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Freedom of Information Request sent to DOJ regarding Mahmoud Khalil, organizer of the pro-Hamas demonstration at Columbia University

Posted on | March 11, 2025 | 9 Comments

Dr. Orly Taitz, ESQ

President of Defend Our Freedoms Foundation

29839 Santa Margarita pkwy, ste 100

Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 92688

Ph 949 683 5411 fax 949 766 7603

FOIA/PA Mail Referral Unit
Department of Justice
Room 115
LOC Building
Washington, DC 20530-0001
Phone: (202) 616-3837
E-mail: MRUFOIA.Requests@usdoj.gov

REQUEST FOR DOCUMENTS AND INFORMATION UNDER 5 §552 FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT

Current Freedom of Information act request is made regarding am ICE detainee Mahmoud Khalil.

The Antiterrorism Act  18 U.S.C. § 2339B makes it unlawful, within the United States, or for any person who is subject to the jurisdiction of the United States anywhere, to knowingly provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization that has been designated by the Secretary of State.

Algerian/Palestinian ICE detainee Mahmoud Khalil was arrested on Saturday, 03.08.2025, upon revocation of his Green Card with deportation orders. He is reportedly currently housed in Louisiana ICE facility and is challenging his deportation orders before US District Court judge Jesse M. Furman in New York. Detention hearing is scheduled for Wednesday, 03.12.2025.

Khalil was an organizer and negotiator of a demonstration at Columbia University Barnard College in favor of a terrorist organization Hamas, where masked Hamas sympathizers were intimidating Jewish students and disrupting university activities and were carrying leaflets and portraits of Hamas leaders, including but not limited to, portraits of Yahia Sinwar, Hamas leader who masterminded slaughter of 1200 people in Israel on 10.07.2023, including multiple American citizens, as well as kidnapping of 251 individuals, including Americans. An American Idan Alexander is still held hostage by Hamas.  Hamas also keeps bodies of a number of American citizens they killed.

Hamas is designated by the US Department of State as a terrorist organization. Actions by Mahmoud Khalil clearly represent “providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization” warranting criminal charges under 18 USC §2339B.

Currently, by and through his attorneys, Khalil is challenging his deportation orders and revocation of his Green Card  due to the fact that he was not charged with any crime.

There is an intense public interest in  whether the Department of Justice is actually fulfilling its duty in protecting the public and filing criminal charges against individuals providing material support to foreign terrorist organizations. To this extent the public is seeking any and all information and documentation showing indictment or charges being filed against ICE deportation detainee Mahmoud Khalil. Due to the urgency of the matter and keen public interest expedited handling of the request is warranted. As such, I am requesting any and all documents showing whether Khalil is a target of a criminal investigation and whether there is an indictment or charges against aforementioned Mahmoud Khalil to be provided on an expedited basis.

Respectfully,

/s/ Dr. Orly Taitz, ESQ

03.11.2025

Comments

9 Responses to “Freedom of Information Request sent to DOJ regarding Mahmoud Khalil, organizer of the pro-Hamas demonstration at Columbia University”

  1. Peter Sack
    March 11th, 2025 @ 4:05 am

    His green card wasn’t revoked.

  2. orly taitz
    March 11th, 2025 @ 3:26 pm

    it was revoked by Secretary of State Marco Rubio

  3. Peter Sack
    March 11th, 2025 @ 8:21 pm

    There is a due process for revocation, which wasn’t followed. And Rubio’s office isn’t claiming that it’s been revoked

  4. taino21
    March 12th, 2025 @ 11:24 am

    He can be designated as persona non grata and booted out. These activist judges need to be held accountable for violating the separation of powers. Just about every act that the Trump administration is taking it has been challenged in court. Once again, no other administration in history has been challenged by the courts more than the 2 Trump administrations. These judges need to be held accountable and I’m not just talking impeachment.

  5. taino21
    March 13th, 2025 @ 9:49 am

    § 41.122 Revocation of visas.

    (a) Grounds for revocation by consular officers. A consular officer, the Secretary, or a Department official to whom the Secretary has delegated this authority is authorized to revoke a nonimmigrant visa at any time, in his or her discretion.

    (b) Provisional revocation —

    (1) General. A provisional revocation is subject to reversal through internal procedures established by the Department of State. Upon reversal of the revocation, the visa immediately resumes the validity provided for on its face. Provisional revocation shall have the same force and effect as any other visa revocation under INA 221(i), unless and until the revocation has been reversed. Neither the provisional revocation of a visa nor the reversal of a provisional revocation limits, in any way, the revocation authority provided for under INA 221(i), with respect to the particular visa or any other visa.

    (2) Pending visa eligibility determination. A consular officer, the Secretary, or any Department official to whom the Secretary has delegated this authority may provisionally revoke a nonimmigrant visa while considering information related to whether a visa holder is eligible for the visa.

    (3) Automatic provisional revocation based on failure to comply with all EVUS requirements. Visas held by individuals subject to the Electronic Visa Update System (EVUS) who have not complied with the conditions described in 8 CFR 215.24 or whose notification of compliance has expired or been rescinded are automatically provisionally revoked and are no longer valid for travel to the United States, without further notice to the visa holder. The automatic provisional revocation pursuant to this paragraph (b)(3) shall be automatically reversed upon compliance with EVUS requirements set out at 8 CFR part 215, subpart B, as confirmed by receipt of a notification of compliance. A visa revoked on grounds other than failure to comply with EVUS shall remain revoked, notwithstanding compliance with EVUS.

    (c) Notice of revocation. Unless otherwise instructed by the Department, a consular officer shall, if practicable, notify the alien to whom the visa was issued that the visa was revoked or provisionally revoked. Regardless of delivery of such notice, once the revocation has been entered into the Department’s Consular Lookout and Support System (CLASS), the visa is no longer to be considered valid for travel to the United States. The date of the revocation shall be indicated in CLASS and on any notice sent to the alien to whom the visa was issued. This paragraph (c) does not apply to provisional revocations under paragraph (b)(3) of this section.

    (d) Procedure for physically canceling visas. Except for provisional revocations pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this section, a nonimmigrant visa that is revoked shall be canceled by writing or stamping the word “REVOKED” plainly across the face of the visa, if the visa is available to the consular officer. The failure or inability to physically cancel the visa does not affect the validity of the revocation.

    (e) Revocation of visa by immigration officer. An immigration officer is authorized to revoke a valid visa by physically canceling it in accordance with the procedure described in paragraph (d) of this section if:

    (1) The alien obtains an immigrant visa or an adjustment of status to that of permanent resident;

    (2) The alien is ordered excluded from the United States under INA 236, as in effect prior to April 1, 1997, or removed from the United States pursuant to INA 235;

    (3) The alien is notified pursuant to INA 235 by an immigration officer at a port of entry that the alien appears to be inadmissible to the United States, and the alien requests and is granted permission to withdraw the application for admission;

    (4) A final order of deportation or removal or a final order granting voluntary departure with an alternate order of deportation or removal is entered against the alien;

    (5) The alien has been permitted by DHS to depart voluntarily from the United States;

    (6) DHS has revoked a waiver of inadmissibility granted pursuant to INA 212(d)(3)(A) in relation to the visa that was issued to the alien;

    (7) The visa is presented in connection with an application for admission to the United States by a person other than the alien to whom the visa was issued;

    (8) The visa has been physically removed from the passport in which it was issued; or

    (9) The visa has been issued in a combined Mexican or Canadian B-1/B-2 visa and border crossing identification card, and the immigration officer makes the determination specified in § 41.32(c) with respect to the alien’s Mexican citizenship and/or residence or the determination specified in § 41.33(b) with respect to the alien’s status as a permanent resident of Canada.

    [76 FR 23479, Apr. 27, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 72523, Oct. 20, 2016]

  6. Jeff Chapman
    March 14th, 2025 @ 7:07 pm

    Wrong section. He has a green card, not a visa

  7. taino21
    March 15th, 2025 @ 12:50 pm

    I correct my self. Persona non grata is reserved for diplomats of a foreign country. Still there are plenty of statutes that allow the DOS and DOJ to boot him out without interfering judges. Any judge that gets involved on established immigration laws is violating the separation of powers and deserve to be impeached!

  8. dr_taitz@yahoo.com
    March 15th, 2025 @ 3:03 pm

    Green Card is a form of a visa

  9. dr_taitz@yahoo.com
    March 15th, 2025 @ 3:04 pm

    Foreign diplomats can be expelled without a court order

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