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		The US government has a new policy for terminating international 
		students' legal status
		[April 30, 2025]  
		By MORIAH BALINGIT 
		WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. government has begun shedding new light on a 
		crackdown on international students, spelling out how it targeted 
		thousands of people and laying out the grounds for terminating their 
		legal status.
 The new details emerged in lawsuits filed by some of the students who 
		suddenly had their status canceled in recent weeks with little 
		explanation.
 
 In the past month, foreign students around the U.S. have been rattled to 
		learn their records had been removed from a student database maintained 
		by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Some went into hiding for fear 
		of deportation or abandoned their studies to return home.
 
 On Friday, after mounting court challenges, federal officials said the 
		government was restoring international students' legal status while it 
		developed a framework to guide future terminations. In a court filing 
		Monday, it shared the new policy: a document issued over the weekend 
		with guidance on a range of reasons students' status can be canceled, 
		including the revocation of the visas they used to enter the U.S.
 
 Brad Banias, an immigration attorney representing a student whose status 
		was terminated, said the new guidelines vastly expand ICE's authority 
		beyond previous policy, which did not count visa revocation as grounds 
		for losing legal status. In the past, if a student had their visa 
		revoked, they could stay in the U.S. to finish their studies — they 
		simply would not be able to reenter if they left the country.
 
 “This just gave them carte blanche to have the State Department revoke a 
		visa and then deport those students even if they’ve done nothing wrong,” 
		Banias said.
 
 Many of the students who had visas revoked or lost their legal status 
		said they had only minor infractions on their record, including traffic 
		violations. Some did not know why they were targeted at all.
 
		
		 
		Lawyers for the government provided some explanation at a hearing 
		Tuesday in the case of Banias' client Akshar Patel, an international 
		student studying information systems in Texas. Patel's status was 
		terminated — and then reinstated — this month, and he is seeking a 
		preliminary court ruling to keep him from being deported.
 In court filings and in the hearing, Department of Homeland Security 
		officials said they ran the names of student visa holders through the 
		National Crime Information Center, an FBI-run database that contains 
		reams of information related to crimes. It includes the names of 
		suspects, missing persons and people who have been arrested, even if 
		they have never been charged with a crime or had charges dropped.
 
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            Students march at Arizona State University in protest of ASU's 
			chapter of College Republicans United-led event encouraging students 
			to report "their criminal classmates to ICE for deportations", Jan. 
			31, 2025, in Tempe, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File) 
            
			
			
			 
            In total, about 6,400 students were identified in the database 
			search, U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes said in the hearing Tuesday. 
			One of the students was Patel, who had been pulled over and charged 
			with reckless driving in 2018. The charge was ultimately dropped — 
			information that is also in NCIC.
 Patel appears in a spreadsheet with 734 students whose names had 
			come up in NCIC. That spreadsheet was forwarded to a Homeland 
			Security official, who, within 24 hours of receiving it, replied: 
			“Please terminate all in SEVIS.” That's a different database listing 
			foreigners who have legal status as students in the U.S.
 
 Reyes said the short time frame suggested that no one had reviewed 
			the records individually to find out why the students' names came up 
			in NCIC.
 
 “All of this could have been avoided if someone had taken a beat,” 
			said Reyes, who was appointed by President Joe Biden. She said the 
			government had demonstrated “an utter lack of concern for 
			individuals who have come into this country.”
 
 When colleges discovered the students no longer had legal status, it 
			prompted chaos and confusion. In the past, college officials say, 
			legal statuses typically were updated after colleges told the 
			government the students were no longer studying at the school.
 
 In some cases this spring, colleges told students to stop working or 
			taking classes immediately and warned them they could be deported.
 
 Still, government attorneys said the change in the database did not 
			mean the students actually lost legal status, even though some of 
			the students were labeled “failure to maintain status.” Instead, 
			lawyers said, it was intended to be an “investigative red flag.”
 
 “Mr. Patel is lawfully present in the U.S.,” Andre Watson of the 
			Department of Homeland Security said. “He is not subject to 
			immediate detention or removal.”
 
 Reyes declined to issue a preliminary injunction and urged lawyers 
			from both sides to come to a settlement to ensure Patel could stay 
			in the U.S.
 
			
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