
A Columbia University studyNT, which is a permanent resident, filed a Monday demand to stop a deportation Order that was given after participating – Protests on Campus in Palestine Support. She says that other participating students have been detained or have submitted deportation orders against them.
What does the demander of the student Yuseo Chung say?
Yuseo Chung moved to the United States of South Korea with his parents when he was 7 years old. Now 21 years, he is a permanent resident and has enrolled as a student of Columbia. According to the Associated pressHe was told that his permanent resident status was “revoked” on March 10, 2025.
He said that ICE received the order to deport it after being arrested on the campus on March 5. Protested Columbia’s actions against student protesters. He was part of a group of students who organized a place in a library at Barnard College, on the other side of Columbia Street.
Chung said in the demand that ice -officers came to his parents’ house to detain him after the protest. Members of the application of the law supposedly had terms to access their Columbia bedroom, looking for records and documents on travel and immigration.
Why will Columbia Yuseo Chung student sue? Trump’s administration?
Chung hopes to block efforts to deport non-American citizens who have participated in Campus protests in Palestine support. She hopes that the lawsuit will block the deportation order, to keep it detained and allow it to remain in the country during the lawsuit, according to Associated Press.
“The impactful actions of the ICE against Ms. Chung are part of a greater pattern of U.S. government attempt the repression of constitutionally protested protest activity and other forms of speech,” says demand, according to Associated Press.
Demand also includes details of five other students subject to similar deportation orders. These include Mahmoud Khalil, protest leader and holder of the green card who was detained, and Momodou Taal, a United Kingdom and Citizen of Gambia and a student at the University of Cornell who was sent a deportation order.
Did the Trump administration respond to Yuseo Chung’s demand?
“Yuseo Chung has been engaged in conduct, including when arrested by NYPD during a pro-Hamas protest at Barnard College,” said a spokesman for the National Security Department. “He is looking for elimination procedures under immigration laws. Chung will have the opportunity to present his case to an immigration judge.”
The Trump Administration has cited a Statute that revokes non -citizens’ visas if they are considered a threat to the interests of U.S. foreign policy.
They are not just the students who have been the target of arrests and arrest. A scholar of Georgetown University was detained, and a professor at the Medicine School of Brown University was rejected.

