DOJ probes Berkeley riot; Illinois TPUSA warns hostility isn’t just in California
(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Justice launched a civil rights investigation into University of California Berkeley after violent agitators overran a Turning Point USA event, an escalation Illinois TPUSA chapters say doesn’t compare to rising hostility on their own campuses.
Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon launched the probe after videos showed barricades torn down, students beaten and multiple arrests at the sold-out TPUSA event.
With several felony arrests and Berkeley cooperating with federal investigators, the fallout is drawing national attention, including from Illinois State TPUSA president Ben Umbdenstock.
“I saw a guy with blood running down his head. It was something I never thought I’d see at a Turning Point event,” Umbdenstock told The Center Square. “The worst we’ve ever had here was when a teaching assistant flipped our table, not once but twice, and he was eventually fired. Later, we found out he’d been arrested by the FBI for threats against the president and other officials. That was crazy enough, and then seeing what happened at UC Berkeley… I’m just grateful my university hasn’t had anything major like that.”
Umbdenstock noted that the Berkeley riot resembled an earlier breakdown in campus safety at the same university in 2017.
“It seems like the same thing happening all over again,” he said. “College campuses should be protecting all students, no matter what.”
Although he believes ISU is generally cooperative and comparatively calm, Umbdenstock said hostility toward conservative students is still real.
In a statement last week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s spokesperson told Fox News Digital that “Violence is not a legitimate exercise of First Amendment rights. While people have the right to protest, it must be done peacefully.”
ISU’s chapter drew national attention this year after a graduate teaching assistant flipped their table, twice, and was later fired. Umbdenstock recalled the escalation.
“He flipped our table on Monday… We brushed it off, and filed a police report. But when the TA returned that Friday, flipped the table again, and made ‘Jesus did so I have to remark’, the situation changed,” said Umbdenstock. “That’s when we knew this wasn’t about some speaker, we were just conservatives to him. Looking at his social media posts, he considered us fascists. Then we learned he’d been talked to by police and even the FBI.”
Umbdenstock called the DOJ’s investigation into UC Berkeley “appropriate.”
“Totally, they should go in,” he said. “It’s their duty to protect every student, even in deep-blue California,” he said
Umbdenstock said the Berkeley chaos is a reminder that conservative students must stay patient, stay strong, and refuse to sink to hostility.
Latest News Stories
Industry advocates: More state regulation will drive insurance rates higher
Lawmakers, policy groups react to social media warning suit
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for August 14, 2025
Peotone Schools Face ‘Fiscal Cliff,’ Board Considers School Closures and New Construction
Public education budgets balloon while enrollment, proficiency, standards drop
Illinois news in brief: Cook County evaluates storm, flood damage; Giannoulias pushes for state regulation of auto insurance; State seeks seasonal snow plow drivers
Governor defends mental health mandate, rejects parental consent plan
Illinois quick hits: Arlington Heights trustees pass grocery tax
Plan launched to place redistricting amendment before voters in 2026
Illinois GOP U.S. Senate candidates point to economy, Trump gains
Facing Budget Crisis, Peotone Committee Questions Athletic Field Project
Committee Summary and Briefs: Peotone Board of Education Committee of the Whole