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Rumeysa Oztuk, Mohsen Mahdawi Immigration Immigration Cases Tuesday – NBC Boston

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The Federal Court of Appeal is scheduled to hear the arguments on Tuesday in cases of the Turkish Tafs University student, which was held by the immigration authorities for a period of six weeks and a Palestinian student at Columbia University, was recently released from detention.

A committee of three judges from the Court of Appeal in the American Second Chamber, based in New York, is expected to hear requests submitted by the US Department of Justice in relation to Rumeysa Oztuk and Mohsen Mahmoudi. The circle appeals the decisions made by two federal judges in Fairmont. He also wants to unify students ’issues, saying they are presenting similar legal questions.

The procedures for the immigration court are performed for Ozturk and mahdawi separately.
Vermont’s local court judge ordered that Ozturk, a 30 -year -old doctorate, will be attended by the state from the Luisiana Immigration Center by May 1 to obtain hearings to determine whether she is illegally detained. Ozturk lawyers say her detention violates her constitutional rights, including freedom of expression and legal procedures.

The Court of Appeal stopped this matter last week to consider the government’s proposal.
The Ministry of Justice said that Congress is limited to the jurisdiction of the federal stadium on immigration issues. She said that the Louisiana Immigration Court has a jurisdiction for the Ozturk case.

Ozturk immigration officials surrounded a street in a Boston suburb on March 25 and led her to New Hampshire and Vermont before placing it on a plane at the detention center in Basily, Louisiana.

Ozturk was one of four students who wrote two articles in the campus newspaper, The Tuffs Daily, which last year criticizes the university’s response to student activists who demand that Tatms “recognize the Palestinian genocide” reveal its investments and strip them of companies with relations with Israel.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Internal Security in March, without providing evidence, said that the investigations found that Ozturk participated in activities to support Hamas, a terrorist group designed from the United States.

The government also challenged another judge’s decision to release Mahdi from detention in Vermont on April 30. Mahdi led protests at Columbia University against the Israel War in Gaza. He was arrested by immigration officials during an interview about putting the finishing touches on his American nationality.

Mahdawi, 34, was a permanent legal resident for 10 years. It has been in Vermont State since April 14. In order to release him, American boycott judge, Jeffrey Croford, said Mahdawi raised “a great claim that the government arrested him to strangle the discourse that does not agree to him.”

He allows him to launch the two traveling users outside the Mother Vermont state and the graduation attendance next month in New York. Recently completed the courses in Colombia and plans to start a master’s degree program there in the fall.

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