Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

NYC mayor-elect Mamdani selects anti-Israel lawyer as chief counsel

Ramzi Kassem, who served as a policy adviser for President Joe Biden, was an attorney for anti-Israel campus protester Mahmoud Khalil and has defended an Al-Qaeda operative.

The legal team of Mahmoud Khalil, Ramzi Kassem (center) and Baher Amzy (left) speak to the press outside of the Thurgood Marshall Courthouse, where a hearing is underway regarding Khalil's arrest, in New York City on March 12, 2025. Photo by Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images.
The legal team of Mahmoud Khalil, Ramzi Kassem (center) and Baher Amzy (left) speak to the press outside of the Thurgood Marshall Courthouse, where a hearing is underway regarding Khalil’s arrest, in New York City on March 12, 2025. Photo by Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images.

Zohran Mamdani, who will be sworn in as mayor of New York City on Jan 1, has appointed anti-Israel attorney Ramzi Kassem as the city’s chief counsel.

He announced the hire on Dec. 30 at a press conference at NYC Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst, saying Kassem would be joining the administration from CUNY, “where he serves as a professor of law.”

The mayor-elect noted that Kassem “served as a policy adviser for President Biden from 2022 to 2024, and has deep experience arguing in court, including before the Supreme Court,” adding that he would “turn to Ramzi for his remarkable experience and his commitment to defending those too often abandoned by our legal system.”

He wrote that Kassem has “been on the front lines of providing legal defense for students detained by ICE and supporting many more at risk.”

Kassem, 47, who wrote anti-Israel articles for his campus newspaper as a student, is co-founder of Creating Law Enforcement Accountability and Responsibility (CLEAR) at the CUNY School of Law. Lawyers from CLEAR, including Kassem, represented Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University graduate detained by immigration authorities for allegedly leading anti-Israel protests.

In a video produced by the Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans (Kassem was a fellow for the organization in 2001), Kassem said that “9/11 happened and of course that changed everything,” shifting his legal focus to representing detainees held at Guantanamo Bay and Bagram Air Base.

Kassem was the lead defense counsel for Ahmed al-Darbi, a Saudi Arabian national and Al-Qaeda operative convicted by a U.S. military commission in connection with the 2002 attack on the French oil tanker Limburg. Kassem and his students have represented 15 prisoners held at Guantánamo, Bagram and other facilities.

Baseball fans can find certified kosher food at 13 MLB stadium locations this season, though stands remain closed on Shabbat and Jewish holidays and do not offer Passover items.
“The events of Oct. 7 underscored the ongoing and evolving nature of the global terrorist threat,” the senators wrote to senior U.S. law enforcement officials.
The measure excludes funding for immigration enforcement and faces potential delays in the House.
“Periods of heightened conflict abroad too often coincide with increased fear, discrimination, and violence at home, putting both Jewish and Muslim Americans at risk,” the groups said.
The U.S. Justice Department said that the group “systematically targeted vulnerable children, coerced them into producing abuse material and threatened to destroy their lives if they resisted.”
“When Israel is fighting for the safety and security of its people, it is of special significance that representatives of many countries choose to sit together around the table of freedom and express partnership,” the Israeli ambassador said.