Denied, detained, deported: the most high-profile cases in Trump's immigration crackdown

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These are some of the people ensnared by the administration's unprecedented measures to target people it believes oppose its agenda - www.theguardian.com

Donald Trump retook the White House vowing to stage "the largest deportation operation in American history". As previewed, the administration has set about further militarizing the US-Mexico border and targeting asylum seekers and refugees while conducting raids and deportations in undocumented communities, detaining and deporting immigrants and spreading fear. Critics are outraged, if not surprised.

But few expected the new legal chapter that unfolded next: a multipronged crackdown on certain people seen as opponents of the US president's ideological agenda. This extraordinary assault has come in the context of wider attacks on higher education, the courts and the constitution. Here are some of the most high-profile individual cases that have captured the world's attention so far because of their extreme and legally dubious nature, mostly involving documented people targeted by the Trump administration in the course of its swift and unlawful power grab.



Students and academics hunted and 'disappeared' In recent weeks, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) teams suddenly began arresting and detaining foreign-born students and academics on visas or green cards. In most cases the government has cited their roles in pro-Palestinian campus protests over Israel's war in Gaza following the 7 October 2023 attack. Claims that they "support Hamas" are invoked as justification for wanting to deport them, even though they have not been charged with any crimes.

Those taken include: Mahmoud Khalil A recent graduate student of Columbia University in New York, Mahmoud Khalil, 30, is a Palestinian green card holder who was a leader during protests last year. He was arrested in front of his pregnant wife and has been in a detention center in Louisiana since mid-March. View image in fullscreen Mahmoud Khalil at Columbia University on 1 June 2024.

Photograph: Jeenah Moon/Reuters The government is using obscure immigration law to make extraordinary claims in cases like...

Joanna Walters.