(CNN) โ As the sun began to set Tuesday over Somerville, Massachusetts, Turkish national Rumeysa Ozturk was on her way to meet friends at an Iftar dinner where they would break their Ramadan fast.
But she would never make it to the gathering, according to her attorney. Instead, the 30-year-old was arrested and physically restrained by immigration officers near her apartment, close to Tufts Universityโs Somerville campus where she was a PhD student, lawyer Mahsa Khanbabai told CNN.
Six plainclothes officers surrounded Ozturk as she walked alone, neighborhood surveillance video appears to show. The officers did not show their badges until she was restrained, the video shows.
Now, she is being held at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Louisiana, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
While no charges have been filed against Ozturk, her attorney told CNN, Ozturkโs visa status has been terminated, according to a statement released Thursday by Tufts President Sunil Kumar.
A federal judge in Boston issued an order late Friday to stop Ozturk from being deported.
Judge Denise Casper wrote in the order that Ozturk โshall not be removed from the United States until further order from this court.โ Casperโs order directs immigration authorities to stop deportation proceedings against Ozturk until she can determine whether the Boston court has jurisdiction to decide if Ozturk was lawfully detained.
Ozturk is one of several foreign nationals affiliated with prestigious American universities to be arrested for purported activities related to terrorist organizations amid the Trump administrationโs immigration crackdown. They include Mahmoud Khalil, a prominent Palestinian activist taken into custody this month outside his Columbia University apartment.
In her order, Casper cited Columbia graduate and Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalilโs case โ specifically referencing a New York judgeโs decision to not allow Khalil to be deported until a court settles whether it has jurisdiction over his case.
Khalil and Ozturkโs cases share some striking similarities โ both were arrested near their homes without notice, both were transferred across state lines and jurisdictions and both have been transferred to Louisiana.
Ozturk โengaged in activities in support of Hamas,โ a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said Wednesday in a statement without specifying what those alleged activities were.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio โdeterminedโ Ozturkโs alleged activities would have โpotentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences and would compromise a compelling U.S. foreign policy interest,โ Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, told CNN Thursday. She declined to provide further details about Ozturkโs alleged activities or how they could pose adverse consequences to US foreign policy.
DHS cited the same provision in the detention of Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University graduate who was arrested by immigration officers earlier this month.
Asked about Ozturkโs case Thursday, Rubio suggested without evidence she was involved in disruptive student protests over Israelโs military operations in Gaza.
โIf you apply for a visa to enter the United States and be a student, and you tell us that the reason why youโre coming to the United States is not just because you want to write op-eds, but because you want to participate in movements that are involved in doing things like vandalizing universities, harassing students, taking over buildings, creating a ruckus, weโre not going to give you a visa,โ Rubio said.
To date, the Trump administration has revoked hundreds of visas, Rubio said. โMight be more than 300 at this point. We do it every day,โ he added.
Meanwhile, Ozturkโs lawyers praised the judgeโs decision Friday.
โThis is a first step in getting Rumeysa released and back home to Boston so she can continue her studies. But we never should have gotten here in the first place: Rumeysaโs experience is shocking, cruel, and unconstitutional,โ Khanbabai said in a statement.
Who is Rumeysa Ozturk?
Ozturk was enrolled in a PhD program at Tufts University on a valid F-1 visa, which allows international students to pursue full-time academic studies, Khanbabai said.
A student of psychology, Ozturk has been studying in the US since 2018, her brother Asim said in a Thursday statement on behalf of the family.
โShe went to America after winning a Fulbright scholarship, successfully completed her masterโs degree at Columbia University, and then started her doctorate at Tufts University in Boston,โ Asim Ozturk wrote in a statement in Turkish he posted to X.
Ozturk was working on her dissertation when she was arrested and had about 10 months left to complete her doctorate, Asim said.
In March 2024, Ozturk cowrote an op-ed in the schoolโs newspaper in which she criticized Tuftsโ response to a student government groupโs call for the university to divest from companies with ties to Israel because of the conflict in Gaza, among other demands.
โCredible accusations against Israel include accounts of deliberate starvation and indiscriminate slaughter of Palestinian civilians and plausible genocide,โ the op-ed says.
Ozturkโs brother, Asim, said he believes she is being targeted for her beliefs.
โApart from expressing her opinion within the framework of freedom of expression without engaging in any provocative or aggressive action regarding the Palestine issue, she has not taken any action,โ Asim added. โIt seems that she has been subjected to the activities of ICE, which has been on a witch hunt in the post-Trump period, against those who support Palestine.โ
Tufts University officials had no prior knowledge of her arrest, Kumar has said.
Kumar shared the concerns of Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell in calling the video of Ozturkโs arrest โdisturbing,โ he said in an updated statement late Wednesday that included additional guidance and resources for international students.
โWe recognize how frightening and distressing this situation is for (Ozturk), her loved ones, and the larger community here at Tufts, especially our international students, staff, and faculty who may be feeling vulnerable or unsettled by these events,โ Kumar added.
โLet me assure you that the university is doing everything in our power to support our community, as we continue to learn more information about this troubling event in real time,โ a Tufts official wrote to university alumni in an email obtained by CNN.
Hundreds protested Ozturkโs detention Wednesday night at a park on the edge of the Tuftsโ campus, CNN affiliate WBZ reported.
โThe fact that someone can just be disappeared into the abyss for voicing an idea is absolutely horrifying,โ rally attendee Sam Wachman told WBZ.
The university is in touch with local, state and federal elected officials and โhope that Rumeysa is provided the opportunity to avail herself of her due process rights,โ he said.
The Turkish government is monitoring the case and staying in touch with Ozturkโs family, it said.
โInitiatives have been made with the US Department of State, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Unit and other authorized units,โ the Turkish embassy said on X, on Wednesday. โEvery effort is being made to provide the necessary consular services and legal support to protect the rights of our citizens.โ
A US State Department spokesperson declined to comment on the specifics of the case.
โDue to privacy and other considerations, and visa confidentiality, we generally will not comment on Department actions with respect to specific cases,โ a State Department spokesperson told CNN.
Sudden arrest caught on camera
Surveillance video released Wednesday and obtained from a neighbor by the advocacy group Muslim Justice League appears to show six plainclothes officers casually approaching Ozturk as she walks alone on a sidewalk.
One officer wearing a hat and hoodie grabs her arms, causing Ozturk to shriek in fear as another pulls out a concealed badge on a lanyard and confiscates her cell phone.
Shortly afterward, the officers all pull cloth coverings over their mouths and noses, some of them wearing sunglasses, as one of them restrains Ozturkโs hands behind her back.
As the officers say, โWeโre the police,โ a person not seen in the video can be heard responding, โYeah, you donโt look like it. Why are you hiding your faces?โ
One minute after the encounter began, Ozturk is walked into a waiting SUV and driven away.
ICE has not responded to CNNโs request for comment on Ozturkโs case.
The use of facial coverings is similar to an account of the arrest of Georgetown University fellow Badar Khan Suri, whose attorney Nermeen Arastu told CNN the officers who detained Khan Suri were โbrandishing weapons.โ
โICE agents came in the night, took him captive, taking him from his wife and children, and hauled him away to an unknown location before transferring him to an ICE detention facility in Louisiana, far from his family and attorneys,โ Arastu added on Suri.
Detained in Louisiana
After her arrest on Tuesday night, Ozturk was driven to multiple government offices in New England, a spokesperson for Ozturkโs legal team said.
The next morning, Ozturk was flown to southern Louisiana where she is being detained.
Throughout that period of time, Ozturk was not charged or given the opportunity to speak with a lawyer, according to the statement.
Following her detainment, Khanbabai filed a petition in federal district court in Boston, challenging the legality of her detention and asking she not be moved out of Massachusetts.
โ(Ozturk) shall not be moved outside the District of Massachusetts without first providing advance notice of the intended move,โ District Judge Indira Talwani, an Obama appointee, wrote Tuesday in an order.
The government must respond to the motion no later than Tuesday, District Judge Denise Casper said.
However, Ozturk was already detained outside Massachusetts when federal officials got the courtโs order, government attorney Mark Sauter said in a court filing Thursday morning.
She is scheduled to face an initial hearing in removal proceedings April 7 in Louisiana, according to an amended petition filed Friday.
Her attorneys have asked a federal court in Massachusetts to assert jurisdiction over her case and release her on bail as the litigation moves forward.
The petition also asks the court to restore her F-1 student visa. The state department revoked her visa on March 21 but she was not notified until she received a notice to appear from ICE after her arrest on March 25, the petition says.
The court filing describes how Ozturk was taken to Louisiana by ICE agents after her arrest. Without access to her medications or legal counsel Ozturk was transferred to a staging facility in Alexandria, Louisiana, then moved again to another facility in southern Louisiana where sheโs currently being held.
A Turkish consulate representative traveled to the ICE office in Burlington, Massachusetts, Wednesday to inquire about Ozturk but was denied information on her location, according to the filing.
Ozturkโs attorneys, who were unable to reach her for nearly 24 hours after her arrest, contacted area hospitals fearing she couldโve had a medical episode, the filing says.
โRumeysaโs friends frantically tried to find out more information about what had happened to her,โ her counsel wrote in the filing. โFor more than 24 hours after her arrest, Rumeysaโs friends, family and legal counsel did not hear from her and could not speak to her.โ
Ozturk had an asthma attack while in transit to Louisiana, according to the filing that says she told her attorney when they made contact a day after her arrest.
Her lawyers also allege that ICE failed to notify them, the court and DOJ lawyers that she was being transferred to Louisiana prior to that transfer, even though the Massachusetts court had entered the order requiring notification.
Ozturk is detained at the South Louisiana ICE Processing Center in Basile, according to ICEโs online detainee locator system.
Ozturk is now the third international student known to be transferred to Louisiana after being detained by federal officers. Khalil and Georgetown fellow Badar Khan Suri were both transferred to an ICE detention facility in Jena.
โLike all the other immigration cases related to international students and activists who have spoken up about the atrocities in Palestine, the government throws around wild accusations but provides no evidence,โ Khanbabai said. โWe hope Rumeysa will be released immediately.โ
This story has been updated with additional information.
CNNโs Lauren del Valle, Amanda Musa, Braden Walker, Caroll Alvarado, Zenebou Sylla, Gul Tuysuz, Sana Noor Haq, Jennifer Hansler and Benjamin Gittleson contributed to this report.
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