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NYPD makes ‘multiple’ arrests, as anti-Israel protesters hold sit-in at Trump Tower

Mahmoud Khalil, the recent Columbia graduate whose release from federal custody the protesters seek, filed a lawsuit with seven students against Columbia, Barnard and a House committee.

Protest
Jewish Voice for Peace protesters are detained by officers of the New York City Police Department inside Trump Tower in Midtown Manhattan, on March 13, 2025. Photo by Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images.

The New York City Police Department told JNS that it arrested multiple people and that it is addressing an ongoing matter, as protesters staged a sit-in at Tower in Midtown Manhattan on Thursday afternoon.

Some 100 protesters advocated for the release of Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian agitator who is in federal custody and facing deportation for, the Trump administration says, supporting the Hamas terror organization, the New York Post reported.

The anti-Israel group Jewish Voice for Peace organized the gathering, which included people wearing red T-shirts stating “Jews say stop arming Israel,” according to footage that the Post published.

The protest came after an initial federal court hearing on Wednesday, in which Jesse Furman, a U.S. district judge in Manhattan, determined that the Trump administration cannot yet deport Khalil.

Federal agents arrested Khalil, who was born in Syria and has ties to Algeria, on Saturday. The recent Columbia graduate holds a green card and is reportedly married to a U.S. citizen. The Trump administration has said that he led anti-Israel protests on Columbia’s campus, and the White House said that he has supported Hamas, which would be grounds for his deportation.

Randy Fine, a Republican, Jewish Florida state senator who is running for Congress, wrote that “Trump Tower has been invaded by Muslim terrorists seeking the release of Muslim terrorist Mahmoud Khalil.”

“Every non-American at this Muslim terror rally should be immediately deported to Gaza,” he wrote.

Khalil and seven unnamed Columbia and Barnard students filed a lawsuit on Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York against Columbia University and its president; Barnard College and its president; and the House Committee on Education and Workforce and its chair, Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.).

The plaintiffs demand that the university and the college refrain from turning student records over to Congress, particularly in response to Walberg’s Feb. 13 letter asking Columbia to produce disciplinary records for “numerous antisemitic incidents that have taken place at Columbia since the fall 2024 semester began.”

Providing such records would violate the First Amendment right of the students to free speech by “exposing the students to negative publicity and investigation,” per the lawsuit.

“Given the plentitude of evidence of members of Congress and President Trump actively attempting to strip universities and others of funding, to roll back contractual obligations and to ban certain media outlets from the White House because the president does not like what they publish, entities like the university feel pressure to cooperate with the government in its efforts to chill and punish protected speech and protest activity,” the plaintiffs allege.

Vita Fellig is a writer in New York City.
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