Harmet Dillon, head of the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division, said her office aims to restore equal justice regardless of race, sex, religion or origin. In an interview with NTD News, she cited intervention against race-based reparations in Evanston, Illinois, and an investigation into alleged voter fraud involving hundreds of thousands of ballots from deceased or non-citizen individuals, according to Dillon.
Harmet Dillon, head of the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division, outlined her office's priorities in an interview with NTD News's Capitol Report, describing efforts to 'restore justice equally to all citizens, regardless of color, sex, religion or origin.' She said her division is cooperating with the Department of Education to strengthen parental authority and accelerate legal processes related to educational transparency, particularly regarding sex education curricula that she said were sometimes concealed from parents during the Biden administration.
Dillon cited two early cases: intervention against a race-based reparations program in Evanston, Illinois, which she described as unconstitutional and divisive; and investigations into alleged voter fraud involving 'hundreds of thousands' of ballots cast by deceased individuals or non-citizens, according to her account. She said the DOJ has already filed lawsuits and appeals in multiple courts on the voter integrity issue.
The interview comes amid the Trump administration's broader push to restructure federal civil-rights enforcement priorities. Dillon's remarks are the first detailed public statement by the new division chief on specific pending cases. The claims regarding the scale of voter fraud have not been independently corroborated by The Zioneer.
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