Protests Continue Across City in the Wake of the Arrest of Mahmoud Khalil

Protests have ranged from downtown’s Foley Square, Union Square and Washington Square to uptown’s Gracie Mansion and Columbia University. In midtown on March 13, about 98 protestors were arrested inside Trump Tower protesting the arrest of the pro-Palestinian student leader that the Trump administration is trying to deport.

| 14 Mar 2025 | 10:15

A week of protests was capped by the arrest of 98 people inside Trump Tower on March 13 over the continuing detention of the pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil who had led student protests at Columbia University last spring.

Most of the protestors wore red t-shirts emblazoned with the words “Jews Say Stop Arming Israel.” Cops said about 150 people were inside initially but some dispersed after warnings. Around 12:30 cops arrested 98 of them, zip tied their hands and loaded them onto buses for procession downtown. City Council woman Aviles was the protestors, according to the Daily News. Generally, most elected Democratic officials have stayed away from protests that have erupted across the city.

A crowd also gathered outside as the protest was underway inside at Fifth Ave. and 56th St.

NYPD Chief of Department John Chell noted that while the lobby is open to the public “to a point” once security says it is a problem, the NYPD gets involved. “We get permission from them [Trump building security]. We give warnings. As you know, some people left and some people stayed on the bottom floor and we made arrests.”

The lobby where the protestors were arrested is in the shadow of the golden elevator that Trump descended from in June 2015 to start his first Presidential campaign.

The protest is the latest in a series of protests across the city that have erupted following the arrest of Khalil. The largest so far came on March 10 when about 4,000 packed into Union Square a day after Khalil was arrested in his apartment by agents for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

On March 11, Mayor Eric Adams, who is under fire for what many feel is too much cooperation with the Trump Administration on the immigration crackdown, refused to condemn the raid that resulted in the arrest of Khalil.

Asked one questioner at a contentious weekly press briefing: “I wonder where you come down on the ICE arrest, whether you come down on the side of people who praise the First Amendment rights to protest in America, or those like President Trump who say foreigners in our country who spew hate speech should be deported. Your position?

Adams declined to take a stand, saying immigration enforcement is up to the federal government.

“Well, first, I cannot say this clear enough. And federal government deals with immigration. That’s who deals with immigration. I’ve said it over and over again that free speech is important. And actually, this country advocates for that. But when it comes down to the determination of the status of who stays in a country and who doesn’t stay in the country, that’s the federal government.”

Adams continued that he would not cooperate with ICE on strictly civil matters but would work with them on criminal matters.”We made it clear we do not collaborate with civil enforcement, and we don’t. But I am going to collaborate every day with [law enforcement]. And the crimes that are committed won’t be on our streets. And ICE is a law enforcement entity. People fail to realize that. ICE is a law enforcement entity. And I’m going to collaborate with law enforcement, every federal, state, and city agency in doing so. But specifically with this individual, that’s not my job.”

That prompted a small crowd to turn up at Gracie Mansion on the evening of March 11, as Adams was entertaining Muslim leaders celebrating Ramadan.

The protestors chanted the usual anti-Israel slogans, including the standard, “Palestine must be free from the River to the Sea.” Critics of the protestors have pointed out the slogan is a de facto endorsement for the abolition of the state of Israel. On March 11, the protestors also called on Adams to resign as well.

The Trump Administration wants Khalil booted on the grounds that he is a “national security risk” who they accuse of spreading anti-Semitic and pro-Hamas propaganda during the student strikes at Columbia last year.

The Trump Administration has also said it is cutting off $400 in federal aid on the grounds that it failed to protect the rights of Jewish students during the campus protests.

Khalil was picked up in the apartment he shares with his pregnant wife New York City by ICE agents and then flown 1,360 miles away to a detention center in Louisiana. Initially, the plan was to revoke his student visa, but it turned out Kahlil already had a valid green card. The Trump Administration is trying to revoke that on the national security issue. A federal judge has blocked the deportation.

His supporters say that freedom of speech is under attack and that he could be the first of many to face persecution. Meanwhile, Khalil and seven other Columbia students filed suit against the school for turning over disciplinary records to Congress.

“There’s a groundwork that’s been laid over the past year,” said Gadeir Abbas, an attorney at the Council on American-Islamic Relations at a press conference on March 13. “They’ve been gathering disciplinary records from all across the country and so the ingredients are in place for real, unprecedented campaign. Or, if there is a precedent you’d have the McCarthy hearings of the 50s.”