Utah international students file lawsuit against Department of Homeland Security
SALT LAKE CITY () — A lawsuit has been filed against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on behalf of eight international students in Utah who had their Student and Exchange Visitor (SEVIS) Program records terminated.
In a release sent to ABC4.com, the ACLU of Utah states that they have filed this lawsuit alongside the law firm Stowell Crayk, P.C., and immigration attorneys Phillip Kuck and Timothy Wheelwright.
The eight students are from four countries — China, Nigeria, Mexico, and Japan — and attend schools located in Utah, including Brigham Young University, the University of Utah, and Ensign College — at least one is enrolled at BYU-Idaho.
'In the United States, everyone — no matter your immigration status — has a constitutional right to due process. To terminate an international student's SEVIS registration, the U.S. government must adhere to regulatory standards and provide basic due process, which it has failed to do – it's not just wrong, it's unlawful,' Jason M. Groth, Legal Director at the ACLU of Utah, said in the release.
'It's unfair': International PhD student at BYU speaks after his student visa was revoked
According to the lawsuit, DHS violated students' Fifth Amendment rights on the basis that they had no notification or opportunity to contest the decision. ACLU says that they are working on filing a temporary restraining order to protect these students.
'These students face irreparable harm if the courts do not correct the government's unlawful actions, including lost immigration status, lost education, lost diplomas, lost tuition, and lost jobs and careers,' said attorney Phillip Kuck. 'If the courts choose not to act, they face removal from the country without any tangible recourse.'
The lawsuit states that the students are not currently seeking to challenge the revocation of their F-1 visas 'even though said revocations appear to have been taken in bad faith.' They are seeking the reinstatement of their SEVIS registration.
According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), SEVIS is 'the Web-based system that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) uses to maintain information on Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP)-certified schools.'
When those students' SEVIS records were terminated, they were subject to 'arrest, detention, and deportation, forcing them to lose their schooling and their employment,' according to the lawsuit. It asserts that ICE is not authorized to terminate their SEVIS records even when the student's visa has been revoked.
Students react to nearly 50 international students' visas being revoked, records being removed across Utah
'Practically speaking, termination of a SEVIS record prevents the student from doing things they must do in order to maintain their status, like OPT reporting, requesting transfers, requesting reduced course load for medical emergencies, etc.,' the lawsuit states.
The students involved in the lawsuit are not identified and are listed as Jane or John Doe. Much of the background information involving the plaintiffs has been redacted.
The causes of action listed are under the Fifth Amendment and the Administrative Procedure Act. The lawsuit asks that the court declare the termination of the students' SEVIS registration and termination of their nonimmigrant status was unlawful.
The lawsuit also asks that the court restore their SEVIS registration, nonimmigrant student status, and curricular practical training (CPT) or optional practical training (OPT).
'The abrupt and unexplained termination of these students' lawful SEVIS registration is profoundly concerning. These students now face deportation or worse, placing their education and futures in jeopardy,' said Tom Ford, Staff Attorney at the ACLU of Utah. 'Coordinated attacks on due process are paving the way for the kind of tyrannical government our Constitution was meant to prevent—and the ACLU of Utah is taking action to stop that abuse of power and keep rights intact for all of us.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
29 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Los Angeles school year begins amid fears over immigration enforcement
As children played in the schoolyard, there were no reports of federal agents in the area. Advertisement Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has urged immigration authorities not to conduct enforcement activity within a two-block radius of schools, starting an hour before the school day begins and until one hour after classes let out. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'Hungry children, children in fear, cannot learn well,' Carvalho said in a news conference on Monday. He announced several measures intended to protect students and families, including altering bus routes to accommodate more students. The district will also distribute family preparedness packets that include know-your-rights information, emergency contact updates, and tips on designating a backup caregiver in case a parent is detained. The sprawling district, which covers more than two dozen cities, is the nation's second largest, with more than 500,000 students. Some 30,000 students are immigrants, and an estimated quarter of them are without legal status, according to the teachers' union. Advertisement Under US law, children have the right to an education regardless of immigration status. Districts across the country have grappled with what to do if federal agents came to school campuses, with some, including LA and Oakland, declaring themselves 'sanctuary' districts. While immigration agents have not detained anyone inside a school, a 15-year-old boy was pulled from a car and handcuffed outside Arleta High School in northern Los Angeles on Monday, Carvalho said. He had significant disabilities and was released after a bystander intervened in the case of 'mistaken identity,' the superintendent said. 'This is the exact type of incident that traumatizes our communities; it cannot repeat itself,' he added. Administrators at two elementary schools previously denied entry to Department of Homeland Security officials in April, and immigration agents have been seen in vehicles outside schools. DHS did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Carvalho said that while staffers and district police officers can't interfere with immigration enforcement and don't have jurisdiction beyond school property, federal agents parked in front of schools have left in the past after conversations with staff. The district is partnering with law enforcement in some cities and forming a 'rapid response' network to disseminate information about the presence of federal agents, he said. Teachers say they are concerned some students might not show up the first day. Lupe Carrasco Cardona, a high school social studies and English teacher at the Roybal Learning Center, said attendance dipped in January when President Trump took office. And when raids ramped up in June, graduation ceremonies took a hit. One raid at a Home Depot near MacArthur Park, an area with many immigrant families from Central America, took place the same morning as an eighth grade graduation at a nearby middle school. Advertisement 'People were crying. For the actual graduation ceremony, there were hardly any parents there,' Cardona said. Raids in California's Central Valley in January and February coincided with a 22 percent spike in student absences compared with the previous two school years, according to a recent study from Stanford University economist Thomas Dee and Big Local News. One 11th-grader, who spoke on the condition that her last name not be published because she is in the country without legal permission and fears being targeted, said she is afraid to return to school. 'Instead of feeling excited, really what I'm feeling is concern,' said Madelyn, a 17-year-old from Central America. 'I am very, very scared, and there is a lot of pressure.' She said she takes public transportation to school but fears being targeted on the bus by immigration agents because of her skin color. 'We are simply young people with dreams who want to study, move forward, and contribute to this country as well,' she said. Madelyn joined a club that provides support and community for immigrant students and said she intends to persevere in that work. 'I plan to continue supporting other students who need it very much, even if I feel scared,' she said. Some families who decided the in-person risk is too great opted for online learning, said Carvalho, with virtual enrollment up 7 percent this year. The district contacted at least 10,000 parents and visited more than 800 families over the summer to provide information about resources such as transportation and legal and financial support, and is deploying 1,000 workers from its central office on the first day of classes to 'critical areas' that have seen immigration raids. Advertisement 'We want no one to stay home as a result of fears,' Carvalho said.
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Notorious MAGA Brawler Becomes ICE Barbie's Gatekeeper
Corey Lewandowski, a troublemaking off-and-on aide to Donald Trump, has gradually gained a staggering level of power at the Department of Homeland Security. While Lewandowski is on paper as a special governmental employee and limited to working 130 days a year, staff at the DHS told CNN that he is acting as a gatekeeper to Sec. Kristi Noem and holds tight control over personnel. 'He's the de facto chief of staff in the department. Everyone is terrified of him because he has almost singular authority to fire people,' one insider told the outlet. Lewandowski has placed multiple staff on administrative leave—in one case, for including pronouns in an email, according to CNN. He has effectively been Noem's No. 2, often overruling Deputy Secretary Troy Edgar, sources told CNN. They said that he demonstrates his power by writing 'Denied' or 'No' in black sharpie on proposals he rejects. 'If you're not getting through Corey, it's not getting done,' an insider told CNN. 'Noem gives the final thumbs up on the calls, but Corey drives the conversations and the narrative.' Lewandowski, who accompanies Noem on travel and is often at her side, acts as her enforcer within the agency, keeping those underneath the secretary in line, sources told CNN. 'He's the hammer and you're the nail,' one DHS official said. 'He's the guy that's going to hold you accountable.' Lewandowski has long been a controversial figure—even to members of Trump's inner circle. During Trump's 2016 presidential bid, Lewandowski served as campaign manager until he was fired for contributing to turmoil within the campaign. Nevertheless, Lewandowski was given a role as a senior adviser on Trump's 2024 campaign—that is, until his clashes with other Trump staff got him sidelined. Rather than being rewarded with a top White House position like other campaign aides, Lewandowski was handed what was—at least on paper—a limited advisory role at the DHS. Lewandowski, who has provided counsel to Noem dating back to her days as South Dakota's governor, had sought to be her chief of staff, but the request was vetoed because of concerns about the 'optics,' The Atlantic reported in February. The problem was that the pair, both of whom are married, have for years been dogged by rumors of an affair. The allegation was first reported by the conservative news site American Greatness in 2021. Two years later, The Daily Mail and The New York Post offered further reporting that the two were allegedly having an affair. Noem and Lewandowski have both denied the allegation. A spokesperson for DHS said the department 'doesn't waste time with salacious, baseless gossip' in a statement to the Wall Street Journal in April. Now, in a powerful role by Noem's side, Lewandowski is reportedly calling shots at the DHS—and ruffling feathers. 'Everything he's doing is to increase [Noem's] profile,' a DHS insider told CNN of Lewandowski. Much of his energy has been focused on taking apart the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which the Trump administration had strenuously criticized on the campaign trail. Lewandowski's mission brought him into conflict with Trump's first acting administrator of FEMA, Cameron Hamilton, who behind closed doors had begun to argue that FEMA should not be shuttered. During the spat, Lewandowski repeatedly tore into Hamilton in front of staff, saying that he had lost sight of the Trump administration's mission, CNN reported. Hamilton was fired in May, a day after he broke with the administration and told lawmakers he did not agree with the administration's plan to dismantle FEMA. While the White House has said that he was fired for publicly contradicting the administration's goals, insiders told CNN that his ouster was being orchestrated by Lewandowski weeks before it happened. CNN also reported that Lewandowski successfully pushed to replace Hamilton with an ally of his, David Richardson. A senior DHS official, speaking on behalf of the agency, told CNN that this was 'categorically false.' The senior official described Lewandowski as an 'adviser,' and said that 'multiple staff have the ability to provide recommendations and input' but that it is Noem 'who has the final decision.' Asked for comment, the White House directed the Daily Beast to a statement provided to CNN. In the statement, spokesperson Abigail Jackson described Lewandowski as 'one of President Trump's longest and most trusted advisers.' 'The tremendous results coming from the Department of Homeland Security – a historically secure border, safer American communities, and successful deportations of criminal illegal aliens – speak for themselves,' she said. The Daily Beast has also contacted the DHS for comment.


Axios
2 hours ago
- Axios
What to know about the isolated military base hosting Trump and Putin
Friday's summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to take place at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. Why it matters: The military base played a crucial role in the U.S. monitoring of the Soviet Union during the Cold War. But it's rarely been visited by non-military leaders in recent years, let alone two presidents. Driving the news: Trump and Putin's meeting on Ukraine, and the press conference that's expected to follow, are expected to take place at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, a little known military facility in Anchorage with a storied history. In addition to the relatively similar flight times from Washington and Moscow, the remoteness of the base may have made it more attractive. What they're saying: "Any place you can do it that kind of isolates it, and it makes it easier to control the setting is actually important for both sides," said Benjamin Jensen, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "The last thing that President Trump would want is pictures of mass demonstrations about a war criminal like Putin being in the United States." Here's what you need to know about the base. Quick facts on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Zoom in: The joint-base is home to the 3rd Wing of the Air Force, which operates fighter jets such as the F-22 Raptor, and is seen as a key hub for operations in Asia, the Arctic and the West Coast. The military based houses more than 32,000 people and accounts for roughly 10% of Anchorage's population, according to the U.S. military. The base has around $15 billion worth of infrastructure and covers 85,000 acres. The bottom line: JBER is seen by many experts as the only location in Alaska with sufficient security to host both Putin and Trump. How JBER was formed The big picture: The military base as its known today was created in 2010 when Elmendorf Air Force Base merged with Fort Richardson. Elmendorf played a crucial role in monitoring the Soviet Union during the Cold War and would also monitor for any possible nuclear attacks or military activity from the Pacific. The base has the nickname "Top Cover for North America" for that reason, per the base's website. Flashback: The Army first moved into Alaska in 1867 after the U.S. purchased the territory from Russia. The Air Force arrived in 1941 amid concerns related to World War II, and took on additional importance afterwards. "Elmendorf Field assumed an increasing role in defense of North America as the uncertain wartime relations between the United States and the Soviet Union deteriorated into the Cold War," the base's website reads. Worth noting: The Army moved to a new Fort Richardson in 1951 and the Air Force took control of the original Fort Richardson, renaming it Elmendorf Air Force Base. They merged in 2010, expanding infrastructure in the process, according to the base's website. Visits to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson The military base has previously played host to at least two U.S. presidents and one foreign dignitary. In 1971, President Richard Nixon hosted Emperor Hirohito of Japan at Elmendorf, which was a historic meeting as the first time a reigning Japanese emperor visited a foreign country. Thousands of people packed a hangar to watch the interaction. Former President Reagan stopped at Elmendorf in 1983 while en route to Japan and Korea. Most other visitors from D.C. have been defense officials scoping out the living conditions of service members in Alaska and discussing the base's mission.