil rights by allowing pro-Palestinian protesters in 2024 to block their access to classes and other areas on campus.

The university has said that it is committed to campus safety and inclusivity and will continue to implement recommendations.

The new UC president, James B. Milliken, said in a statement Wednesday that it has agreed to talks with the administration over the allegations against UCLA.

“These cuts do nothing to address antisemitism,” Milliken said. “Moreover, the extensive work that UCLA and the entire University of California have taken to combat antisemitism has apparently been ignored.”

Milliken said the “cuts would be a death knell for innovative work that saves lives, grows our economy, and fortifies our national security. It is in our country’s best interest that funding be restored.”

As part of the lawsuit settlement, UCLA said it will contribute $2.3 million to eight organizations that combat antisemitism and support the university’s Jewish community. It also has created an Office of Campus and Community Safety, instituting new policies to manage protests on campus. Frenk, whose Jewish father and grandparents fled Nazi Germany to Mexico and whose wife is the daughter of a Holocaust survivor, launched an initiative to combat antisemitism and anti-Israeli bias.

Last week, Columbia agreed to pay $200 million as part of a settlement to resolve investigations into the government’s allegations that the school violated federal antidiscrimination laws. The agreement also restores more than $400 million in research grants.

The Trump administration plans to use its deal with Columbia as a template for other universities, with financial penalties that are now seen as an expectation.

New York Groups Challenge ICE’s Courthouse Arrests

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The Trump administration’s tactics “discourage people from attending court or from feeling safe in court, where folks are simply seeking to access the process that is accorded to them,” said Bobby Hodgson, assistant legal director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.

Immigration officers outside 26 Federal Plaza in June. (Ayman Siam/Office of NYC Comptroller)

Several New York organizations are suing the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the Executive Office of Immigration Review, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for repeatedly arresting migrants who show up to routine, mandatory check-ins at immigration courts.

The New York Civil Liberties Union, the American Civil Liberties Union, Make the Road New York, and Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel LLP filed the lawsuit Friday on behalf of The Door and African Communities Together, two local nonprofits that serve New Yorkers and immigrants. 

They say ICE’s courthouse policy, which has recently allowed officers to arrest people after their court hearings, and the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR)’s dismissal policy, which allows Department of Homeland Security (DHS) attorneys to move to dismiss orally in court without a written motion, are unfair and capricious.

The lawsuit seeks to reverse ICE’s policies under the Administrative Procedure Act, a federal law that governs how agencies create and enforce regulations.

The administration’s tactics “discourage people from attending court or from feeling safe in court, where folks are simply seeking to access the process that is accorded to them,” said Bobby Hodgson, assistant legal director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.

Before these measures were put in place, the Trump administration pushed for more arrests of immigrants without legal status, but officials were failing to reach the numbers they expected

But arrests increased significantly since May, when these measures were put in place. That same month, Stephen Miller, the president’s top immigration adviser, and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem pressed immigration officials to increase detentions to reach at least 3,000 people a day.

Of the 2,365 immigrants arrested in the New York area since January, more than half had no prior criminal charges or convictions, according to a New York Times analysis of data obtained by the Deportation Data Project. About half of those arrests were people detained at immigration offices or courts. 

“The ability of law enforcement to make arrests of criminal illegal aliens in courthouses is common sense,” an unnamed spokesperson from the DHS press office told City Limits, echoing words that had been used before by DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin. The Executive Office for Immigration Review referred questions to DHS and declined further comment.

The lawsuit describes how members of two organizations, The Door and African Communities Together, have been affected by arrests and detentions.

The Door works with young people under the age of 24, some of whom are immigrants seeking legal relief, such as asylum or Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS). This status is available to individuals under the age of 21 who are unmarried and currently living in the United States, among others.

Advocates and attorneys have suggested that people ask to appear virtually in immigration court as a means to avoid ICE agents. 

One of The Door’s clients filed a motion to appear online, according to the lawsuit. However, the court rejected his request, and he had to appear in court in person, where he was arrested. 

The 21-year-old is currently being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, which officials have decried for its “dangerous, inhumane conditions.”

Thursday morning, Congressmembers Adriano Espaillat, Nydia Velázquez, and Dan Goldman—who filed a lawsuit against ICE last week over being barred access to ICE holding areas—were again denied entry to the Brooklyn facility during an oversight visit.

The Door fears the young man’s SIJS petition will be lost if he is deported; they have not been able to speak with him since his arrest in June.

“We see the fear of our members in a way that I haven’t seen in the past,” said Beth Baltimore, the deputy director of The Door’s Legal Services Center.

Baltimore explained that out of all the motions to appear virtually that they’ve filed on behalf of clients in the last couple of months, only a couple have been approved.

“A lot of people are just losing access to counsel that might be provided in New York and losing access to services at The Door,” said Baltimore about the young people, including migrant youths, who get access to services through the organization. They can’t come to our health center, can’t come to our arts programming, and lunch and dinner every day.”

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Daniel@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

The post New York Groups Challenge ICE’s Courthouse Arrests appeared first on City Limits.

Kelley Mack, ‘The Walking Dead’ and Dr Pepper ‘Fansville’ actor, dies at 33

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By Christie D’Zurilla, Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Actor Kelley Mack, who played Addy in Season 9 of “The Walking Dead” in addition to doing national commercials and voice-over work, has died at age 33, her family said on social media.

“It is with indelible sadness that we are announcing the passing of our dear Kelley. Such a bright, fervent light has transitioned to the beyond, where we all eventually must go,” the family wrote Tuesday on her Instagram account. She died in Cincinnati after battling glioma of the central nervous system, according to a notice posted on her CaringBridge page.

“Kelley passed peacefully on Saturday evening with her loving mother Kristen and steadfast aunt Karen present. Kelley has already come to many of her loved ones in the form of various butterflies … She will be missed by so many to depths that words cannot express.”

Mack, born Kelley Lynne Klebenow in Cincinnati on July 10, 1992, was raised in towns around Ohio and also in Missouri, Connecticut, North Carolina and Illinois. She moved to Los Angeles after earning a cinematography degree from Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film in Orange in 2014.

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Her commercial work included playing Becky in “Fansville” ads for Dr Pepper and her voice-overs could be heard in spots for the Hyundai Ioniq, Budweiser, Credit Karma and more. Her “Walking Dead” character, Addy, was one of the young residents of Hilltop who had a crush on Henry while he had feelings for Lydia. Addy’s reanimated head wound up on a pike at the border of the Whisperers’ territory along with those of Henry and a handful of others who fought bravely but unsuccessfully after being kidnapped by Alpha.

After experiencing pain last fall in her lower back and legs, Mack was diagnosed in late November with a diffuse midline glioma, a rare type of astrocytoma, a cancer that starts in the central nervous system. “Due to the biopsy surgery on my spinal cord,” she said on Instagram in January, “I have lost the use of my right leg and most of my left leg, so I now get around with a walker and a wheelchair.”

She started proton radiation treatments in Cincinnati in mid-January — “It felt like I was filming an episode of my new TV show, set on a space ship floating somewhere in our infinite galaxy,” she wrote on Instagram — and by March had regained some ability to walk despite continuing pain in her lower body.

“Some days are challenging,” she said in April on CaringBridge, listing all the “healthy” things she was trying to do with aid from caregivers — her family members. “We have our emotional hiccups,” she said, “but we remind each other of our positivity and strength. We continue to feel confident in our path forward, God, and in our love for each other all leading up to overcome.”

By July, however, Mack was receiving respite care, which was described as “the toughest part of her journey.”

She is survived by her mother and father, Kristen and Lindsay Klebenow, sister Katherine, brother Parker, grandparents Lois and Larry Klebenow and her boyfriend, Logan Lanier. A celebration of life will be held Aug. 16 in Glendale, Ohio, and at a future date in Los Angeles.

©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Fringe review: ‘What I Should Have Said’ is a good concept with very rocky execution

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Could Be Worse

“What I Should Have Said” follows a man who goes to marriage counseling, alone, and — as enacted across the stage — replays arguments with his wife, then re-replays them in healthier ways he wishes he’d communicated. Great concept. Muddled execution. Occasionally stiff acting aside, the show barely escapes trite self-help dialogue and can’t sell the marital relationship as believably precarious, which would be necessary for the “should’ve” scenes to feel incisive. A final-act twist unexpectedly cuts against part of the show’s premise, but those last minutes turn out to be the only ones that live up to the show’s powerful potential.

Presented by Peake Productions at Phoenix Theater; 8:30 p.m. Aug. 1, 8:30 p.m. Aug. 2, 2:30 p.m. Aug. 3, 8:30 p.m. Aug. 7, 7 p.m. Aug. 8, 7 p.m. Aug. 9

Still trying to decide what to see? Check out all the Pioneer Press 2025 Fringe reviews, with each show rated on a scale of Must See, Worth Considering, Could Be Worse or You Can Skip It.

The Minnesota Fringe Festival is presenting nearly 100 hourlong stage acts from July 31 through Aug. 10 around Minneapolis. Visit MinnesotaFringe.org for ticket and show information.

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