logo
Homeland Security terminates NDSU student's immigration status

Homeland Security terminates NDSU student's immigration status

Yahoo12-04-2025

Apr. 11—FARGO — The Department of Homeland Security has terminated the work status of a recent graduate from
North Dakota State University,
a university email confirmed.
The campus email sent by Provost David Bertolini on Thursday, April 10, stated Homeland Security unexpectedly took action last Friday, April 4, against a recent NDSU graduate participating in Optional Practical Training.
Optional Practical Training is a program allowing international students with F-1 student status to work in the U.S. for a period directly related to their field of study.
Homeland Security terminated the student's Student and Exchange Visitor Information System, or SEVIS, status. If a person's SEVIS status is terminated, they may need to depart the U.S. immediately or apply for reinstatement, according to immigration law firm ILBSG.
Bertolini's email included information from NDSU's International Student and Study Abroad Services, or ISSAS, office and Faculty Immigration Office.
"Within an hour, our team became aware of the situation and immediately reached out to the student to address it," the ISSAS email said.
"In light of recent national developments, we anticipate that similar situations may arise again," the email said. "Please know that ISSAS remains deeply committed to supporting, guiding, and advocating for our students — especially in moments of uncertainty."
ISSAS hosted virtual and in-person town hall events this week for international students and faculty to offer support and "remind everyone that they are not alone," the message said.
ILBSG, based in Illinois,
reported widespread SEVIS terminations among F-1 students nationwide with no warning this week.
It said the terminations are part of a large-scale effort by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to target individuals with lawful immigration status and issue revocations based on "actual or perceived criminal histories."
Impacts have been felt in Minnesota, as well, with Homeland Security terminating records of
at least five international students at Minnesota State University Mankato and at least three students at the University of Minnesota.
Another U of M graduate student has been held at the Sherburne County Jail pending deportation proceedings and is
facing additional charges from Homeland Security, not yet publicly available.
At St. Cloud State University,
visas for several international students was recently terminated.
At Minnesota State University Moorhead,
administrators said they're fielding questions and providing support to international students who are worried about their visa status. They have not reported any students impacted.
A spokesperson at Concordia College in Moorhead said no international students there have had their visas revoked.
An NDSU spokesperson said they did not have anyone available to provide more information.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pentagon used UFO conspiracies to hide secret weapon programs: Report
Pentagon used UFO conspiracies to hide secret weapon programs: Report

American Military News

timean hour ago

  • American Military News

Pentagon used UFO conspiracies to hide secret weapon programs: Report

A new report claims that the Pentagon used unidentified flying object (UFO) disinformation to hide secret weapon programs from the Soviet Union during the Cold War. The report noted that the disinformation shared by the Pentagon resulted in multiple UFO conspiracy theories. In a review of a 2024 Pentagon report on UFO sightings, The Wall Street Journal claimed that some of the most common theories regarding UFOs, including reports about aliens being held at Nevada's Area 51, were directly encouraged by the Pentagon to hide details on various secret weapon programs. According to The Wall Street Journal, evidence based on interviews with roughly two dozen U.S. military contractors, scientists, and officials and thousands of pages of documents, emails, text messages, and recordings reportedly show that the U.S. government engaged in efforts to encourage UFO conspiracies since the 1950s. The Wall Street Journal reported that the Pentagon's 2024 report indicated that a Nevada bar owner near Area 51 was given fake photos of flying saucers near Area 51 by an Air Force colonel in the 1980s. The Air Force colonel told the Pentagon's investigators that he was given a mission at the time to share disinformation and protect the true objective of Area 51, which was to test the F-117 Nighthawk stealth airplane. READ MORE: Video: Pentagon whistleblower says gov't restricting UFO retrieval info According to The Wall Street Journal, the U.S. military determined that its secret weapon and technology programs could be hidden from the Soviet Union during the Cold War by encouraging UFO conspiracy theories. The Wall Street Journal reported that Sean Kirkpatrick, the former director of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, found multiple examples of the Pentagon spreading disinformation regarding UFO sightings, including an incident that involved the Air Force hazing multiple military members by introducing them to a fake unit allegedly responsible for investigating alien aircraft. The outlet noted that Kirkpatrick also determined that the government intentionally withheld information from the public regarding documented sightings of secret military projects. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Robert Salas, a former Air Force captain, said, 'This is a gigantic cover-up.' In a statement obtained by The Wall Street Journal, the Department of Defense said, 'The department is committed to releasing a second volume of its Historical Record Report, to include AARO's findings on reports of potential pranks and inauthentic materials.'

Yes, the rule of law is in danger from Trump. But there's an even greater threat
Yes, the rule of law is in danger from Trump. But there's an even greater threat

San Francisco Chronicle​

time3 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Yes, the rule of law is in danger from Trump. But there's an even greater threat

For the past five months, myself and others in the legal world have criticized the illegality and unconstitutionality of President Donald Trump's extreme executive actions. Last month, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem announced that Harvard could no longer enroll international students — and that those already attending needed to transfer. There is no doubt that the administration hopes that if it can force Harvard to capitulate, it will send a message to all colleges. Indeed, Noem explicitly posted on X, 'Let this serve as a warning to all universities and academic institutions across the country.' It is a blatant illegal act of reprisal against Harvard to target its international students. But, lost in the legalese, I fear we have at times failed to pay sufficient attention to the basic lack of humanity in so many of these actions. What about those 6,700 international students who are enrolled? Where are they supposed to attend school next year? What does it mean to tell a doctoral student in the midst of laboratory research to transfer? President Donald Trump's policies and actions are cruel. We can't lose sight of that. The students are simply the collateral damage for the Trump administration's efforts to make Harvard cower. We see that same dynamic now playing out on the streets of Los Angeles. In deporting undocumented individuals, the Trump administration could return them to their home countries, which is the standard procedure. Instead, it has moved hundreds of people to a brutal maximum-security prison in El Salvador. Not one of these individuals has been convicted of any crime to warrant imprisonment. We know that some were taken by mistake. And even if they had been convicted of a crime, why the inhumane conditions of the Terrorism Confinement Centre in El Salvador? Another group of individuals was deported to a U.S. Naval base in Djibouti, apparently on their way to be held in South Sudan. Apart from violating court orders, there is no apparent reason for this other than to move those deported as far from the United States as possible and to harsh conditions. The cruelty is stunning and unprecedented. And that's the point. As the ongoing events in Los Angeles show, Trump's aggressive and even cruel use of ICE are designed to provoke an understandably angry reaction. And he is using that as an excuse for an unprecedented nationalization of California national guard troops to send a message that he will not hesitate to use military force to stop demonstrations. This inhumanity of those at the top of government sends a message to those who carry out its policies. Stories of awful actions by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents abound. There was a horrifying picture of a teenage girl pinned to the ground by police as her mother was apprehended by ICE agents to be deported. There was the story of a 4-year-old child suffering from cancer being deported without essential medications. And there was a 10-year-old U.S. citizen with brain cancer who was apprehended with her family in Texas while they were on their way to receive medical care. Even during the first Trump administration, ICE agents would not go into schools, churches or hospitals. But that policy has been revoked, and now parents are afraid to send their children to school, people are afraid to worship and many will not seek needed medical care, even when they have communicable diseases that can infect others. The lack of humanity is reflected in the Trump budget bill passed by the House of Representatives. It is estimated that 11 million people will lose their health insurance coverage if it is enacted. People will suffer and die due to the lack of access to medical care. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that over 3 million people — and it says that may be a low estimate — will lose food assistance because of cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, the largest food assistance program. How many children will go to bed hungry and be malnourished because of this cut? The elimination of the U.S. Agency for International Development and its assistance will lead to countless deaths in foreign countries due to a lack of food and medicine. There is a heartlessness at the core of so many of the Trump administration's actions. For the past 45 years as a law professor, I have concluded each semester by telling my students that it is not enough to contemplate and to argue effectively. As lawyers, they have an obligation to care — to care about those affected by their advocacy and their work. But where is the caring by those who are now running the federal government? Myself and others have extensively written about the assault on the rule of law. It's also our duty to speak about the war on compassion. We have talked about democracies that have become authoritarian, but we haven't talked enough about societies where the government cares so little for humanity and the horrors that have resulted. At a time when our society is deeply divided over policy, can't we still share a commitment that children be treated humanely? Can't we all agree that no one should needlessly suffer? Can't we all condemn unnecessarily cruel Trump administration policies? In fighting to uphold the law, we also must not lose sight that we are fighting for the human beings who are protected by it.

Chicago area crash leaves 19-year-old e-bike rider critically hurt, police say
Chicago area crash leaves 19-year-old e-bike rider critically hurt, police say

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Chicago area crash leaves 19-year-old e-bike rider critically hurt, police say

The Brief A 19-year-old riding an electric off-road bike crashed into a pickup truck in suburban Huntley on Sunday. The teen was critically hurt, police said. The bike was not street legal and had no front or rear lights, police added. HUNTLEY, Ill. - A 19-year-old riding an electric off-road dirt bike was critically injured when he collided with a pickup truck in northwest suburban Huntley early Sunday morning. The crash happened around 1:12 a.m. at the intersection of Haligus and Reed roads, according to the Huntley Police Department. What we know The teen was riding the bike westbound on Reed Road as a Ford F-150 was traveling eastbound and turned onto Haligus Road. The two vehicles collided in the intersection, police said. The Huntley Fire Protection District personnel from nearby Station No. 2 responded immediately after hearing the crash. The 19-year-old had life-threatening injuries and was taken to Northwestern Medicine Huntley Hospital. The driver of the F-150, a 40-year-old man, was not injured and remained on scene. He was cooperative with the investigation, police said. Police said the electric dirt bike was not legal to ride in the roadway and lacked legally required "visibility equipment," including a white front headlight and red rear reflectors or lights. The operator of the bike was not wearing a helmet. Police believe the lack of equipment was a major contributing factor to the biker's injuries.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store