IBM Pays $17M to DOJ to Settle First-Ever Civil Rights Fraud Initiative Case, Targeting Diversity Modifiers and 'Diverse Interview Slates'
In the inaugural resolution of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Fraud Initiative, IBM agreed Friday to pay $17,077,043 over allegations that its federal contracts were tainted by DEI practices that Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche called "repackaged" racial discrimination.

The Justice Department announced Friday that International Business Machines Corporation has agreed to pay $17,077,043 — civil penalties included — to resolve False Claims Act allegations that its diversity, equity, and inclusion practices amounted to unlawful discrimination against employees and applicants "because of race, color, national origin, or sex." According to the DOJ press release, it is the first resolution secured under the Civil Rights Fraud Initiative that Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche launched in May 2025.
"Racial discrimination is illegal, and government contractors cannot evade the law by repackaging it as DEI," Blanche said in the announcement. "The Department launched the Civil Rights Fraud Initiative to root out this misconduct, hold offenders accountable, and end this practice for good."
What DOJ says IBM did
The legal theory is False Claims Act liability layered onto federal contract compliance. Federal contractors must certify that they comply with anti-discrimination requirements as a condition of contracting. DOJ alleges IBM signed those certifications while running internal programs that, in the Department's view, did the opposite.
The specific practices the government named in the release:
- A diversity modifier that tied bonus compensation to achieving demographic targets.
- Altered interview criteria based on race or sex, including the use of "diverse interview slates" for hiring, transfer, and promotion.
- Race and sex demographic goals set for individual business units, with hiring and promotion decisions made to progress toward those goals.
- Training, mentorship, partnership, leadership development, and educational programs whose eligibility, participation, or admission was limited on the basis of race or sex.
Notably, several of those practices — diverse slates in particular, modeled on the NFL's Rooney Rule — have been standard corporate HR tools at Fortune 500 companies for more than a decade. DOJ's position in the settlement is that, at least for federal contractors, they cross the line into unlawful preference.
Why IBM got credit
The release says the government gave IBM "credit for cooperating" based on four factors: the company made early disclosures of facts from its own independent investigation, helped DOJ calculate damages and penalties, and took "voluntary remedial measures, including the termination and/or modification of various programs and practices at issue." That phrasing is a clear signal from DOJ about the playbook for other companies it is eyeing: dismantle the programs before the Department forces you to, and cooperate.
The Civil Rights Fraud Initiative
The Civil Rights Fraud Initiative was announced by Blanche in May 2025 as a joint effort of the Civil Division's Commercial Litigation Branch (Fraud Section) and the Civil Rights Division. It explicitly applies False Claims Act enforcement — historically aimed at defense, health-care, and procurement fraud — to federal contractors that DOJ believes are violating anti-discrimination laws under the cover of DEI.
Today's IBM settlement is the first time the initiative has produced a concrete resolution. Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward framed it as a template: "Merit drives promotion and opportunity. Not someone's sex or race. Today's settlement proves this Department's commitment to ensure companies are not using taxpayer funded work to further woke unconstitutional practices in American workplaces."
Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brenna E. Jenny added that when "a company accepts federal funding while engaging in practices that sort, prefer, or disadvantage employees on the basis of race or sex, the company is stepping outside the conditions under which the government agreed to contract with them, and we will hold them accountable."
Liability not established
DOJ notes at the bottom of the release, as standard, that "the claims resolved by the United States in the settlement are allegations only and there has been no determination of liability." IBM has neither admitted nor had a court rule on the underlying conduct; it has paid to make the case go away and — per DOJ — altered or terminated the programs in question. The matter was handled by DOJ's Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud Section. Press release number 26-345.