Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon from the Civil Rights Division recently discussed Coach Rolovich’s case. Coach Rolovich was dismissed in 2021 for not getting vaccinated, despite claiming a religious exemption.
It was mentioned in the post that the Department of Justice has appealed in the case of Rolovich v. Washington State University to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. They expressed their support for Coach Rolovich and his right to practice his religious beliefs freely.
Dhillon replied, “Yes, we are! Thanks to the whole @CivilRights team who worked on this! @jesus_osete.”
Yes we are! Thanks to the whole @CivilRights team who worked on this! @jesus_osete https://t.co/kNJ6UyMmhU
— Harmeet K. Dhillon (@HarmeetKDhillon) June 20, 2025
In reaction to the appeal, Rolovich (currently the senior offensive assistant coach at the University of California, Berkeley) stated, “I dedicated myself to WSU, and it is disheartening that I was let go because of my faith.”
“I wasn’t looking for a fight—I just asked to live out my beliefs,” he added. “I hope the court will ensure that no coach or player can be forced to choose between their faith and the game they love.”
Joseph Davis, senior counsel at Becket, the nonprofit legal institute helping the coach, said that:
“Washington State sacked its own coach for standing firm in his faith. In America, you have to accommodate religion, not target it just because some on the sidelines complain. The Ninth Circuit should hold Washington State accountable for what it did—and uphold Coach Rolovich’s and every American’s right to stay true to their faith on the job.”
In 2021, we reported that the university had fired Rolovich and four assistant coaches, who all refused to get the jab, as mandated for all Washington state employees by then-state Democratic Governor Jay Inslee.
RedState’s Jerry Wilson wrote at the time:
The Church’s primary dictum regarding COVID vaccination was issued in December of last year [2020]. The document issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Note on the morality of using some anti-Covid-19-vaccines, focused primarily on the ethical issue of Catholics taking a vaccine that, as the document states:
In 2022, RedState’s Bonchie also reported on the coach’s story, and some of the insane details Rolovich shared about the tremendous pressure the university put him under to get vaccinated – humiliating him in the process.
“The AD said ‘Hey, let’s put you on the 50-yard line, we’ll have the team all around you and the doctor will give you the vaccine in front of everybody,’” Rolovich said on ‘The Jason Rantz Show.’
“I said, ‘Absolutely not. I have no desire to do that.’ I wasn’t going to make it a circus.”
That same year, Rolovich fought back by filing a wrongful termination suit against Washington University after refusing to get vaccinated when he was denied a religious exemption,according to the AP.
In January of this year, Washington University celebrated its win against Rolovich after a district judge found the school was justified in terminating him.
This is a developing story. RedState will provide updates as more information becomes available.