logo
Homeland Security agent says he told not to tell Rümeysa Öztürk her visa was revoked when she was arrested

Homeland Security agent says he told not to tell Rümeysa Öztürk her visa was revoked when she was arrested

CNN15-07-2025
Federal investigators normally tasked with uncovering narcotic and financial crimes were told to prioritize the arrest of a university student with no criminal record, and not tell her that her visa was revoked, a Homeland Security Investigation agent testified Tuesday, a marked shift for the agency under President Donald Trump.
The agent, Patrick Cunningham, appeared during the second week of a trial in Boston over the Trump administration's so-called ideological deportation policy, which a group of university professors say is intended to protected political speech.
The trial has highlighted how the Department of Homeland Security began taking orders from the State Department as it targeted certain professors and students to change their immigration status and work to have them deported. Critics have claimed the administration is targeting these individuals because of their pro-Palestinian views and statements against Israel.
Cunningham was asked Tuesday about the arrest of Tufts University doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk, who was approached by a plain-clothed officer near her Somerville, Massachusetts, home in March. In footage of the arrest, the officer can be seen grabbing Öztürk's wrists after approaching her as other officers walked toward Öztürk from across the street.
According to Cunningham, a high-ranking agent in Boston, the State Department had communicated to HSI that Öztürk's visa had been revoked and passed information about the student to HSI, including an anti-Israel op-ed written by Öztürk.
'I can't recall receiving a communication like this,' from the State Department before, Cunningham said. In the past, he said, HSI was not involved in most immigration-related cases, sticking primarily to drug, financial and other crimes.
When he received the communication from the State Department and was told to arrest Öztürk because her visa had been quietly revoked, Cunningham went to lawyers at the Department of Homeland Security to make sure the arrest would be legal, according to his testimony.
'It was not something that I had much experience with, no. If any,' he said Tuesday.
Cunningham also said that leadership had made the decision not to tell Öztürk that her visa had been revoked.
'It was the determination made that she would not be' made aware 'that her visa had been revoked,' the agent said. 'We did not plan on alerting her.'
After spending six weeks in detention, US District Judge William K. Sessions III ordered Öztürk's release in May as her immigration case plays out.
CNN has reached out to Öztürk's attorney for comment.
Also Tuesday, a high-ranking agent at HSI's New York division, Darren McCormack, said he received an intelligence packet on Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil.
McCormack testified that instructions came from DHS headquarters in Washington to locate and surveil Khalil and he was told the administration was interested in the case.
'At some point I was made aware that the Secretary of State and or the White House had an interest in Mr. Khalil,' McCormack testified.
Days after they were instructed to monitor Khalil, McCormack received a memo from the State Department that 'indicated that his status, his immigration status in the United States had changed,' McCormack said.
Like in the case of Öztürk, McCormack checked with officials to make sure the arrest being requested was legally sound.
'We historically, in the recent time, had not enforced those laws,' McCormack said of HSI's lack of work on immigration efforts. 'I wanted to confirm that there was a legal basis for the arrest.'
Khalil was released in June after being detained for more than 100 days. His immigration case is ongoing and Khalil's lawyers filed a claim against the Trump administration for $20 million in damages, alleging he was falsely imprisoned and was portrayed as antisemitic.
A separate HSI witness, Acting Special Agent in Charge Christopher Heck, testified that DHS headquarters had instructed him to begin surveilling Georgetown University scholar Badar Khan Suri in order to be able to arrest him when the State Department changed his immigration status.
As with Öztürk and Khalil, a federal judge ordered the release of Suri in May as the immigration case played out.
The agents also testified about the use of masks by ICE agents during each of these arrests, saying that there is no policy around the use of masks at DHS and the decision is made by the individual officer.
Some agents chose to wear masks during these arrests, the agents testified.
'Currently, in the world of social media and doxing and for safety of agents and their families, agents will wear masks to protect their identities,' McCormack said.
HSI agents do not wear uniforms and drive unmarked vehicles, the agents said.
William Crogan, an HSI agent serving as an attaché in London, testified that while the use of masks 'is not necessarily a new thing in my experience,' he told the judge presiding over the trial that in the previous five years prior to the new administration he could only recall masks being used by undercover HSI agents looking to keep their identity secret.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jefferies' Zervos Says Fed Not Independent, Powell Left-Leaning
Jefferies' Zervos Says Fed Not Independent, Powell Left-Leaning

Bloomberg

time29 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Jefferies' Zervos Says Fed Not Independent, Powell Left-Leaning

A potential candidate to succeed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, David Zervos, said that it's inaccurate to describe the US central bank as independent, and characterized the outgoing Fed chief as aligned with the political left. 'The Fed has never been independent, and the political pressures on the Fed have always been growing and continue to grow,' Zervos, chief market strategist at the investment bank Jefferies, said on CNBC. He highlighted pressure from Democratic lawmakers in recent years on monetary policymakers to lower interest rates.

The East Coast Braces for Hurricane Erin - CNN This Morning with Audie Cornish - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
The East Coast Braces for Hurricane Erin - CNN This Morning with Audie Cornish - Podcast on CNN Podcasts

CNN

time29 minutes ago

  • CNN

The East Coast Braces for Hurricane Erin - CNN This Morning with Audie Cornish - Podcast on CNN Podcasts

The East Coast Braces for Hurricane Erin CNN This Morning 46 mins While it's not expected to make a direct hit on the US, Hurricane Erin still presents a life-threatening danger, with treacherous rip currents and potentially deadly flooding. Also on today's show: Trump invites Putin and Zelensky to meet in person, but one of the guests wont RSVP ... The White House calls the DC takeover a matter of safety, but America's Black mayors say there's something more sinister going on ... President Trump keeps up his pressure campaign on the Smithsonian, questioning why so many exhibits still talk about how bad slavery was.

Former Heat employee pleads guilty to selling stolen jerseys, memorabilia
Former Heat employee pleads guilty to selling stolen jerseys, memorabilia

New York Times

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Former Heat employee pleads guilty to selling stolen jerseys, memorabilia

Former Miami Heat security officer Marcos Thomas Perez pleaded guilty Tuesday to transporting and transferring stolen goods in interstate commerce, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida. Perez, 62, stole more than 400 jerseys and other memorabilia from a secured equipment room and sold them on online marketplaces. The U.S. Attorney's Office said in a release that Perez sold more than 100 stolen items for $1.9 million over three years and shipped them across state lines, often at prices below their market value. The items included a game-worn LeBron James jersey from Game 7 of the 2013 NBA Finals, which later sold for nearly $3.7 million in a 2023 Sotheby's auction. Advertisement Perez, a retired member of the Miami Police Department, worked as a security officer with the Heat from 2016 to 2021 and later served as an NBA security employee from 2022 to 2025. While working on game days at the team's Kaseya Center, Perez had access to an equipment room that stored hundreds of game-worn jerseys and other memorabilia intended for a future Heat museum, according to the release. Law enforcement executed a search warrant at Perez's home in April and seized almost 300 items that the Heat confirmed had been stolen from their arena. Earlier this month, Perez appeared in federal court and was charged with transporting and transferring stolen goods in interstate commerce. The charges are reminiscent of those faced by former Augusta National employee Richard Brendan Globensky, who pleaded guilty to stealing items worth an estimated $5.3 million from the country club, including Arnold Palmer's green jacket, which was intercepted in an FBI sting operation in 2022. Globensky received a 12-month prison sentence in March. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store