NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________
No. 25-1290 ____________
HUDA FAKHREDDINE; PENN FACULTY FOR JUSTICE IN PALESTINE; EVE TROUTT POWELL
v.
THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Huda Fakhreddine; Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine, Appellants ____________
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 2:24-cv-01034) District Judge: Honorable Mitchell S. Goldberg ____________
Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) December 11, 2025 ____________
Before: KRAUSE, PHIPPS, and FISHER, Circuit Judges
(Filed: January 9, 2026) ____________
OPINION * ____________
PHIPPS, Circuit Judge.
At a congressional hearing, two Representatives questioned a university president
about antisemitism on the university’s campus. In the course of their questioning, those
* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. congressmen referenced faculty members, campus groups, and on-campus events. After the hearing, the congressional committee requested documents from the university, which
it began producing. One of the referenced professors had already received negative
publicity after the hearing, and fearful that the university’s documents would exacerbate that unwanted attention and provoke harassment, she – along with another faculty member
and a campus group to which they belonged – sued the university for violations of federal
civil rights and claims under state law. For relief, they sought to enjoin the university from producing documents to the committee, and they later requested damages as well. In
response to the university’s motion to dismiss, the District Court determined that the
plaintiffs failed to allege Article III standing, and because the claims were not otherwise plausible, it dismissed them with prejudice. In this appeal, the professor who was
mentioned at the congressional hearing and the campus group challenge that ruling. On de
novo review, we will modify the District Court’s dismissal to be without prejudice and
affirm the order dismissing the case as modified.
BACKGROUND
The University of Pennsylvania is a private institution of higher education in
Philadelphia. It employs Huda Fakhreddine as a tenured professor of Arabic literature and
Eve Troutt Powell as a tenured professor of history and Africana studies. Both professors
are members of Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine, “a collective of faculty, students, staff, researchers, and graduate employees at the University of Pennsylvania who support
Palestinian human rights and liberation from Israeli occupation.” Am. Compl. ¶ 11
(SA56). In September 2023, Fakhreddine co-organized the Palestine Writes literature
festival at Penn.
2 Shortly after that on-campus event, on October 7, 2023, Hamas, which has been described as a “militant Palestinian nationalist and Islamist movement . . . dedicated to the
establishment of an independent Islamic state in historical Palestine,” 1 attacked Israel.
According to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, that attack killed approximately 1,200 people. 2
The next morning, Fakhreddine tweeted in Arabic, “while we were asleep, Palestine
invented a new way of life.” Id. at ¶ 19 (SA58).
On October 16, 2023, there was an anti-Israel protest on Penn’s campus, and Fakhreddine was one of the speakers. In her remarks, she said, “Israel is the epitome of
antisemitism . . . it desecrates the memory of the Holocaust victims” and “humiliates every
Jewish person.” Id. (SA58). Another speaker at the rally opined that Jews should “go back to Moscow, Brooklyn, Gstaad, or f***ing Berlin where [they] came from,” and
Fakhreddine applauded. Id. (SA58).
These developments caught the attention of the United States House of Representatives Committee on Education and the Workforce. In response to a request from
the Committee, Penn’s president, along with the presidents of two other universities,
voluntarily testified at a hearing on December 5, 2023.
In the course of that hearing, which was broadcast on national television and
streamed online, two Committee members mentioned Fakhreddine. Representative Joe
Wilson of South Carolina rhetorically inquired: Has any action been taken to address Professor Fakhreddine and Professor Ahmad Almallah’s support of this inciteful and intimidating speech? How 1 Hamas, Encyclopedia Britannica (Dec. 14, 2025), https://www.britannica.com/ topic/Hamas. 2 Lauren Frayer, Israel revises down its death toll from the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks to about 1,200, NPR, Nov. 11, 2023, https://www.npr.org/2023/11/11/1212458974/israel-revises- death-toll-hamas-attacks-oct-7 [https://perma.cc/4BD8-XVL4] (“In a text message to journalists on Friday, a spokesperson from Israel’s Foreign Ministry said ‘around 1,200’ is now what he called ‘the official number of people’ killed by Hamas militants on Oct. 7.”).
3 are Jewish students in Fakhreddine’s[ ]classes supposed to receive fair treatment when she endorses hatred?
Holding Campus Leaders Accountable and Confronting Antisemitism: Hearing Before the
H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce, 118th Cong. 46 (2024) (statement of Joe Wilson,
Member, H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce). And Representative Jim Banks of Indiana asked Penn’s president directly: How about Huda Fakhreddine, who romanticized the murder of over 1,000 Israeli Jews as “Palestine inventing a new way of life,” and clapped as a speaker said Jews should go back to Berlin and Moscow. Why does that professor still have a job at your university?
Id. at 70–71 (statement of Jim Banks, Member, H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce).
After the hearing, Penn’s president resigned, and the Committee continued its
inquiry into Penn through a letter dated January 24, 2024. That letter, which was not sent
in connection with a subpoena, requested twenty-five categories of documents from Penn, primarily related to antisemitic incidents on campus, disciplinary measures taken by the
university in response to discrimination, and sources of funding for certain university
programs, including the Palestine Writes literature festival. None of those document
requests specifically mentioned Fakhreddine, Troutt Powell, or Penn Faculty for Justice in
Palestine. But in providing background for the Committee’s motivation for those requests,
the letter mentioned Fakhreddine three times: Multiple Penn faculty made antisemitic remarks and statements of support for Hamas in the aftermath of the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack, including the following: Associate Professor of Arabic Literature Huda Fakhreddine publicly celebrated the attack on the morning of October 7, tweeting in Arabic that “while we were asleep, Palestine invented a new way of life.” At an October 16, 2023, anti-Israel protest on Penn’s campus, Fakhreddine said, “Israel is the epitome of antisemitism . . . it desecrates the memory of the Holocaust victims. It humiliates every Jewish person.” Fakhreddine also applauded a speaker’s statement that Jews should “go back to Moscow, Brooklyn, Gstaad, or f***ing Berlin where you came from.”
4 Letter from Virginia Foxx, Chairwoman, H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce, to Ramanan Raghavendran, Chairman, Board of Trustees, University of Pennsylvania, and
Dr. Larry Jameson, Interim President, University of Pennsylvania 6–7 (Jan. 24, 2024)
(SA34–35) (footnotes omitted). In voluntary response to the letter, Penn began producing documents to the Committee.
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NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________
No. 25-1290 ____________
HUDA FAKHREDDINE; PENN FACULTY FOR JUSTICE IN PALESTINE; EVE TROUTT POWELL
v.
THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Huda Fakhreddine; Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine, Appellants ____________
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 2:24-cv-01034) District Judge: Honorable Mitchell S. Goldberg ____________
Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) December 11, 2025 ____________
Before: KRAUSE, PHIPPS, and FISHER, Circuit Judges
(Filed: January 9, 2026) ____________
OPINION * ____________
PHIPPS, Circuit Judge.
At a congressional hearing, two Representatives questioned a university president
about antisemitism on the university’s campus. In the course of their questioning, those
* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. congressmen referenced faculty members, campus groups, and on-campus events. After the hearing, the congressional committee requested documents from the university, which
it began producing. One of the referenced professors had already received negative
publicity after the hearing, and fearful that the university’s documents would exacerbate that unwanted attention and provoke harassment, she – along with another faculty member
and a campus group to which they belonged – sued the university for violations of federal
civil rights and claims under state law. For relief, they sought to enjoin the university from producing documents to the committee, and they later requested damages as well. In
response to the university’s motion to dismiss, the District Court determined that the
plaintiffs failed to allege Article III standing, and because the claims were not otherwise plausible, it dismissed them with prejudice. In this appeal, the professor who was
mentioned at the congressional hearing and the campus group challenge that ruling. On de
novo review, we will modify the District Court’s dismissal to be without prejudice and
affirm the order dismissing the case as modified.
BACKGROUND
The University of Pennsylvania is a private institution of higher education in
Philadelphia. It employs Huda Fakhreddine as a tenured professor of Arabic literature and
Eve Troutt Powell as a tenured professor of history and Africana studies. Both professors
are members of Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine, “a collective of faculty, students, staff, researchers, and graduate employees at the University of Pennsylvania who support
Palestinian human rights and liberation from Israeli occupation.” Am. Compl. ¶ 11
(SA56). In September 2023, Fakhreddine co-organized the Palestine Writes literature
festival at Penn.
2 Shortly after that on-campus event, on October 7, 2023, Hamas, which has been described as a “militant Palestinian nationalist and Islamist movement . . . dedicated to the
establishment of an independent Islamic state in historical Palestine,” 1 attacked Israel.
According to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, that attack killed approximately 1,200 people. 2
The next morning, Fakhreddine tweeted in Arabic, “while we were asleep, Palestine
invented a new way of life.” Id. at ¶ 19 (SA58).
On October 16, 2023, there was an anti-Israel protest on Penn’s campus, and Fakhreddine was one of the speakers. In her remarks, she said, “Israel is the epitome of
antisemitism . . . it desecrates the memory of the Holocaust victims” and “humiliates every
Jewish person.” Id. (SA58). Another speaker at the rally opined that Jews should “go back to Moscow, Brooklyn, Gstaad, or f***ing Berlin where [they] came from,” and
Fakhreddine applauded. Id. (SA58).
These developments caught the attention of the United States House of Representatives Committee on Education and the Workforce. In response to a request from
the Committee, Penn’s president, along with the presidents of two other universities,
voluntarily testified at a hearing on December 5, 2023.
In the course of that hearing, which was broadcast on national television and
streamed online, two Committee members mentioned Fakhreddine. Representative Joe
Wilson of South Carolina rhetorically inquired: Has any action been taken to address Professor Fakhreddine and Professor Ahmad Almallah’s support of this inciteful and intimidating speech? How 1 Hamas, Encyclopedia Britannica (Dec. 14, 2025), https://www.britannica.com/ topic/Hamas. 2 Lauren Frayer, Israel revises down its death toll from the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks to about 1,200, NPR, Nov. 11, 2023, https://www.npr.org/2023/11/11/1212458974/israel-revises- death-toll-hamas-attacks-oct-7 [https://perma.cc/4BD8-XVL4] (“In a text message to journalists on Friday, a spokesperson from Israel’s Foreign Ministry said ‘around 1,200’ is now what he called ‘the official number of people’ killed by Hamas militants on Oct. 7.”).
3 are Jewish students in Fakhreddine’s[ ]classes supposed to receive fair treatment when she endorses hatred?
Holding Campus Leaders Accountable and Confronting Antisemitism: Hearing Before the
H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce, 118th Cong. 46 (2024) (statement of Joe Wilson,
Member, H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce). And Representative Jim Banks of Indiana asked Penn’s president directly: How about Huda Fakhreddine, who romanticized the murder of over 1,000 Israeli Jews as “Palestine inventing a new way of life,” and clapped as a speaker said Jews should go back to Berlin and Moscow. Why does that professor still have a job at your university?
Id. at 70–71 (statement of Jim Banks, Member, H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce).
After the hearing, Penn’s president resigned, and the Committee continued its
inquiry into Penn through a letter dated January 24, 2024. That letter, which was not sent
in connection with a subpoena, requested twenty-five categories of documents from Penn, primarily related to antisemitic incidents on campus, disciplinary measures taken by the
university in response to discrimination, and sources of funding for certain university
programs, including the Palestine Writes literature festival. None of those document
requests specifically mentioned Fakhreddine, Troutt Powell, or Penn Faculty for Justice in
Palestine. But in providing background for the Committee’s motivation for those requests,
the letter mentioned Fakhreddine three times: Multiple Penn faculty made antisemitic remarks and statements of support for Hamas in the aftermath of the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack, including the following: Associate Professor of Arabic Literature Huda Fakhreddine publicly celebrated the attack on the morning of October 7, tweeting in Arabic that “while we were asleep, Palestine invented a new way of life.” At an October 16, 2023, anti-Israel protest on Penn’s campus, Fakhreddine said, “Israel is the epitome of antisemitism . . . it desecrates the memory of the Holocaust victims. It humiliates every Jewish person.” Fakhreddine also applauded a speaker’s statement that Jews should “go back to Moscow, Brooklyn, Gstaad, or f***ing Berlin where you came from.”
4 Letter from Virginia Foxx, Chairwoman, H. Comm. on Educ. and the Workforce, to Ramanan Raghavendran, Chairman, Board of Trustees, University of Pennsylvania, and
Dr. Larry Jameson, Interim President, University of Pennsylvania 6–7 (Jan. 24, 2024)
(SA34–35) (footnotes omitted). In voluntary response to the letter, Penn began producing documents to the Committee.
On March 9, 2024, Fakhreddine, Troutt Powell, and the Penn Faculty for Justice in
Palestine filed a four-count complaint against Penn in the District Court to prevent the release of documents about them to the Committee. Although Penn is a private university,
the first two counts in that complaint were for constitutional violations on the theory that
“Penn, by cooperating with the Committee, is merging with, in effect becoming the tool and instrumentality used by a government actor.” Compl. ¶ 130 (SA26). Specifically,
Count One alleged that Penn violated the First Amendment by retaliating against the
plaintiffs for their speech and for discriminating against them based on their viewpoints.
Count Two alleged violations of the Fourteenth Amendment by releasing private
information. And despite the only identified basis for subject-matter jurisdiction in the
complaint being federal-question jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1331, the other two counts
were for violations of Pennsylvania law. Count Three alleged a violation of the right to
privacy under the Pennsylvania Constitution. Count Four alleged breach of contract for
releasing information in violation of promises that Penn made.
In early April, the plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction to prevent Penn
from further responding to the Committee’s January 24 letter. Penn opposed that motion
and moved to dismiss on several grounds: that plaintiffs lacked Article III standing; that
Penn was not a governmental or state actor subject to suit under the First and Fourteenth
Amendments; and that the complaint did not state plausible claims. The District Court
5 denied the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and dismissed the complaint without prejudice for a lack of Article III standing. Fakhreddine v. Univ. of Pa., 2024 WL
3106186, at *4 (E.D. Pa. June 24, 2024).
On July 8, 2024, the plaintiffs amended their complaint. That pleading added a request for damages and also included a fifth count for conspiracy to violate civil rights,
see 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3).
In August 2024, before Penn responded to that amended complaint, the Committee requested documents from Penn directly about Fakhreddine. It sought her resume and
curriculum vitae; syllabi from her courses from the Fall 2022 Semester until present;
course-wide communications for her courses from the Fall 2023 Semester until present; and communications that she had since August 1, 2023, relating to Faculty for Justice in
Palestine, the Palestine Writes literature festival, or the Gaza Solidarity Encampment. Penn
alerted Fakhreddine to this request and notified her that it would produce only her
curriculum vitae and syllabi from her courses since the Fall 2022 Semester.
On August 22, 2024, Fakhreddine’s counsel sent a letter to the District Court
recounting those developments. That evening, the District Court held an emergency
conference call with counsel. During that transcribed call, the District Court construed the
letter from Fakhreddine’s counsel as a motion for emergency injunctive relief and denied
that motion.
On September 30, 2024, Penn moved to dismiss the amended complaint. It again
argued that the plaintiffs did not have Article III standing, renewed its other prior
arguments in favor of dismissal, and asserted that the amended complaint did not state a
§ 1985(3) conspiracy claim. While the briefing on that motion was underway, on
October 31, 2024, the House Committee published a report on antisemitism on college
6 campuses; that report did not mention Fakhreddine, Troutt Powell, or Faculty for Justice in Palestine. 3
After completion of the briefing and oral argument, the District Court, on
January 30, 2025, resolved Penn’s motion to dismiss by dismissing the case with prejudice.
Fakhreddine v. Univ. of Pa., 2025 WL 345089, at *8 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 30, 2025). It concluded
that the plaintiffs lacked Article III standing because “they did not ‘allege[] what
information Penn will disclose or how it will harm them.’” Id. at *3 (alteration in original)
(quoting Fakhreddine, 2024 WL 3106186, at *3). The District Court then determined that
further amendment would be futile because the plaintiffs could not state a claim for
violations of their federal and state constitutional rights, breach of contract, and § 1985(3), and it dismissed the amended complaint with prejudice. Id. at *8.
Through a timely notice of appeal, two of the plaintiffs, Fakhreddine and Faculty
for Justice in Palestine, invoked the appellate jurisdiction of this Court to challenge that final decision. See 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
DISCUSSION
At the motion-to-dismiss stage, Fakhreddine and Faculty for Justice in Palestine
cannot establish Article III standing for their claims premised on federal constitutional or
statutory rights without plausibly alleging an injury-in-fact. See Carney v. Adams,
592 U.S. 53, 55, 58–59 (2020) (applying the modern tripartite test for Article III standing to a federal constitutional claim); Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 337–43 (2016)
(applying the modern tripartite test for Article III standing to a federal statutory claim);
3 See U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Education and the Workforce, Republican Staff Report: Antisemitism on College Campuses Exposed (Oct. 31, 2024), https://edworkforce.house.gov/uploadedfiles/10.30.24_committee_on_education_and_the _workforce_republican_staff_report_-_antisemitism_on_college_campuses_exposed.pdf [https://perma.cc/KA7A-65Z3].
7 Lutter v. JNESO, 86 F.4th 111, 124 (3d Cir. 2023) (requiring plausible allegations of injury-in-fact at the pleading stage). To meet that requirement, they must plausibly allege
“‘an invasion of a legally protected interest’ that is ‘concrete and particularized’ and ‘actual
or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.’” Spokeo, 578 U.S. at 339 (quoting Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992)); see Lutter, 86 F.4th at 124. A claim premised
on the dissemination of information cannot meet that standard unless the information
disseminated concerns the plaintiff in some way. See TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 594 U.S. 413, 439 (2021) (holding that persons whose information was not disseminated
lacked an injury-in-fact). And here, the operative pleading, the amended complaint dated
July 8, 2024, which was filed before the Committee’s August 2024 requests for information specifically related to Fakhreddine, contains no allegations that the information Penn
provided to the Committee mentioned or concerned Fakhreddine or Faculty for Justice in
Palestine. 4 At most, the pleading alleges that responsive documents “might mention”
Fakhreddine and that it is “impossible . . . to know . . . what Penn has produced.” Am.
Compl. ¶¶ 29, 41 (SA60, 62). But Article III standing cannot be premised on speculation.
See Diamond Alt. Energy, LLC v. EPA, 606 U.S. 100, 111 (2025). Without providing non- speculative allegations in their amended complaint, neither Fakhreddine nor Faculty for
Justice in Palestine met their burden of establishing Article III standing. See TransUnion,
594 U.S. at 439. Accordingly, those claims were correctly subject to dismissal. As to the two claims under state law – for violations of the Pennsylvania
Constitution and for breach of contract – the amended complaint fails to identify a basis
4 Although the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allow parties to supplement their pleadings to account for “any transaction, occurrence, or event that happened after the date of the pleading,” Fakhreddine did not avail herself of that opportunity with respect to the Committee’s August 2024 requests or Penn’s response to those requests. Fed. R Civ. P. 15(d). See generally Lutter, 86 F.4th at 124–26 (explaining the different consequences for Article III standing resulting from amendment versus supplementation of pleadings).
8 for the District Court’s subject-matter jurisdiction. See generally Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(1) (“A pleading that states a claim for relief must contain . . . a short and plain statement of
the grounds for the court’s jurisdiction, unless the court already has jurisdiction and the
claim needs no new jurisdictional support.”). And that defect is not curable because even if the amended complaint alleged supplemental jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), that
would not be grounds for exercising jurisdiction over those claims because the federal
claims were dismissed. See Talley v. Clark, 111 F.4th 255, 266 n.6 (3d Cir. 2024) (explaining that when a district court “dismisses the federal claims prior to trial . . . it ‘must
decline’ to exercise jurisdiction over the state law claims ‘unless considerations of judicial
economy, convenience, and fairness’ justify retaining that jurisdiction” (quoting Hedges v. Musco, 204 F.3d 109, 123 (3d Cir. 2000))); see also 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c). Thus, the
District Court lacked jurisdiction over those claims.
Because the dismissals were on justiciable and jurisdictional grounds, however, they
should have been without prejudice. See Merritts v. Richards, 62 F.4th 764, 772 (3d Cir.
2023). Therefore, we will modify the order of dismissal so that it is without prejudice and
affirm such an order. See Cook v. GameStop, Inc., 148 F.4th 153, 163 (3d Cir. 2025).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the District Court’s order will be modified to dismiss the
amended complaint without prejudice and affirmed as modified.