An immigration judge has denied Bond as a student at the University of Tufts from Turkey, who has been detained by Louisiana authorities for three weeks for what her lawyers have been apparent revenge for an optical piece co -authored in the student newspaper.
Meanwhile, Rumeysa Ozturk’s attorneys have filed a new request to a Federal Judge in Vermont, considering whether to undertake a jurisdiction in her detention case. The lawyers asked the judge to order to be confronted by the state by Friday and to hold a hearing next week. They said that this would allow better communication with her legal team and a doctor to appreciate her. Ozturk is said to have suffered five asthma attacks in custody.
The lawyers of the 30 -year -old Octurk demanded an immigration judge that she would be released to Bond when her immigration case stems. This judge denied her request on Wednesday, the Octurk had a hearing that day, they said in a statement published on Thursday morning.
The Ministry of Interior Security presented a document in support of their opposition to Octurk’s request for bonds: a Memorandum for a State Department with a Phagragraph that takes away her student visa, her lawyers said in the new court declaration.
The note says that on March 21, Ozturk’s visa was canceled on March 21 after an assessment that it has participated in associations, which can undermine US foreign policy by setting up a hostile environment for Jewish students and showing support for a certain terrorist organization.
Ozturk’s attorneys said the immigration judge denied the bond based on the insolvent conclusion that D -Ozturk was both a risk of flight and a community danger. “
Messages looking for a comment on Thursday were sent by email to ICE.
Ozturk, a doctoral student studying childhood development, was taken by immigration staff while strolling along the street in the Boston suburbs in Someville on March 25. After being taken to New Hampshire and then Vermont, she was placed in Basil, Louisiana.
Ozturk is among several people with relationships with US universities whose visas have been canceled or have been stopped entering the United States after being charged with demonstrations or publicly expressed support for the Palestinians. Immigration judge in Louisiana has ruled that the United States may deport the colleague of Colombian University of Mahmoud Halil on the basis of the federal government’s argument that it poses a risk of national security.
Ozturk’s attorneys challenge the legal body for the detention of ICE. They also asked the US district judge William Sessions in Vermont, where her detention case was transferred after the lawyers first filed a filing of a petition for her release to Massachusetts to take her jurisdiction and release her.
The sessions that held a hearing on Monday have not yet ruled. He had asked Ozturk’s lawyers if there was any evidence that they suggest that she was a member of the organization, which was later “temporarily prohibited”, according to the State Department’s note. The lawyers told her she was gone.
“The entire government of the government against Rymes is based on the same note from one paragraph from the State Department to ICE, which simply pointed to the Op-Ed of the Rymes,” Marty Rosenblut, one of Ozturk’s lawyers, said in a statement.
Ozturk was one of the four students who wrote an option in the Campus newspaper, The Tufts Daily, last year criticized the University of Student Activists’ reaction demanding Tufts “recognizing the Palestinian genocide”, reveals its investments and released from companies with links to Israel.
Ozturk’s lawyers say her detention violates her constitutional rights, including a free speech and a proper process. They said they did not know for hours where she was after she was taken. They said they were not able to talk to her up to more than 24 hours after detention. Ozturk herself said that she was unsuccessfully made numerous requests to talk to a lawyer.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Interior Security said last month, without providing evidence that investigations found that Ozturk was engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a terrorist group designated by the United States.