Judge rejects release of pro-Palestinian activist


A US judge on Friday denied Mahmoud Khalil’s request to be released from detention, after federal prosecutors changed their rationale for holding the Columbia graduate student as part of its crackdown on pro-Palestinian activists.
Newark, New Jersey-based US District Judge Michael Farbiarz on Wednesday said the government could not use foreign policy interests to justify Khalil’s detention.
On Friday the government said it was also holding Khalil, a legal permanent resident of the United States, on a charge of immigration fraud.
In response, Farbiarz said Khalil’s lawyers had not successfully argued why it was unlawful for the government to hold him on the charge, which he has denied.
The ruling marked the latest turn in Khalil’s fight to be freed from a Louisiana detention center after his March arrest for involvement in the pro-Palestinian protest movement, which President Donald Trump has called antisemitic. His detention was condemned by civil rights groups as an attack on protected political speech.
Marc Van Der Hout, a lawyer for Khalil, said the government practically never detained people for immigration fraud and the Syrian-born student was being punished for opposing Israel’s US-backed war in Gaza following Hamas’ October 2023 attack.
‘Highly unusual’
“Detaining someone on a charge like this is highly unusual and frankly outrageous,” said Van Der Hout. “There continues to be no constitutional basis for his detention.”
Farbiarz had previously suggested legal residents like Khalil were rarely detained on the basis of immigration fraud.
On Friday he said Khalil should seek bail from the immigration lawyer in his case.
The Syrian-born activist was arrested by immigration agents in the lobby of his university residence in Manhattan on March 8.

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