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Activist Mahmoud Khalil wants ex-Justice Department official off panel of judges weighing his appeal

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Lawyers for Mahmoud Khalil, the former Columbia University graduate student fighting deportation, have asked Judge Emil Bove to step aside from an appellate panel that could weigh in on his case because of 叠辞惫别鈥檚 previous role as a top Justice Department official involved in investigating student protesters.

Khalil鈥檚 lawyers this week asked that the full complement of judges on the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals 鈥 minus Bove 鈥 review and reverse a January ruling by a panel of three 3rd Circuit judges that put the Trump administration one step closer to detaining and ultimately .

As the Justice Department鈥檚 Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General, Bove 鈥渄irected immigration enforcement investigations and decisions against student protesters on college campuses,鈥 including at Columbia, Khalil鈥檚 lawyers wrote.

叠辞惫别鈥檚 鈥渄emonstrates the existence, or at least the appearance of, a conflict of interest鈥 that should disqualify him from having a say in Khalil鈥檚 appeal, they said.

Bove has been a judge on the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals . Prior to his role at the Justice Department, he served as one of President Donald Trump鈥檚 defense lawyers, representing him in criminal matters including the hush-money case in New York that ended in Trump鈥檚 conviction on 34 felony counts.

The decision on recusal is up to Bove himself. The Justice Department, whose lawyers are representing the government in Khalil鈥檚 appeal, 鈥渟ees no basis for recusal but defers to Judge Bove,鈥 according to court papers.

Through the 3rd Circuit court, Bove declined to comment.

During the judicial confirmation process, Bove acknowledged that his Justice Department position, overseeing criminal and civil matters across the country, 鈥渃ould give rise to actual or potential conflicts鈥 and that he would recuse himself 鈥渋n cases that I was personally involved in should any such matter come before the court.鈥

Khalil, a legal permanent resident, was the first person during the crackdown on noncitizens who publicly criticized Israel and its actions in Gaza.

He remains in the U.S. with his wife, an American citizen, and their young son while he fights the January ruling that found a New Jersey federal judge who had sided with him didn鈥檛 have jurisdiction to decide the matter. Federal law requires detention and deportation challenges to move through the separate immigration court system first, the ruling said.

The three-judge panel鈥檚 2-1 decision didn鈥檛 resolve the key issue in Khalil鈥檚 case: whether the Trump administration鈥檚 effort to throw Khalil out of the U.S. over his campus activism and criticism of Israel is unconstitutional. He then spent three months detained in a Louisiana immigration jail, of his son.

The Trump administration has accused Khalil of leading activities 鈥渁ligned to Hamas,鈥 though they have not presented evidence to support the claim and have not accused him of criminal conduct. They also accused him of failing to disclose information on his green card application.

Khalil, who was born in Syria to a Palestinian family and holds Algerian citizenship, has dismissed the allegations as 鈥渂aseless and ridiculous,鈥 framing his arrest and detention as a 鈥渄irect consequence of exercising my right to free speech as I advocated for a free Palestine and an end to the genocide in Gaza.鈥

The government under a seldom-used statute that allows for the expulsion of noncitizens whose beliefs are deemed to pose a threat to U.S. foreign policy interests.

In February 2025, a month before Khalil鈥檚 arrest, Bove co-authored a memorandum on the Justice Department鈥檚 formation of a task force geared toward 鈥淚nvestigating and prosecuting acts of terrorism, antisemitic civil rights violations, and other federal crimes committed by Hamas supporters in the United States, including on college campuses.鈥

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