BREAKING: DHS Agents Lie Their Way Into Columbia University Residence to Detain Student, School Says
Almost one year after DHS took Mahmoud Khalil, Trump immigration agents have now taken another student

Department of Homeland Security agents lied, saying they were looking for a missing person, before entering a Columbia University residence to detain a student, Columbia President Claire Shipman said in a statement on Thursday.
“Our understanding at this time is that the federal agents made misrepresentations to gain entry to the building to search for a ‘missing person,’” Shipman wrote in an email to students.
The arrest marks the first time in almost a year that DHS took a Columbia student from a university-owned residence. The last time was when it detained pro-Palestine campus protest leader Mahmoud Khalil.
Shipman said that the school is working to provide legal support to the student. She reiterated that “all law enforcement agents must have a judicial warrant or judicial subpoena to access non-public areas of the University,” and that an administrative warrant is not sufficient.
The school did not provide further comment beyond her statement.
DHS and ICE did not respond to requests for comment.
“Columbia University’s administration bears a profound responsibility for failing to protect its own students,” Mohsen Mahdawi, a Columbia student and green card holder who was detained by federal immigration agents at a citizenship interview last April before being later released, told Zeteo.
“When ICE targeted students and raided Columbia residential housing, the administration chose silence over action and did not file suit against the government to defend the students,” Mahdawi added.“ Columbia is an institution that has betrayed its commitment to academic freedom and human rights. Inaction in such moments is not neutrality. It is abandonment.”
The arrest comes as the Student Workers of Columbia-United Auto Workers continue ongoing bargaining with the university. Their demands include protection from ICE, which the school has thus far rejected.
“Frankly, given the way that CU staff have facilitated the entry of ICE and law enforcement into Columbia’s residences, I think students and workers would be safer and find more support off of Columbia’s campus than anywhere near it,” said Sohum, a member of the SWC bargaining committee, who prefers to only go by their first name.
Just on Wednesday, students rallied on campus to demand stronger protections for international students and for the school to declare itself a sanctuary campus.
Hours later, DHS agents entered a campus building and took a student.
This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.
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