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A group of Columbia University students has chained themselves to a gate in protest against the detention of Mahmoud Khalil by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The protest began Wednesday afternoon outside Columbia University’s St. Paul’s Chapel, where students demanded the university disclose the names of the trustees responsible for providing Khalil’s information to ICE. The Columbia Palestine Solidarity Committee expressed their resolve on X, writing, “We will not leave until our demand is met.”
BREAKING: @Columbia University students chain themselves to Columbia’s gates, demanding the name of the trustees who gave Mahmoud Khalil’s name to ICE. We will not leave until our demand is met. Free Mahmoud Khalil. Free Palestine. @JVPColumbia pic.twitter.com/hskTdUASCC
— Columbia Palestine Solidarity Coalition (CPSC) (@Columbia_psc) April 2, 2025
“FREE MAHMOUD KHALIL. NAME THE TRUSTEE. Jewish students will not leave. They will remain chained to the campus gates until @Columbia University is held accountable. WHO REPORTED MAHMOUD TO ICE?” the group wrote on X.

Protesters display a banner from a balcony as students chained themselves to the gates of Columbia University on Wednesday to demand accountability from university trustees after the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil. (Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Around 80 protesters were just outside the St. Paul’s Chapel gate on Columbia University’s campus, a spokesperson for the New York Police Department told Fox News.
Protesters also draped a poster off of a nearby overpass that read: “Free Mahmoud Khalil. Name the trustees.”
Khalil, one of the leaders of the Columbia University anti-Israel encampment in spring 2024, was detained by ICE agents in New York City in early March. The Department of Homeland Security alleged that Khalil “led activities aligned to Hamas, a designated terrorist organization.”

Mahmoud Khalil allegedly played a major role in the protests against Israel at Columbia University. (Ted Shaffrey/File)
Khalil was born in Syria and came to the U.S. in 2022 before becoming a permanent resident in 2024.