Assistant Chief Immigration Judge Jamee Comans ruled that the U.S.’ determination that Khalil poses “adverse foreign policy consequences” for the U.S. is “facially reasonable.”
The judge gave Khalil’s lawyers until April 23 to file applications for relief to stop his deportation to Syria or Algeria on this ground.
Comans is holding in abeyance the second deportation ground cited by the Trump administration: a claim that Khalil committed immigration fraud because he omitted information about his work history in his green card application. Comans made the determinations Friday afternoon.
Khalil has been targeted for deportation for his role in Columbia University campus protests against Israel.
After Comans issued her ruling, Khalil, attired in a blue uniform and sandals, asked to be allowed to give remarks.
Khalil noted that the judge had previously talked about “due process and fundamental fairness,” and the former Columbia student said those principles were not followed today.
Khalil said the Trump administration shipped him “1,000 miles away” from his family. He concluded by telling the judge that the cases of other migrants detained here at the ICE facility in Jena, Louisiana should also be addressed with urgency.
An attorney for Khalil said in a statement after the hearing, “Today, we saw our worst fears play out: Mahmoud was subject to a charade of due process, a flagrant violation of his right to a fair hearing, and a weaponization of immigration law to suppress dissent. This is not over, and our fight continues.
“If Mahmoud can be targeted in this way, simply for speaking out for Palestinians and exercising his constitutionally protected right to free speech, this can happen to anyone over any issue the Trump administration dislikes,” said Marc van der Hout.
Comans made the determinations Friday afternoon. Khalil has been targeted for deportation for his role in Columbia University campus protests against Israel.
The government hasn’t charged Khalil with any crime, but it has argued in immigration court that he should be stripped of his green card and deported on two civil immigration grounds.
The Trump administration has invoked a rarely used provision of immigration law that allows the government to seek the deportation of noncitizens whose “presence or activities” are determined to “have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States.”
Faced with a deadline this week to provide evidence against Khalil, the Department of Homeland Security filed a memorandum by Secretary of State Marco Rubio outlining the foreign policy rationale.
Rubio cited no specific evidence against Khalil, a 30-year-old legal permanent resident whose American citizen wife is in the late stages of pregnancy. But he said Khalil’s presence in the country undermines “U.S. policy to combat anti-Semitism around the world and in the United States, in addition to efforts to protect Jewish students from harassment and violence in the United States.”
The Trump government has separately alleged that Khalil committed immigration fraud by failing to disclose certain information in his green card application, including his work for the British Embassy in Beirut and the United Nations agency for Palestinian migrants and refugees.
Khalil’s attorneys harshly criticized Rubio’s memo and the government’s case against Khalil. They claim the government is violating Khalil’s right to free speech.
“If the secretary of state claims the power to arrest, detain and deport someone, including a lawful permanent resident, simply because that person dissents from U.S. foreign policy, there are no limits. There’s no beginning and no end to that kind of executive power,” said Johnny Sinodis, an attorney for Khalil’s immigration case, on Thursday.
Khalil has separately sued the government over his arrest, detention and the effort to deport him. That case, in federal court in New Jersey, seeks an order that would require both Khalil’s release and Rubio to rescind his determination. It also asks a judge to prohibit the Trump administration from targeting noncitizens “who engage in constitutionally protected expressive activity in the United States in support of Palestinian rights or critical of Israel.”
Graham Kates
contributed to this report.
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