The pro-Palestinian activistâs supporters allege that his detention poses a constitutional violation.
Columbia University student activist Mahmoud Khalil remains detained in Louisiana as his attorneys challenge his arrest and pending deportation by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Khalil, 30, became the face of pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia last spring by acting as a spokesperson for the demonstrators, who opposed Israelâs military response to the Gaza-based Hamas terrorist groupâs Oct. 7, 2023, attack.
The early-morning assault on Israeli neighborhoods, military bases, and a music festival resulted in some 1,200 deathsâmostly civiliansâand the abduction of 251 more, including some U.S. citizens. Israel swiftly declared war and launched a military campaign that has destroyed much of the Gaza Strip and killed more than 48,000 Palestinians, according to Gazaâs Hamas-controlled health ministry.
The Columbia protests sparked additional demonstrations on college campuses nationwide. Khalilâs arrest by immigration agents on March 8 reignited some of those demonstrations as protesters decried his detention.
The move to deport Khalil comes amid the Trump administrationâs ramped-up immigration enforcement efforts across the country.
Officials have promised to prioritize the deportation of individuals who pose public safety or national security threats. Targets have included criminal gang members and those connected to or supporting terrorist organizations.
President Donald Trump heralded Khalilâs arrest as the first of âmany to come,â noting that his administration would not tolerate âpro-terrorist, anti-Semitic, anti-American activity.â
âIf you support terrorism, including the slaughtering of innocent men, women, and children, your presence is contrary to our national and foreign policy interests, and you are not welcome here.â
Legal Status Revoked
Court documents describe Khalil as a Palestinian who was born and raised in a refugee camp in Syria and holds Algerian citizenship.
He entered the United States on a student visa in or around December 2022 and completed his masterâs program at Columbiaâs School of International and Public Affairs this past December. He is due to graduate in May.
According to Khalilâs attorneys, he and his wife were returning home to their student housing apartment on March 8 when they were approached by immigration agents in plain clothes.
The agents said they were detaining Khalil because his student visa was revoked. When he and his wife provided documentation showing that he was a lawful permanent resident, they were told his green card was also revoked.
Following his arrest, Khalil was transferred to a detention facility at ICEâs New Orleans Field Office. He has not been charged with a crime.
Activism
In April and May of last year, Khalil served as a spokesperson for a group of pro-Palestinian protesters who formed an encampment on Columbiaâs Manhattan campus and staged an occupation of Hamilton Hall, the universityâs administrative building.
Among the demonstratorsâ chief demands was that the Ivy League institution cut financial ties with Israel and companies supporting the nation in its war with Hamas. Khalil garnered national attention as he led negotiations with university administrators on the protestersâ behalf.
Asked about Khalilâs case during an appearance on CBS Newsâs âFace the Nationâ on March 16, Rubio pointed to the activistâs role in the Columbia protests as grounds for his removal.
âThatâs a crime in and of itself, that theyâre involved in being a negotiator, the spokesperson [of] this, that, the other. We donât want it; we donât need these people in our country.â
Rubio said the federal government has no obligation to accept visitors who âpromote terrorist organizationsâ or participate in vandalism or riots on college campuses.
âI donât know when weâve gotten it in our head that a visa is some sort of birthright. It is not,â he said. â[A visa-holder] is a visitor into our country, and if you violate the terms of your visitation, you are going to leave.â
Pending Deportation
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt advised during a March 11 press briefing that the Trump administration revoked Khalilâs green card in accordance with the Immigration and Nationality Act.
The statute adds that ânotice of such revocation shall be communicated to the attorney general, and such revocation shall invalidate the visa or other documentation from the date of issuance.â
Leavitt said Khalil was granted the privilege of entry into the United States but âtook advantage of that opportunity, of that privilege, by siding with terrorists.â
She said that he not only led campus protests that âharassed Jewish American students and made them feel unsafeâ but also distributed flyers displaying the logo of Hamas.
âAnd I have those flyers on my desk. They were provided to me by the Department of Homeland Security,â Leavitt said, adding that the Trump administration has a âzero-tolerance policy for siding with terrorists.â
Court Battle
U.S. District Judge Matthew Furman has barred the Trump administration from deporting Khalil as the legal challenge of his detention moves forward.
At a March 12 hearing in New York, Khalilâs attorneys noted that they had yet to have a single attorney-client-privileged phone call with him.
They contended that he should be returned to New York so the case could continue there, near his attorneys and his wife.
Khalilâs wife, Noor Abdalla, said his arrest had taken an emotional toll on her and her late-stage pregnancy in a court document.
âSince his arrest, I have neither been able to sleep nor eat. I can feel my baby, and I hope that he is okay, but I know that this stress and all that comes with it is not good for him,â she wrote.
Justice Department attorney Brandon Waterman argued for either a dismissal of the case or a change of venue to Louisiana or New Jersey, the two states where Khalil has been held.
Furman did not issue a decision on the venue challenge. Instead, he instructed both parties to work together to set a schedule for submitting their written arguments.
The judge also ordered that Khalilâs attorneys be granted at least one phone call with him that day and another on March 13.
Chase Smith and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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