Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrested a former Columbia University student over his involvement in the pro-Palestine protests that swept the campus over the past year, even though he has a green card and was never charged with a crime. Columbia, the site of a monthslong pro-Palestine encampment, became a particular obsession for right-wingers and liberal Zionists alike, who accused the university of turning a blind eye to campus antisemitism even as it sent the New York Police Department to arrest its own students. This latest arrest signals that the Trump administration is similarly determined to punish protesters â and provides a glimpse into the surveillance tools it will exploit to accomplish that.
Mahmoud Khalil, who graduated from the universityâs School of International and Public Affairs last December, was picked up by ICE in his university-owned apartment on March 8, his attorney, Amy Greer, told the Associated Press. Khalilâs arrest came just days after Axios reported that the State Department would be using AI to revoke visas for pro-Palestine student protesters. During the arrest, agents from ICEâs Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) division reportedly told Greer â who was on the phone with Khalil and his wife, a US citizen â that they were acting on State Department orders to revoke Khalilâs student visa. After Greer told the agents that Khalil is a permanent resident, and Khalilâs wife showed them his green card, the agents said they were revoking his green card, even though the agency doesnât have the legal authority to do that. Then the agents threatened to arrest Khalilâs wife despite her US citizenship. She is eight months pregnant.
In an emailed statement to The Verge, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said that Khalil had been arrested âin support of President Trumpâs executive orders prohibiting antisemitism.â
The rest of her statement was similarly vague: âKhalil led activities aligned to Hamas, a designated terrorist organization. ICE and the Department of State are committed to enforcing President Trumpâs executive orders and to protecting US national security.â
McLaughlinâs statement and Khalilâs arrest highlight the degree to which the government, often spurred by pro-Israel advocates, has equated protests against Israelâs war on Gaza with both antisemitism and terrorism. While civil rights organizations have called Khalilâs arrest a violation of the First Amendment, other groups that claim to advocate for free speech on college campuses have remained silent.
Greer has called the arrest a clear case of retaliation. âICEâs arrest and detention of Mahmoud follows the US governmentâs open repression of student activism and political speech, specifically targeting students at Columbia University for criticism of Israelâs assault on Gaza,â she told CNN. âThe US government has made clear that they will use immigration enforcement as a tool to suppress that speech.â
A personâs green card canât be revoked without due process
In a habeas corpus petition filed in the Southern District of New York, Greer asked a federal judge to order Khalilâs release, once again describing his immigration arrest as a violation of his First Amendment right to free speech. âEven the threat of detention and deportation has a chilling effect on speech,â Greer wrote. On Monday evening, Judge Jesse Furman prohibited DHS from deporting Khalil while his case is under judicial review and ordered all parties to meet for a hearing on Wednesday, March 12th in response to Khalilâs habeas petition.
Itâs not unheard of for ICE to arrest people with green cards; anyone whoâs not a US citizen, including lawful permanent residents, can be put into deportation proceedings for violating immigration law. But the onus is on ICE to prove that someone is âdeportable.â Since lawful permanent residents have legal status in the US, those who end up in deportation proceedings often get put on ICEâs radar after being charged with certain criminal offenses. Under the 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, legal immigrants, including those with green cards, can be deported for having been convicted of a vast array of crimes â months or even years after their conviction. But those deportations have to be ordered by an immigration judge; a personâs green card canât be revoked without due process.
But there are no reports of Khalil having a criminal record, which raises questions about why ICE detained him â and how they found him. (The NYPD did not respond to The Vergeâs request for comment.) His arrest raises questions about ICEâs surveillance apparatus and the possibility of government overreach.
To become a permanent resident, Khalil had to register with US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the DHS agency that handles legal migration. Under the Privacy Act, USCIS and other agencies must generally safeguard peopleâs âpersonally identifiable informationâ â including their name, address, and biometric identifiers. But there are some exceptions to this. USCIS is allowed to share information with other DHS agencies âas long as there is a mission need in line with the requestorâs official duties.â A DHS policy memo issued in 2007 states that the department âgives the highest priority to the sharing of potential terrorism, homeland security, law enforcement, and related informationâ and that DHS personnel âmust have timely access to all relevant information they need to successfully perform their duties.â
(USCIS links to this memo, hosted by Homeland Security Digital Library, in its policy manual chapter on âprivacy and confidentiality.â That link, however, is now dead and leads to the following message: âContent on this platform is being reviewed and removed to align with the Presidentâs executive orders and DoD/DHS priorities. Until that review is complete, site content is not available.â The memo can still be accessed via the Wayback Machine. It is unclear whether DHS has updated its policies.)
When asked whether USCIS shared any of Khalilâs information with HSI, a USCIS spokesperson directed The Verge to DHS. DHS did not comment.
Immigration officers have access to a host of state, local, and federal government databases, some combination of which may have contained Khalilâs address and other personal information. But ICE doesnât necessarily need to rely on other government agencies for this information, since it has access to most Americansâ data. A 2022 Georgetown Law study found that ICE can locate three out of four adults in the US through their utility records, and it has access to just as many peopleâs driverâs licenses. Almost all of this information, the reportâs authors wrote, can be accessed âwarrantlessly and in secret.â ICE has access to so much of our data that it ânow operates as a domestic surveillance agency,â the report found.
Itâs likely that all ICE needed to find Khalil was his name â which has been publicized a number of times by groups whose sole purpose is to identify and surveil pro-Palestine student activists.
âHSI is a sophisticated investigative section of ICE so they would be capable of locating peopleâs addresses, perhaps through traditional tools like LexisNexis, if they still contract with ICE,â Kathleen Bush-Joseph, an analyst at the Migration Policy Instituteâs US immigration program, told The Verge.
One of these organizations is Canary Mission, a database that has tracked pro-Palestinian student protesters for over a decade. Canary Mission has published the names, photos, and other identifying information of student activists across the country â including Khalilâs. Last October, the Heritage Foundation, the right-wing think tank behind Project 2025, announced its own effort to surveil anti-Israel students, which it dubbed Project Esther. After Trumpâs reelection, the right-wing Zionist organization Betar said it was compiling a list of foreign critics of Israel. The organization said it shared the ânames of hundreds of terror supportersâ with the Trump administration, which it hoped would target those individuals for deportation.
In April 2024, amid protests that had taken over Columbiaâs campus, Khalil â who was in the country on a student visa at the time â told reporters the universityâs harsh response to the encampments made him worry about his legal status. âThatâs why for the past six months, Iâve barely appeared on the media,â Khalil said at a press conference. âThatâs why Iâm not suspended. I did not participate, fearing that I will be arrested and ultimately deported from this country.â
âI havenât been able to sleep, fearing that ICE or a dangerous individual might come to my homeâ
While other students held down the encampments on Columbiaâs lawn, Khalil was among those negotiating with university administrators on the protestersâ behalf. The studentsâ main demand was divestment: they wanted the university to divest from weapons manufacturers and other companies that support Israelâs war on Gaza.
Khalilâs fears didnât subside after he became a permanent resident last year. In fact, Zeteo reports that Khalil asked Columbia administrators to protect him from harassment just one day before his arrest. âSince yesterday, I have been subjected to a vicious, coordinated, and dehumanizing doxxing campaign led by Columbia affiliates Shai Davidai and David Lederer who, among others, have labeled me a security threat and called for my deportation,â Khalil wrote in a March 7 email to Columbia interim president Katrina Armstrong. His email cited a January post on X from Betar. âHeâs on our deport list!â the group wrote of Khalil.
âI havenât been able to sleep, fearing that ICE or a dangerous individual might come to my home,â the email read. âI urgently need legal support, and I urge you to intervene and provide the necessary protections to prevent further harm.â
Davidai, a professor at Columbia Business School, is known for harassing pro-Palestine students on X. The university temporarily suspended him from campus last fall for ârepeatedly harassing and intimidatingâ university employees. Davidai has praised Khalilâs arrest, while Lederer, an engineering student, has accused Khalil of distributing âHamas propaganda.â
After Khalil was arrested, ICE told his wife and attorney that he was being held at an ICE detention center in Elizabeth, New Jersey, the AP reports. But he wasnât there when his wife attempted to visit the detention facility on March 9. As of Monday morning, Greer didnât know where her client was being held. ICEâs detainee locator now says Khalil is being detained at LaSalle detention facility in Jena, Louisiana, a privately owned detention center operated by the GEO Group. Khalilâs whereabouts were first reported by Zeteo.
Itâs not uncommon for ICE to transfer the people it has arrested to far-away detention centers. Setareh Ghandehari, the advocacy director of the Detention Watch Network, said ICE often uses transfers to âtarget and retaliate against activists speaking up against the immigration and ICE detention system.â The remoteness of these facilities often means that detainees are far from not only their friends and family but also from attorneys and oversight groups. According to the latest Census data, less than 5,000 people live in Jena. Meanwhile, the GEO Groupâs detention center there can hold up to 1,160 people.
âThe arrest of Khalil and his subsequent detention and transfer is a continuation of that practice,â Ghandehari told The Verge. âICE is especially prone to transferring people to more rural locations, like Jena, Louisiana, that are not only far away from a personâs support system, but are also hard to access. Itâs an isolation tactic designed to punish people and make it harder for them to fight their immigration cases.â
ICE has been accused of going after activists in the past. In 2018, activist Ravi Ragbir sued ICE for targeting him and other noncitizens who criticized its enforcement practices. Ragbir, the executive director of the New York City-based New Sanctuary Coalition, had been arrested during a routine ICE check-in that year. ICE settled the suit with Ragbir in 2022, and the government gave him a three-year reprieve from deportation.
Also in 2018, members of the Vermont-based group Migrant Justice sued DHS, claiming it had retaliated against its members by targeting them for immigration enforcement after they organized a campaign to protect undocumented farmworkers in the state. The group also sued the Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles, alleging that the agency systematically passed along immigrantsâ private information to ICE for enforcement purposes. Vermontâs DMV settled with Migrant Justice in 2020.
Immigrant advocacy organizations have similarly decried Khalilâs arrest, calling it a clear case of retaliation. To them, Khalil is being punished for exercising his right to free speech in criticizing Israelâs treatment of Palestinians.
âThis is only the beginningâ
âThe unlawful detention of Mr. Khalil reeks of McCarthyism,â Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said in a statement. âItâs clear that the Trump administration is selectively punishing Mr. Khalil for expressing views that arenât MAGA-approved â which is a frightening escalation of Trumpâs crackdown on pro-Palestine speech, and an aggressive abuse of immigration law.â
Reports suggest that Khalil is by no means the administrationâs only target. The Student Workers of Columbia told Reuters that another student had received an email from the US consulate in their home country saying their US visa had been revoked without giving any reason. A day after the student, who the union declined to name, received the email, three ICE agents entered the studentâs building and tried to get into their apartment, representatives from the union told Reuters.
Khalilâs arrest is seemingly at odds with Trumpâs recent boasts that heâs âstopped all government censorship and brought back free speech in America.â But itâs perfectly consistent with his administrationâs stance on pro-Palestine protests on college campuses. In fact, just one day before Khalilâs arrest, the Trump administration pulled $400 million in funding from Columbia, claiming the university had failed to confront antisemitism on campus. âFreezing the funds is one of the tools we are using to respond to this spike in anti-Semitism,â Leo Terrell, the head of the Justice Department Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, said in a statement. âThis is only the beginning.â
Others in the administration put it more bluntly. âSHALOM, MAHMOUD,â the official White House account posted on X. On TruthSocial, Trump promised there would be more: âThis is the first arrest of many to come.â
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