Tuesday, May 20, 2025

US judge frees pro-Palestinian student activist Rümeysa Öztürk

Rümeysa Öztürk, one of several pro-Palestine scholars kidnapped and imprisoned by the Trump administration, was released from Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody Friday following a federal judge’s order.

U.S. District Judge William Sessions III in Vermont ruled that Öztürk—a 30-year-old Turkish Ph.D. student at Tufts University in Massachusetts and Fulbright scholar—was illegally detained in March, when masked plainclothes federal agents snatched her off a suburban Boston street in broad daylight in what eyewitnesses and advocates likened to a kidnapping and flew her to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Louisiana.

“Thank you so much for all the support and love,” Öztürk told supporters outside the facility following her release.

The government admits that Öztürk committed no crime. She was targeted because of an opinion piece published in Tufts Daily advocating divestment from Israel amid the U.S.-backed nation’s genocidal assault on Gaza and its apartheid, occupation, ethnic cleansing, and colonisation in the rest of Palestine. Öztürk was arrested despite a U.S. State Department determination that there were no grounds for revoking her visa.

“There has been no evidence that has been introduced by the government other than the op-ed,” said Sessions, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton. “That literally is the case.”

“There is no evidence here as to the motivation, absent consideration of the op-ed, so that creates unto itself a very significant substantial claim that the op-ed—that is, the expression of one’s opinion as ordinarily protected by the First Amendment—form the basis of this particular detention,” the judge continued, adding that Öztürk’s “continued detention potentially chills the speech of the millions and millions of people in this country who are not citizens.”

“There is absolutely no evidence that she has engaged in violence, or advocated violence, she has no criminal record,” Sessions noted. “She has done nothing other than, essentially, attend her university and expand her contacts in her community in such a supportive way.”

“Her continued detention cannot stand,” he added.

The Trump administration has openly flouted judges’ rulings—including a U.S. Supreme Court order—that direct it to release detained immigrants. Sessions’ Friday ruling follows his earlier order to send Öztürk to Vermont and Wednesday’s 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmation of the judge’s directive, both of which have been ignored by the administration.

Seeing that Öztürk was still in ICE custody hours after his order, Sessions reiterated his directive Friday afternoon.

“In light of the court’s finding of no flight risk and no danger to the community, petitioner is to be released from ICE custody immediately on her own recognisance, without any form of body-worn GPS or other ICE monitoring at this time,” the judge wrote.

The Trump administration has dubiously invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, which allows the president to detain dor deport citizens of countries with which the U.S. is at war, in a bid to justify Öztürk’s persecution. The administration has also cited the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, which empowers the secretary of state to order the expulsion of noncitizens whose presence in the United States is deemed detrimental to U.S. foreign policy interests.

Trump administration has invoked the law to target numerous other students who the government admits committed no crimes. These include Mahmoud KhalilMohsen Mahdawi, and Yunseo Chung—all permanent U.S. residents—as well as Ranjani Srinivasan and others. Far-right, pro-Israel groups like Betar and Canary Mission have compiled lists containing the names of these and other pro-Palestine students that are shared with the Trump administration for possible deportation.

Foreign nationals—and some U.S. citizens wrongfully swept up in the Trump administration’s mass deportation effort—are imprisoned in facilities including private, for-profit detention centres, where there are widespread reports of poor conditions and alleged abuses.

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