Probe Launched After Antifa Targets Turning Point USA Event at UC–Berkeley: DOJ Official
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Berkeley police arrest a protester outside of a Turning Point USA event at the University of California–Berkeley in Berkeley, Calif., on Nov. 10, 2025. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
By Janice Hisle
11/11/2025Updated: 11/13/2025

Federal authorities are investigating events surrounding a violent Antifa protest at a conservative gathering in California, a top Justice Department official announced on Nov. 11.

That action comes in the wake of a Nov. 10 Turning Point USA (TPUSA) event at the University of California–Berkeley, where “violent thugs” attacked attendees, according to Harmeet Dhillon, the assistant attorney general who heads the Justice Department’s civil rights division.

In a social media post, Dhillon described “issues of serious concern regarding campus and local security and Antifa’s ability to operate with impunity” in the Golden State.

She later disclosed that “several aspects of [the Justice Department] are involved” in the investigation.

TPUSA is a conservative organization whose founder, Charlie Kirk, was assassinated while speaking on a Utah college campus Sept. 10—a killing allegedly tied to Antifa-related ideology because of anti-fascist markings found on bullet casings that were seized as evidence in the case.

Dhillon, in her post on X, shared a video that TPUSA shot, showing explosions, fire, and smoke, as protesters waved signs and chanted against “fascists.” The post included a comment from Nick Sortor, who describes himself as an independent journalist.

“Antifa has turned Turning Point’s event at UC Berkeley in California into an absolute WARZONE,” Sortor wrote. “Munitions are being lit on fire by Antifa while attendees are rushed into the venue.”

Dhillon also posted that her agency would be contacting UC–Berkeley and the city of Berkeley.

“In America, we do not allow citizens to be attacked by violent thugs and shrug and turn our backs,” she said. “Been there, done that, not on our watch.”

Dhillon said her concerns were similar to those she experienced in 2017 as a private attorney. Her clients sued UC–Berkeley over its alleged discrimination against speakers espousing politically conservative viewpoints. The university settled the lawsuit in 2018, pledging to change its procedures for handling “major events.”

At the time, Dhillon stated that the settlement benefited all students, not just conservative students.

University, Others React


In response to The Epoch Times’ request for comment about the latest incident, Dan Mogulof, assistant vice chancellor at the university, said, “UC Berkeley has not been notified of any federal investigation.”

Via email on Nov. 11, Mogulof said that more than 900 people attended the TPUSA gathering, adding, “The event was successfully held and proceeded without disruption.”

City police officers arrested two people before the event “for fighting outside campus,” he wrote, and campus police arrested two others for “failing to comply with directions.”

Dhillon released a letter she sent to the UC–Berkeley campus police chief. In the letter, Dhillon said she was formally requesting that Chief Yogananda Pittman “preserve all records” related to the Nov. 10 event.

Specifically, Dhillon wrote that she was concerned about potential violations of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and citizens’ constitutional rights to free speech and equal protection.

UC–Berkeley originated the “free speech movement” in 1964, at a time when California college campuses prohibited free speech about non-campus-related causes.

The Epoch Times sent a message asking City Attorney Farimah Brown to respond to Dhillon’s promise to take action against the city. However, city offices were closed in observance of Veterans Day; no response from Brown arrived by publication time.

Brown also did not respond to a second request sent on Nov. 12.

TPUSA, in a social media post before the violence erupted that night, said that protesters were “chanting that they are ‘ANTIFA’” and that their purpose was to “stop fascism,” while shutting down TPUSA and labeling all attendees as “fascists.”

Packed House Despite Opposition


Andrew Kolvet, TPUSA spokesman, called the violence “a coordinated attack on a peaceful event.”

Protesters scared away many people who wanted to come, he told Fox News’s Jesse Watters on Nov. 11.

Kolvet also said the university forced TPUSA to use the university’s ticketing system. As a result, opponents scooped up tickets so that TPUSA fans couldn’t use them. That tactic, intended to reduce crowd size, has become “a common ploy” of left-wing agitators, Kolvet said.

Nevertheless, the venue was filled, he said. Zellerbach Hall, where the event was held, has a capacity of nearly 2,000. Video footage on the Fox News report showed a capacity crowd waving photos of Charlie Kirk and chanting his name.

Attendees such as Savanah Hernandez, an independent journalist who contributes content to TPUSA, said the incident was frightening.

In a social media post, Hernandez alleged that the protesters “were allowed to terrorize innocent Americans for hours while openly calling for everyone in attendance to be killed, by labeling them all ‘fascists’ while then proceeding to chant ‘death to fascists.’”

“They also made a point to continue to celebrate and normalize the assassination of Charlie Kirk,” Hernandez said.

Kirk had been scheduled to speak at the Nov. 10 UC–Berkeley event. Instead, the program featured comedian Rob Schneider and Christian media personality Frank Turek.

Kirk had on many occasions pushed back against the leftist classification of his views as “fascist.”

He once told a young man who engaged him at one of his open tents on his “American Comeback Tour” on college campuses: “I’m not a fascist; I believe in a free society.”

Hernandez, in her Nov. 11 post, said that, based on her observations at UC–Berkeley, the Trump administration “is not taking ANTIFA seriously and the labeling of ANTIFA as a domestic terrorist organization has had ZERO effect.”

“If anything, it’s emboldened these violent anarchists,” she wrote on X.

The Epoch Times sent a message to the FBI seeking a response to criticisms such as Hernandez’s. An automatic reply stated that FBI responses were limited because of reduced staffing during the government shutdown.

Attorney General Pam Bondi recognized the civil unrest on Nov. 11 in a post on X, saying, “Antifa is an existential threat to our nation.”

“The violent riots at UC Berkeley last night are under full investigation by the FBI-led Joint Terrorism Task Force. We will continue to spare no expense unmasking all who commit and orchestrate acts of political violence,” she said, noting the executive order designating Antifa a “domestic terrorist organization.”

President Donald Trump issued the order 12 days after Kirk’s assassination and later issued a memo that outlined additional directives to the FBI and numerous other federal agencies involved with the Antifa probe.

“The Department of Justice and our law-enforcement partners are dismantling violent networks that seek to intimidate Americans and suppress their free expression and First Amendment rights,” Bondi said.

The FBI stated it is following Trump’s directive to investigate Antifa.

Correction: A previous version of this article misspelled Savanah Hernandez’s name. The Epoch Times regrets the error.

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Janice Hisle mainly writes in-depth reports based on U.S. political news and cultural trends, following a two-year stint covering President Donald Trump’s 2024 reelection campaign. Before joining The Epoch Times in 2022, she worked more than two decades as a reporter for newspapers in Ohio and authored several books. She is a graduate of Kent State University's journalism program. You can reach Janice at: janice.hisle@epochtimes.us

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