Behind the Bastards - How ICE Is Targeting Students for Deportation
Episode Date: April 4, 2025Garrison and James discuss how a doxing campaign is targeting student visa and green card holders for alleged ties to pro-Palestine protests. Sources: https://apnews.com/article/columbia-univers...ity-mahmoud-khalil-ice-15014bcbb921f21a9f704d5acdcae7a8 https://archive.ph/20250316111414/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/16/nyregion/mahmoud-khalil-columbia-university.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/15/nyregion/columbia-student-kristi-noem-video.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/25/nyregion/columbia-university-protester-chung-deportation.html https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/25/columbia-gaza-protester-yunseo-chung-lawsuit https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/24/nyregion/columbia-student-ice-suit-yunseo-chung.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/us/politics/cornell-student-momodou-taal.html https://apnews.com/article/social-media-immigration-applicants-handles-dhs-f67b480abebff7e451056be17572593d https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/exclusive-trump-admin-spies-on-social?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=7677&post_id=160081190&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=1aiy5i&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email https://apnews.com/article/georgetown-trump-deportation-immigration-homeland-security-21fc205cebbbbba2ed260050df04702a https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/29/us/rumeysa-ozturk-tufts-student-detained.html https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/us/israel-gaza-student-protests-canary-mission.html https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/14/israel-betar-deportation-list-trump https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/trump-administration-takes-aim-immigrant-students-rcna198346 https://apnews.com/article/immigration-detainees-students-ozturk-khalil-78f544fb2c8b593c88a0c1f0e0ad9c5f https://x.com/janashortal/status/1905759411248734353 https://dailyegyptian.com/120974/news/international-siu-student-has-visa-revoked-confirms-university-admin/ https://drive.google.com/file/d/1SGz224raVR8mHMzC6q-6EUiNcBKD6BSK/view See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is It Could Happen here. I'm Garrison Davis. Today I'm joined by James Stout.
This episode is going to be about ice actions against students, scholars, and professors around
the country and this wave of deportations targeting people engaged in pro-Palestine speech,
protest, as well as some individuals who have been roped up in this new wave of deportations,
who have not publicly engaged in Palestine activism.
Let's start on the evening of Saturday, March 8th.
Mahmood Khalil and his wife were returning home from dinner
when plain-clothes ice agents followed the couple into their campus apartment building
at Columbia University. A man wearing a Marvel graphic tea arrested Khalil for then
unknown reasons and threatened to arrest Khalil's wife, who is eight months pregnant and an American
citizen. When Khalil's wife brought his green card from their apartment, she says one of the ICE
agents placed a phone call, informing someone, Kalil was a permanent resident. To which the person
on the phone replied, let's bring him in anyway. You're going to be under arrest. So turn around, turn around,
turn around, turn around, stop resisting. Okay, okay, he's not resisting. He's not resisting. He's giving me his phone.
Okay. He's not, I understand. He's not resisting.
Don't worry. I don't be happy. You're going to have to come with us.
I'm going with you. No way. You guys really don't need to be doing all of that.
It's fine. It's fine. It's fine. How do you keep the end? Don't speak.
During the arrest, Khalil's lawyer, Amy Greer, spoke on the film with one of the ICE agents,
who said that they were acting on State Department orders to revoke Colleen.
Kaleel's student visa. Greer reiterated to the agents that Kaleel was in fact a permanent resident
with a green card. But the ICE agent just responded by saying they were revoking the green card
instead. Kaleel's a graduate student who has been studying at Columbia for over two years.
Last year, Kaleel emerged as a visible figure in the college encampment protests, becoming a public
spokesperson and a lead negotiator on behalf of Columbia University apartheid divest. Though never being
arrested, Khalil faced harassment from right-wing Zionist doxing campaigns calling for his deportation.
And when ICE did come for Kleele, disappearing him to a detention facility in Louisiana and cutting him off
from communication with his wife and lawyer, throughout all of this, he was not charged with any crime.
Instead, ICE and the State Department are using a rarely used Cold War era immigration statute
that gives the Secretary of State the power to exclude or deport any non-citizen of the
United States if there are, quote, reasonable grounds to believe that an individual's entry,
proposed activities, presence, or activities in the United States would have, quote,
potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences. Yeah, that was the one that, like,
I remember at the time you and I were discussing this, like, in our group chat and we were trying
to work out, like, how the Secretary of State could be revoking a green card. Like, yeah.
And I think you found this, or you found it somewhere in it. And the, the Trump
administration has been very, very good at finding very obscure pieces of law that it can
wield against migrants, right? No one in 2016 would have foreseen what they did with Title
42, which is a public health law. And they're doing something similar here. I mean,
they may have spent the last four years looking for these things, essentially when the
campus protest began, but like this is entirely unprecedented as far as I'm were. And right after this
happened. We discussed how this case was probably going to be used as a testing ground for employing
these tactics on a more widespread scale, creating legal precedent. And sure enough, Khalil's case
was not an outlier. This was just the first public instance of the Trump administration's
directed targeting of students they believe to be associated with protests against Israel and its
actions in Gaza. And this wave of actions by ICE had actually already begun before Khalil's arrest.
The day before Khalil was arrested, Ice agents knocked on the door of PhD student Rajani Shrinivassan,
who a few days prior was suddenly notified that her student visa had been revoked.
When ICE agents knocked, she did not answer the door.
The next day, Ice showed up again to her Columbia University apartment.
Trinnavasen was not home, but upon hearing of Khalil's arrest just a few hours later,
she decided to quickly collect some belongings and flee to Canada.
Five days later, when ICE returned to her residence, but this time with a warrant,
Trina Vosin was already gone.
Homeland Security Secretary Christy Knoem praised this as quote-unquote self-deportation.
Yeah, they talk about this a lot.
Like, self-deportation is definitely one of their goals.
They talked about it before Trump even came into power.
Like, that's what we're seeing a lot of these spectacle raids and, like, spectacle deportations.
Scare tactics.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
The desire is that people leave.
Is she a Canadian citizen or like...
I don't believe so, no.
Okay.
It was just the fastest flight from LaGuardia.
Out of the country.
Out of like, yeah, the closest she could be.
Yeah.
I wonder what her immigration status is in Canada now.
She is currently figuring this whole situation out still.
Okay.
Navigating her legal options, both in Canada and the states.
Yeah, that would be interesting too to see what Canada can offer her.
And like, I don't think the Trump administration would go after like having her extradited back.
Because as you say, she's not accused.
of a crime and that they've kind of got what they wanted. A bit of be interesting to follow that.
There is no need for extradition because none of the people that were talking about today
were accused of any crime. Yeah. With the other cases of quote unquote like self deportation,
one of the issues is people have had their passport seized and held, like lots of Venezuelan
migrants, so like they actually can't. Yeah. Or it would be very difficult for them to
to like just get on a flight and leave. Which I think is in part why she made the decision to
get out when she could. Right. DHS claimed in a statement that Trenovas an advertisement that Trenovans
advocated violence and was, quote, involved in activities supporting Hamas, a terrorist organization,
unquote. ISIS targeting her seemingly stems from being mass arrested while trying to return to her
apartment from a picnic with friends on the same day as the Hamilton Hill occupation. She couldn't
get home and was caught up in the crowd and was arrested among a hundred other people.
She received two summons for obstructing traffic and failure to disperse, but her case was quickly
dismissed. Homeland Security claims that failing to declare these two summons is what caused her
visa to be revoked. Okay. Interesting. That same week, ICE went after another green card holder
at Columbia, a 21-year-old student named Jung Sao Chung, a permanent resident who immigrated to the
United States from South Korea with her family when she was seven. On March 9th, ICE agents
visited her parents' home looking for Chung. In that day, she received an odd text message reading,
Younsau, this is Audrey from the police. My job is to reach out to you and see if you have any questions
about your recent arrest and the process going forward. When are you available for a phone call?
This recent arrest was allegedly in reference to being detained, among others, at a sit-in protest
at Bernard College on March 5th. Chung was charged and then released with misdemeanor obstruction.
After receiving that sketchy text message, Chung got an email from Columbia Public Safety reading
Quote, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York has asked us to inform you that Homeland Security Investigation agents are seeking to make contact with you in connection with an administrative warrant for your arrest.
Consistent with university's practice, we wanted to share this information and their request with you.
If you are represented by counsel, it may make sense for your lawyer to speak directly with DHS, unquote.
Chung's lawyer decided to call, quote unquote, to Audrey from the police, who revealed that she was actually an HSI agent.
and that the State Department was revoking Ms. Chung's residency status.
Now, rather than opting for self-deportation or turning herself into immigration authorities,
Chung decided to go into hiding and fight the deportation in the courts while trying to evade ICE detention.
When ICE failed to locate her, they enlisted the help of federal prosecutors.
To quote from the New York Times, quote, on March 10th, Perry Corbony,
a high-ranking lawyer in the federal prosecutor's office, told Ms. Ahmad, Ms. Chong's attorney,
that the Secretary of State, Mr. Rubio, had revoked Ms. Chung's visa.
Ms. Ahmad responded that Ms. Chung was not in the country on a visa and was a permanent resident.
According to the lawsuit, Mr. Koboni responded that Mr. Rubio had, quote, revoked that as well, unquote.
Yeah.
So this is the exact same language we saw with Khalil.
And it displays a general uncaring towards who they are actually targeting and what their actual legal status is in the United States.
They think they're going after people student visas, but when it turns out they have great.
green cards, that doesn't stop them, they still continue to do it anyway. On March 13th,
ICE searched two residences on campus with warrants, citing a statute for harboring non-citizens,
but Chung was nowhere to be found. Like Khalil, the Trump administration is arguing that her
presence of the United States hinders the administration's foreign policy agenda. But her lawyers
note that Chung was not by any means a quote-unquote movement leader. She was simply one of hundreds of
students who joined in nationwide protests against Israel's actions in Gaza. Her lawyers write,
quote, Ms. Chung has not made public statements to the press or otherwise assumed a high-profile
role in these protests. She was, rather, one of a large group of college students raising, expressing,
and discussing shared concerns, unquote. Chung had previously faced a university disciplinary process,
which found she was not in violation of any university policy related to protests last year.
Chung's lawyers filed a lawsuit to prevent her deportation,
claiming that ICE's actions against Chung are illegal and unconstitutional.
This lawsuit reads, quote,
officials at the highest echelons government are attempting to use immigration enforcement
as a bludgeon to suppress speech that they dislike,
including Ms. Chung's speech.
ICE's shocking actions against Ms. Chung
form a part of a larger pattern of attempted U.S. government repression
of constitutionally protected protest activity
and other forms of speech, unquote.
On March 25th, a federal judge granted a temporary restraining order
halting efforts from ICE to detain or relocate Chung.
The judge said that the government produced, quote,
nothing in the record to indicate Chung is a danger to the community
or a quote-unquote foreign policy risk,
or that she was in any communication with terrorist organizations.
The judge said that there would be, quote,
no trip to Louisiana here, unquote.
This is in reference to the big ICE detention facility in Louisiana.
We'll be right back after this ad break.
Okay, we're back.
Now, although Chung has at least temporarily halted ICE's efforts to detain or deport her,
not all legal recourses have proven successful.
This week, a U.S. District judge declined a request to block the deportation of Cornell's
student, Mamadu Tall, after the State Department revoked his visa. On March 31st, Tall released a
statement, quote, given what we have seen across the United States, I have lost faith that a favorable
ruling from the courts would guarantee my personal safety and ability to express my beliefs.
I have lost faith I could walk the streets without being abducted. Waying these options,
I took the decision to leave on my own terms. Yeah, it's pretty bleak.
So, Tall has elected for the quote-unquote self-deportation option, at least for now.
I believe his case is going to continue, but he's not going to remain in the United States.
Yeah.
I think he returned to the UK, right?
I believe so, yeah.
He's a British citizen.
Now, interestingly, last September, Cornell University itself tried to revoke Tall's student visa for involvement in student protests.
But he successfully appealed and was able to continue his African studies PhD remotely.
Yeah, I spoke to him a little bit back then, just via direct message.
But I think at that time, whatever his agreement was, it seems like there was a component
of it that at least he didn't want to talk about it in public, which is fine.
Everyone has the right to do that, and he should do it as best for himself.
But maybe I'll try and follow up with him again now, see if he wanted to speak.
Because he seems to have, like, he's been of all of these people, like, the one who's been
able to make the most statements and, like, control his narrative to some degree.
Yeah, no, he entered this period of like radio silence after he won his appeal last fall and then only started speaking publicly again once he began getting targeted by the Trump administration like the past month and a half.
I think he proactively filed that suit right like before.
Yes. Yeah. Now, the scale that Mark Rubio and ICE are seeking for in regards to deportations is seemingly going to be increasingly large.
On March 27th, Secretary of State Mark Rubio claimed that he has revoked over 300 student visas so far, saying at a press conference, quote, we do it every day. Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas, unquote. There are a few ways the government is currently trying to find these quote-unquote lunatics. ICE seems to be targeting non-citizens who have been arrested or detained at Palestine protests, even if their charges were subsequently dropped.
This is the case for Chung and Shrini Vossin, as well as former student Leka Cordia, a Palestinian
who was arrested at Columbia campus protests in April of 2024.
She's currently being held in an ICE detention facility in Texas.
Now, beyond arrest records, the government is utilizing the World Wide Web and social media
to identify new and returning visa applicants and possibly current visa holders that, quote,
support terrorist organizations, unquote.
Social media screening of immigrants and visa holders has been slowly ramping up since 2014
and accelerated during Trump's first term. But a new directive from Secretary of State Mark Rubio
titled, Enhanced Screening and Social Media Vetting for Visa Applicants, was sent out on March 25th
and leaked by journalist Ken Clippenstein. The directive cites two executive orders from Trump,
measures to combat anti-Semitism, and, quote, protecting the United States from foreign terrorists
and other national security and public safety threats, unquote.
The State Department is now requiring consular officers
to conduct a, quote-unquote, mandatory social media review
with screenshoting for students and student exchange visitors
with the intent of looking for evidence of, quote,
advocating for, sympathizing with or persuading others
to endorse or espouse terrorist activities
or support a designated foreign terrorist organization, unquote.
Now, this applies to FMNJV.
So student exchange visas, academic visas, and vocational visas.
The directive also instructs officers to search social media for, quote, conduct that bears a hostile
attitude towards U.S. citizens or U.S. culture, including government, institutions, or founding
principles, unquote, which is kind of the most incredibly broad thing I've ever seen.
Yeah, I mean, it's living in the complete discretion of the officer, right?
There's already been an instance of U.S. Customs agents denying entry to someone who had, quote, unquote, anti-Trump sentiments found on their phone.
Now, though this new directive is focused on denying or revoking student visas, the Department of Homeland Security is seeking to expand its social media data collection to U.S. citizenship, green card, and asylum applicants.
Basically, anyone and everyone in the U.S. immigration system, no matter their current status or what previously,
this vetting they might have already gone through.
Yeah. On March 5th, DHS issued
a 60-day notice for public comment
on a proposal for, quote, uniform
vetting standards and national security screening,
unquote, that includes the collection of
social media information for all non-citizens
applying for immigration benefits like
citizenship or permanent residency.
A statement from the U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Service reads,
quote, these efforts ensure that those
seeking immigration benefits to live and work
in the United States do not threaten
public safety, undermine national security, or promote harmful anti-American ideologies, unquote.
Yeah, like the anti-American ideologies, again, it's just vastly broad, right?
It's like crazy red scare level stuff. Yeah. And I'm guessing this will be either like a literal
control F of whatever they can find of your public social media or AI even, some kind of AI
assistant. That's what it seems to be, right? Like, former immigration agents have suggested that
they're probably going to use some AI system for this,
as they've already kind of used more primitive versions,
but ramping up to this scale and with like this increased focus
and like attention on quote unquote AI
is going to affect the way that they do this vetting process.
Absolutely.
Yeah. Great.
So though the government is trying to increase their social media screening,
so far they actually haven't had to do that much of their own research
to identify targets for removal.
On March 17th, a Georgetown scholar named Biddiwold,
Khan Suri, was arrested by Homeland Security outside his home in Virginia, where he lives with
his wife, who's a U.S. citizen, and their three kids. According to Surrey's lawyer, masked
agents, quote, refused to tell him the basis for the arrest, handcuffed him, and forced him
into an unmarked black SUV, unquote. Later, his wife was informed that her husband's visa
was revoked based on the social media posts, and that Surrey was sent to ICE detention in Louisiana.
Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Trisha McLaughlin
posted on X that Surrey was, quote,
actively spreading Hamas propaganda
and promoting anti-Semitism on social media.
The Secretary of State issued a determination
that Surrey's activities and presence in the United States
rendered him deportable, unquote.
Of course, any single post in support of Palestine
is going to be seen as, quote, unquote,
promoting anti-Semitism.
Yeah.
According to Mark Rubie.
Surrey's lawyer wrote in a court filing, quote,
Dr. Surrey is an academic, not an activist,
but he spoke out on social media about his views on the Israel-Ghazzo war.
Even more so, his wife is an outspoken critic of the Israeli government
and the violence it has perpetuated against Palestinians, unquote.
Yeah, it seems like he was identified through his wife, right?
Correct, and we'll get to that.
Suri has no criminal record, and according to a colleague,
he did not attend campus protests.
However, Suri's lawyer writes that his...
his family have been victims of a doxing campaign, with his wife stating that a website had, quote,
claimed falsely that my husband and I have, quote, ties to Hamas, unquote.
The Homeland Security Assistant Secretary referenced that claim in a public statement on Twitter,
and this harassment stems in part from Surrey's father-in-law being Ahmad Yusuf, a former advisor to Hamas.
A federal judge blocked Surrey's deportation as immigration court proceedings continue,
but he still remains in ICE detention.
What kind of visa was he on?
He's not a green card holder.
He received his visa to continue doctoral research
on peace building in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It's some kind of academic or exchange visa.
I don't think we know the exact type that he has.
Okay.
Yeah.
It would be interesting to know if are they searching
just through F1 visa databases
or are they so, I mean, obviously not
if they're finding these green card people.
but like...
Well, I think specifically in this case,
they're searching social media.
They're not searching through their own databases.
They don't care what kind of visa he has.
They're looking at this doxing campaign
that's been targeted at him and his family
for like over a year
and using that as the basis to deport him.
Right, and then being like, can we deport?
He's not a citizen, so yes, basically.
Even though his wife is a citizen.
Yeah, his children, presumably, therefore are also citizens.
His wife, whose father is Amad Yousif,
They can't deport her because she's a citizen, or at least they can't deport her right now.
Who knows if they'll try to denaturalize in the future.
Yeah.
But this is the easiest person to target.
Yeah.
And I think that's kind of what they're going for.
Like a lot of this is, it's like the politics of owning the libs, right?
It's like the politics of being angry at your niece and nephew on Facebook and wanting to humiliate them.
Like it's not a particularly like coherent policy.
than like the Palestine protests made a lot of people on the right mad and they don't like migrants
and now they're using this obscure legal provision as a as a cudgel against everything they dislike.
Yeah, and using social media to identify people who have never been arrested, never been charged with anything.
Yeah. We're going to finish our discussion on these doxing campaigns and ICE action starting students after this ad break.
All right, we're back. So right now, the two main main.
vectors for iced attention. Whether you have a green card or a visa, seems to be previous arrests
or these mass doxing campaigns. Now, someone like Mahmoud Khalil was never arrested or charged
with a crime, but instead has been the target of harassment from both a local campus doxing
account run by Columbia professors and fellow students, as well as larger right-wing Zionist
organizations like Canary Mission. A few days before being arrested by ICE, Canary Mission,
a video naming Khalil as a quote-unquote,
siren emoji, suspected foreign national alert.
So what is Canary Mission,
if you're lucky enough to be unaware?
Since 2015, Canary Mission has been collecting
and publishing personal information of people
they accuse of promoting, quote,
hatred of the United States, Israel,
and Jews on a North American college campuses,
and beyond, unquote.
Now, they have profiles for a few legitimate,
like American neo-Nazis,
but many profiles only cite criticism of the Israeli government and its actions in Gaza as proof of alleged anti-Semitism.
And now there is increasing evidence that the government is using websites like Canary Mission to target students, professors, and scholars for ICE deportation,
essentially outsourcing intel gathering from these pro-Israel non-government organizations.
A few weeks ago, Canary Mission uploaded a profile for Rumazzo-Turk, a Turkish graduate student,
at Tufts University. They included a picture, her resume, and linked to an op-ed she co-wrote last
year for her student paper, criticizing the university for its ties to Israel amidst the war in Gaza.
Before this, the Canary Mission claimed Ozturk, quote, engaged in anti-Israel activism, unquote.
Two weeks later, while walking alone to Iftar dinner for Ramadan, a plain-clothes ice agent
approached Oz Turk on the sidewalk. As he grabbed her arms and wrestled away her phone,
five more agents surrounded her and pulled up their gator masks as neighbors began filming the arrest.
Within 24 hours, she was moved to ICE detention in Louisiana. A statement from Homeland Security
claimed that HSI, Homeland Security investigation, had determined that Oz Turk, quote,
engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organization that relishes the
killing of Americans, unquote. And Secretary of State Mark Rubio said, quote, we gave you a visa to come
and study and get a degree, not to become a social activist that tears up our university campuses, unquote.
Yeah, I mean, again, like, writing an op-ed is like as central to the First Amendment as things
can be, right? Yeah, there's no evidence she was even attending campus protests, let alone
tearing up the university. She co-wrote an op-ed. And,
you should not be deported for engaging in protest on a university campus at all, right?
This is blatantly unconstitutional, extremely worrying.
The fact that this person just got a profile in the Canary Mission website for writing an op-ed,
and then this is used as justification for her deportation, is still an even greater escalation.
Yeah, like, if we're talking about, like, this sort of, like, liberal idea of the marketplace of ideas,
right?
the way that ideas enter the marketplace,
you will find nothing more amenable to liberalism
than writing an op-ed in your campus newspaper, right?
That is the most well-behaved, straight down the middle,
constitutionally protected thing,
way to engage in anti-genocide activism, pro-Palestine activism.
So, like, in a sense, this one is particularly disturbing.
Like, it's a frontal assault on First Amendment rights for non-citizens is what it is.
Yes.
On March 24th, Canary Mission published a new section of their website titled Uncovering Foreign
Nationals, which lists the profiles of non-citizens who they believe qualify for deportation.
Jesus.
Another far-right pro-Israel doxing group called Bitar, which even the ADL lists as an extremist group.
Dad.
Which is wild.
Batar says that they have given the Trump administration a deportation list.
of thousands of names, including citizens that they expect to be denaturalized.
People like Mamadu Tal and Mahmoud Khalil have been targeted by both of these organizations.
People will be familiar with, I don't know if it's Bitar or Bitar, but like you probably have
seen videos of them on campus trying to hand pages to people.
Pagers.
Yeah, like.
Making light of the pager attack Israel did.
I mean, making a threat.
Sure, sure.
Like, if you're going to come onto a campus and make a fucking bomb threat and accuse someone
else of terrorism, I mean, the hypocrisy is kind of the point.
Or even just, like, you know, quote unquote, celebrating the deaths of people, right?
Yeah, right.
Like, like mocking this attack which killed children, which, you know, crippled people.
It's just disgusting.
It's, like, just abhorrent.
They seem to get a lot of attention online because they do the thing where they go up to
people and say deliberately provocative things.
and then film their reactions, right?
They're kind of IRL trolling.
The past week, ICE actions against students
have seemingly accelerated.
Ali Reza Derrudi,
a doctoral student from Iran
studying at the University of Alabama,
was arrested by ICE on March 25th
in the middle of the night
at his off-campus apartment.
Derrude's entry visa expired,
but he was allowed to stay in the States
as he still maintained his student's status.
Yeah.
It's unknown why exactly he was
targeted, he has no ties to protests or any notable online footprint.
It could be his ethnic origin, right?
Yeah, it could be his name, right?
Yeah, but we should explain the status thing a bit more for people who aren't familiar.
Sure.
Your status is when you're in good standing with a university, so normally that means you need
to be enrolled in 12 credits per, you might be on semesters, you might be on quarters.
I don't think it's hugely matters.
But there's a minimum course load.
It may be different for different systems.
I don't know. You'd also need to be in good standing in terms of not late on your fees,
right, your tuition fees, that kind of stuff, right? Not in any, you haven't been expelled or
excluded from the university for any actions that you've taken, that kind of thing. It means you
are currently a student at the university, basically. The only time this normally affects international
students I'm aware of, like as a person who now teaches students, it's like they can't drop below
a certain course load when otherwise they may wish to drop below a certain course
load to either focus on, they might have like a research position, they might be doing other stuff
on campus like TAing, right? Sometimes that TA and counts towards their course load. Sometimes it doesn't,
but it can affect things like that. But generally, it would be the university that would update
that status, right? That would notify US customs and immigration if somebody fell out of compliance
with that. If I'm hearing right, that doesn't seem like that's what happened here, right?
No. Simply his entry visa expired. So if he left the country, he then would have to get another visa to get back in. But he can stay as long as he still has his valid student status. So not only is I was trying to revoke these visas, but they're trying to essentially say that by revoking these visas, they are also attempting to strip them of their student status, which is like a separate step. These things can get kind of very blurry, though.
Yeah, like I don't quite know how that works in terms of like are ICE supposed to be able to. I don't think it hugely matters at this point.
Technically, the State Department does have that ability, but it's under the same like foreign policy risk designation.
Okay.
And they'll justify it by saying, well, his visa already expired. So we're just removing him because his visa expired, even though that's not really how this works.
Yeah, and they don't have to remove him for that reason. But yeah, in this case, I guess they're going for something else.
No, because the University of Alabama did not elect to rescind his student status.
He was a student in good standing.
Yeah.
And thus legally allowed in the United States.
Yeah, yeah.
Like everyone else here, he hadn't done anything that would, under normal circumstances,
lead to him having any interactions with USCIS.
Just this last week, I sustained a University of Minnesota grad student at their off-campus housing.
The university released a statement saying that they had no prior.
knowledge of this incident and had not shared any information with federal authorities.
This person's name is still not released.
Last week, a student at the Southern Illinois University had their visa revoked.
The school administration told their college paper that the university has no role in the visa
revocation process.
The Illinois governor's office is working with schools across the state to, quote,
ensure they are being vigilant about what's happening on their respective campuses.
The governor's team has asked universities to communicate.
with international students about the general resources available to them through the institution.
In addition, we have suggested that they connect impacted students with legal resources that have
been in place for several years, unquote, according to a statement sent to the university paper,
the Daily Egyptian.
Tina Sickinger, which is a very cool name, the school's director of international student
and scholar services, sent an email to the international student body of Southern Illinois.
Illinois University, advising them to carry photocopies of immigration documents with them at all
times, as well as proof of enrollment and records of U.S. residences.
The email recommended that students, quote, use caution on social media and exercise discretion
when participating in political demonstrations or protests, unquote.
Warning that though protests should be protected speech, quote, such activities can sometimes
be misinterpreted and may carry risks to your immigration status, unquote.
Unfortunately, I think this is the university trying to look out for these students.
Yeah, that's the best you can expect from them, really.
And they are providing legal resources to these students,
but they're essentially saying, like, you shouldn't post anything or do any protests
because then ICE might come kidnap you.
Yeah.
Which is just a fucked up situation to be in.
And, like, they don't have, like, any other ability to, like, stop this right now.
I am curious what Prisker is going to continue to do here, though.
Yeah, I mean...
none of what they've said is, it's like wrong.
It's kind of what you can expect from the university,
the best you can expect from the university really is like,
hey, we've noticed it's happening.
So that is the situation as it currently stands.
I do have one final tidbit here
just that highlights the absurdity of this whole situation.
On March 24th, a lawsuit on behalf of Israeli Columbia students
and relatives of Israeli October 7th victims
was filed against Colombia Jewish Voice for Peace
and Students for Justice in Palestine,
Columbia University apartheid divest,
and individual Columbia students, including Mahmoud Khalil.
The lawsuit alleges that these Columbia groups and students
are the domestic propaganda arm of Hamas,
and even claims that these groups had advanced notice
that the October 7th attack was going to take place.
Oh, come on.
So, the plan was kept secret among Hamas' own political allies in the region.
But they gave an Ivy League university in the New York City a heads up.
Tip off. They just let them know what was coming.
Completely absurd.
Yeah, absolutely. Like the IDF completely failed to see this coming, right?
But they're not the folks at the Ivy League universities who were ready and waiting.
Hamas didn't tell the Houthis. They didn't tell Iran. They didn't tell Hezbollah.
Didn't do Hezbollah. But they told student activist groups in New York.
York City at the Columbia University campus.
Yeah, absolutely ludicrous.
Like, I eagerly await this, this court case, I guess, to see what evidence they have
of this.
The evidence is going to be like someone had a Palestinian flag.
Some of the quote-unquote evidence that they, that they allege is that some of these
like activist accounts had renewed activity in October of 2023, like, before the attack
happened.
But this is just a simple coincidence.
obviously these people did not have a heads up that the October 7th attack was going to take
place.
Yeah.
The lawsuit also argues that protest activity is not First Amendment protected speech, but in fact,
quote, substantial assistance in the form of propaganda and recruiting services and in
coordination with a designated foreign terrorist organization.
Again, alleging there is some kind of communication between Hubmas and student activists
in New York City.
Yeah, this is ludicrous.
One of the reasons that maybe we're seeing this so much over the Palestine advocacy is that
Hamas is a listed foreign terrorist organization.
Many other groups, and lots of groups in that part of the world are, but like it's just
a bigger stick to waive, I guess, material aid, or that no one has been actually accused
to material aid to a foreign terrorist organization as far as I'm aware.
But like, that is kind of the sort of stick that they're waiving, right?
That is the thing that they're alleging.
I will end us with just this kind of final note.
Now, while there are little signs that this would happen at a scale this large and this focused
under a Democratic president, a degree of consent for this type of targeting was manufactured
the past year as it relates to Palestine protests, with some liberals and Democratic politicians
associating activists as pro-Hamas terrorists.
And this is the consequence of that public perception building and the consent being
manufactured for that framing. And now that the even more evil side is in charge, they can take
that justification and run with it way further than what a Joe Biden or Kamala Harris would have
done. So it is far worse, but it's not in a political bubble. This has been like a growing
project for the past few years. There was no point at which the Biden administration really like
effusively said, this is protected First Amendment speech. Yeah. We may not like it, but it is central to
a bill of rights, if central to what America is supposed to be about.
They never defended the constitutionality of this speech.
Yeah.
Nor would they have intervened to stop the deportation of someone like Tall if Cornell
decided to revoke his status, right?
Right.
Yeah.
I don't think the Biden administration or Kamala Harris administration would be directing these
universities to take that action themselves, nor would they be, I think, revoking student
visas at scale like this.
No.
But they would have let ICE do the stuff that ICE does.
if universities themselves elect to remove student visas or unenroll these students.
And like a degree of the complacency here is placed on the actual university administrations,
the university staff who have been vilifying these protesters for the past two years.
Yeah, and I mean in some cases, right, like I'm thinking of one of Colombia,
like professors got away with things which are absolutely unacceptable.
And like a hundred percent in some violation of your agreement with the university as a member of the faculty.
Like doxing your students, photographing students without their consent, following students around.
Like absolutely unacceptable.
Like in any other context that you would be immediately shit can for that.
Like really, really, the only reason you can lose tenure seemingly is being a fucking creep to students or stealing a lot of money.
And like universities did allow that for.
more than a year under the Biden administration. And like, we're seeing the consequences of that now.
It's also worth noting that since I've had to quote from so many government statements this episode,
the Trump admin is continuing to correlate any expression of sympathy or solidarity with Palestine
as explicit support for Hamas. Basically, anything you say that's critical of the Israeli government,
its actions in Gaza are being interpreted by the Trump administration as anti-Semitism,
and support for the October 7th massacre.
This is a false equivalency.
What the government alleges
should not be automatically taken as the truth.
These tactics have been used for years
to broadly smear pro-Palestine activists
while also hurting anti-Zionist Jews.
And I guess, like, finally,
we are not necessarily endorsing
every single thing that every single one of these students has said.
Yeah.
We do not necessarily agree with the framing
of every single sentence that they have said.
I mean, we don't know everything that they've said.
Yeah, exactly.
This is, like, completely separate to that.
Yeah, it doesn't matter.
Like, we are defending their right to engage in constitutionally protected speech.
Correct.
No matter what they're saying, no matter if they have opinions on Hamas that differ from ours,
no matter what they are saying at a campus protest,
it should not result in ICE targeting them and hunting them down
and forcing students who attend sit-in protests into hiding to defend their own rights
and to keep their green cards.
This is like a completely absurd and like blatantly fascist
to use the now overused word, frankly.
But this is.
Like this is what that is.
If this was happening in China,
this was happening in Russia,
in other countries,
people would be very,
very quick to call out.
I mean, it does happen in Russia, right?
People...
Exactly.
And people are quick to call it out.
Yeah, yeah.
And the State Department of this country has called it out, right?
Like, rightly, like, I don't agree with everything.
the State Department does, but they do agree with them on that.
Like, yeah, and I think this is like, I know, if you find yourself having a discussion
about this, I think almost everyone in America can find something that they disagree with the
government on or have disagreed with the government on. And like, this hurts every single one of
us, right? Like, everyone's right to freedom of speech is challenged when someone's right to
freedom of speech is challenged. And like, I think that is the way to approach this. It doesn't
really matter if the people whose speech is being challenged right now, their speech is,
if it's odious to us, if it's something that we don't agree with. That isn't what's at stake.
What's at stake is everyone's right to say everything without government consequences.
Well, I think that doesn't, for us today, at it could happen here. We will continue to report
on the targeting of students, scholars and professors, and immigrants in general, as the Trump
administration, it ramps up its deportation efforts.
If you would like to contact us about these topics, we have an encrypted email address
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