logo
‘I was stunned and scared:' Columbia University student ran from Homeland Security

‘I was stunned and scared:' Columbia University student ran from Homeland Security

CNN31-03-2025
Ranjani Srinivasan was busy talking to an adviser at Columbia University when the federal agents first came to her door. The day before she'd got an unexpected email that her student visa had been canceled, and she was trying to get information.
'It was my roommate who heard the knock and immediately recognized (it as) law enforcement,' Srinivasan told CNN. 'She asked them 'Do you have a warrant?' And they had to say 'No.''
'I was stunned and scared,' she said. 'I remember telling the adviser 'ICE is at my door and you're telling me I'm fine? Do something.''
They returned another day, also without a warrant, Srinivasan said. Matters escalated when they came a third time, with a judge's permission to enter the Columbia apartment. By then she had already left the country.
The biggest question for Srinivasan is why they came at all.
Srinivasan had renewed her student visa just a few months earlier, being granted permission for another five years in the United States — more than enough time to complete her PhD in urban planning. She was no stranger to immigration rules, having won a Fulbright scholarship to Harvard University for her master's degree and then returning to her native India for the requisite two years after.
Her dream acceptance at Columbia's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation coincided with the beginning of the Covid pandemic, so she started her studies in Chennai, India, before making it to New York City.
By last month, the end of her doctorate was almost in sight, she was grading papers for the students she was teaching and fretting over a deadline for a journal. Far from her mind was a night almost a year before when she got caught up in a crowd.
That evening in April 2024 she'd been trying to get back to her university apartment from a staff picnic when she was swept up in a police operation against a crowd protesting Israel's war with Hamas in Gaza, she said.
I did not mean to deceive anyone … If I made a mistake, I would have been happy to clarify it to the state
Ranjani Srinivasan
Srinivasan had only just returned to the US, having been away from Columbia since before the war began and generated passionate protests. 'We didn't really know what was going to happen that day,' she said. 'The whole perimeter of the neighborhood had been barricaded.' Unable to prove she lived there, she wasn't allowed to go to her street, so she ended up circling the neighborhood, looking for a way through, she told CNN.
'They kept shifting the barricades, and then I think around 200 cops descended, and they kind of charged at us. It was absolute confusion. People were screaming, falling, people were running out of the way,' she said. Too small to force her way through the melee, she ended up in a large group of people detained by the police.
She said she was held with the crowd for several hours but never fingerprinted or booked for an arrest. She was given two pink-colored summonses by the New York Police Department — one for obstructing pedestrian traffic and the other for failure to disperse — before being released. A lawyer working pro bono for a number of the students got the summonses dismissed even before she had to appear in court. That means there should be no record against her, and as far as Srinivasan was concerned, she could forget the whole thing.
She did not report the dismissed summonses on her visa renewal.
When asked why Srinivasan's visa was revoked, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement 'these citations were not disclosed.'
That was never mentioned to Srinivasan when she was told her visa had been taken away.
'I did not mean to deceive anyone,' she said. 'If I made a mistake, I would have been happy to clarify it to the state.'
But she was never given the chance.
According to local so-called sanctuary laws, federal authorities should not have even known Srinivasan had ever been detained, according to her lawyer, Nathan Yaffe.
'New York City is supposed to have protections in place to prevent people who don't commit crimes, who haven't been in any kind of trouble, from getting caught in this sort of punitive dragnet that the administration is implementing here,' he said.
'But clearly the federal government has access to the summons database or to other data that allows them to see even when people aren't fingerprinted, even when people don't have any criminal case, even when the only allegation against them is entirely dismissed.'
It was very clear to her, rightly so, that this government would stop at nothing to pursue her, even though their pursuit of her was based on nothing
Nathan Yaffe, Srinivasan's lawyer
No one from DHS, the NYPD or Columbia University responded to CNN requests about how federal authorities became aware of this case. When asked about Srinivasan by CNN at a news conference, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said: 'I'll say it over and over again: New York City Police Department, they do not collaborate for civil enforcement.' He said he would look into it but his office has not got back to CNN.
For Srinivasan, the sudden escalation was alarming. She says she had attended protests in her time in the US, but as much to experience American culture as to exercise free speech.
But she was seeing others being detained under orders from the Trump administration and was afraid.
'You keep going back, thinking 'Have I done something?' And there are no answers there,' she said.
She knew Columbia University graduate student and US permanent resident Mahmoud Khalil was arrested and put in detention in Louisiana, and did not want to take that risk.
'It was very clear to her, rightly so, that this government would stop at nothing to pursue her, even though their pursuit of her was based on nothing,' Yaffe said.
Srinivasan went to LaGuardia Airport and took a flight to Canada.
Government officers, now in possession of a warrant, went back to her apartment.
Four agents, three with their faces covered, spent several minutes inside.
They asked Srinivasan's roommate to stay in her room. 'If not, you can leave,' one agent said, as heard on a video recording taken by the roommate that CNN has viewed.
Another said he would explain the warrant 'if you would like to put down your phone.'
I'm glad to see one of the Columbia University terrorist sympathizers use the CBP Home app to self deport
Kristi Noem, Secretary of Homeland Security on X
'We have a warrant to search this premises for electronics, documents related to Ranjani Srinivasan,' continued the officer who identified himself as coming from 'Homeland Security' as the roommate recorded. 'Did you get enough video?' he added.
The officers left, taking nothing for evidence.
A DHS news release heralded Srinivasan's departure but did not mention unreported summonses, instead alleging she was 'involved in activities supporting Hamas.' The release was headlined: 'Columbia University Student Whose Visa Was Revoked for Supporting Hamas and Terrorist Activities Used CBP Home App to Self-Deport.' The app, introduced the day before Srinivasan left, includes a feature for immigrants without legal permission to be in the US to inform the government they intend to depart.
There was also a damning post on X from Secretary Kristi Noem: 'It is a privilege to be granted a visa to live & study in the United States of America. When you advocate for violence and terrorism that privilege should be revoked and you should not be in this country. I'm glad to see one of the Columbia University terrorist sympathizers use the CBP Home app to self deport.'
Yaffe said the statements about Srinivasan were 'absolutely false.'
'She has basically been a private person, pursuing her studies and pursuing her career,' he said. 'She's been a student, and they not only took that away from her in the sense of forcing her out of the country … but they also took away her privacy, obviously, and made her the huge public face of this campaign of repression that they're undertaking with the deliberate desire, as the administration has said, to send a message to other students.'
Srinivasan also takes issue with how she was portrayed. She denies using the CBP Home app, saying it wasn't on her phone and anyway her device was almost dead at the airport. 'I didn't even know the app existed. I just left,' she said.
As for her politics, she said: 'I'm not a terrorist sympathizer, I'm not a pro-Hamas activist. I'm just literally a random student … It just seems very strange that they would spend so much, vast resources, in persecuting me.'
For now, she's trying to stay optimistic about getting back to her life and doctorate. She was due to complete it in May. She hopes somehow Columbia can reenroll her so her five years of study with them is not for naught.
But she's unhappy with the actions of the Ivy League school, which has made policy changes apparently to address demands from the Trump administration since she left. The interim president of Columbia University stepped down the following week.
'I do think that Columbia should have protected me against this. I think that that's part of their mandate,' Srinivasan said. 'When you're attracting these international students to come and study at Columbia, when you go and do outreach all across the world to attract the best and the brightest, you have a mandate to protect them.'
She might be an expert in planning, but Srinivasan is not trying to look too far ahead and is set on two goals.
'I want my PhD. I want my name cleared.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

George Conway says Trump not ruling out Maxwell clemency ‘just insane'
George Conway says Trump not ruling out Maxwell clemency ‘just insane'

The Hill

time16 minutes ago

  • The Hill

George Conway says Trump not ruling out Maxwell clemency ‘just insane'

Attorney George Conway criticized President Trump on Friday for not completely ruling out a pardon for convicted sex offender Ghislaine Maxwell at the center of the Jeffrey Epstein case. His words came after Trump told reporters earlier in the day that he was 'allowed' to grant Maxwell clemency but hadn't considered taking the measure. 'She is a sexual predator. She was found guilty of doing these things. She [was] found guilty of, she would take the passports away from these girls, who they dragged to Epstein island. She did all of this stuff,' Conway said during an appearance on CNN's 'The Lead with Jake Tapper.' 'She's neck deep, way in.' 'And so the notion that they would give her clemency is just insane,' he added. Conway, a staunch Trump critic, joins a chorus of Democrats and even some conservatives who are railing against the Trump administration for failing to release files related to the Epstein case. Epstein, who died in prison in 2019, and Maxwell, who's now serving a 20-year sentence, were convicted for sex trafficking and other charges. Maxwell appealed her guilty verdict and is fighting to have her case heard before the Supreme Court. This week, she met with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche about the case. During those meetings, the Justice Department granted her limited immunity in exchange for her candor, ABC News reported. However, some, including Conway, said she can't be trusted. 'The Justice Department trashed on her credibility back when they prosecuted her,' he told Tapper on Friday. 'They said that she couldn't be trusted under oath.' Trump was notified that his name was listed in files tied to Epstein's dealings earlier this year. But the president denies any wrongdoing and says those seeking information about his involvement with the deceased financier are engaging in a 'witch hunt.'

Fewer than half of ICE arrests under Trump are convicted criminals
Fewer than half of ICE arrests under Trump are convicted criminals

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Fewer than half of ICE arrests under Trump are convicted criminals

A woman cries after her husband is detained by federal agents during a mandatory immigration check-in in June in New York City. The Trump administration's arrests have been catching a smaller share of criminals overall, and a smaller share of people convicted of violent and drug crimes, than the Biden administration did in the same time frame last year. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images) Despite Trump administration rhetoric accusing Democrats of protecting violent criminals and drug-dealing immigrants, the administration's arrests have been catching a smaller share of criminals overall, and a smaller share of people convicted of violent and drug crimes, than the Biden administration did in the same time frame. While the Trump administration has caught more immigrants with convictions for drugs and violence, their share of the rising arrest numbers is smaller, as more people get swept up for minor traffic violations or strictly immigration crimes, according to a Stateline analysis. Forty percent of the nearly 112,000 arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from Jan. 20 through late June were of convicted criminals. That's compared with 53% of the nearly 51,000 arrests for same time period in 2024 under the Biden administration. Trump's deportations could cost 6M jobs, report finds The share of people convicted of violent crime fell from 10% to 7% and drug crimes from 9% to 5%, according to a Stateline analysis of data from the Deportation Data Project. The project, led by attorneys and professors in California, Maryland and New York, collects and posts public, anonymized U.S. government immigration enforcement datasets obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests. Some Democratic states are among those with the highest share of violent criminals in this year's ICE arrests: Hawaii (15%), Vermont (13%), and California and Nebraska (12%) — while some of the lowest shares were in more Republican states: Maine (2%), and Alabama, Montana and Wyoming (3%). Immigration attorneys see an increased push to arrest and detain immigrants for any type of violation or pending charge as President Donald Trump pushes for higher arrest and detention numbers to meet his campaign promise for mass deportation. Trump officials have called for 3,000 arrests a day, far more than the current average of 711 as of June and 321 a day during the same time period under Biden. The majority of recent ICE detentions involve people with no convictions. That's a pattern I find troubling. – Oregon Republican state Rep. Cyrus Javadi Arrests have accelerated since about mid-May, when government attorneys began asking to revoke bail and arrest people who show up for court hearings after being released at the border, said Vanessa Dojaquez-Torres, practice and policy counsel for the American Immigration Lawyers Association, which represents more than 16,000 immigration attorneys. 'We're not completely sure what the reasoning or the goal is behind some of these policies, other than they want detention numbers up,' Dojaquez-Torres said. 'They seem to have really been struggling to get their deportation numbers up, and so I think that's one of the reasons why we see a lot of these policies going into effect that are meant to kind of circumvent the immigration court process and due process.' Arrests of people convicted of violent crimes increased by 45% from about 5,300 to 7,700 compared with last year. For drug crimes, the increase was 21% — and they fell as a share of total arrests, from 9% under the Biden administration to 5% this year. If Trump wants more deportations, he'll need to target the construction industry Arrests for those not convicted of any crime nearly tripled to about 67,000, and increased from 47% to 60% of arrests. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security defended ICE arrests Wednesday. Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement that the agency was 'targeting dangerous criminal illegal aliens and taking them off American streets. Violent thugs ICE arrested include child pedophiles, drug traffickers, and burglars.' In Oregon, arrests during the first part of last year increased from 51 under the Biden administration to 227 under the Trump administration, with those not convicted of any crime increasing from 34 to 137. Those with convictions for violent crime increased from 3 to 16. Even some Republicans are concerned with the new emphasis on non-criminals. 'The majority of recent ICE detentions involve people with no convictions. That's a pattern I find troubling, especially when it risks sweeping up people for things like expired tags or missed court dates,' said Oregon state Rep. Cyrus Javadi, a moderate Republican representing Tillamook and Clatsop counties. Nationally, nonviolent crimes have risen as a share of immigration arrests. The most common crime conviction for those arrested this year is driving while intoxicated, which was also the top offense last year under Biden. But this year it's closely followed by general traffic offenses, which rose to second place from sixth place, surpassing such crimes as assault and drug trafficking. More cities, counties join immigrant sanctuary lawsuit seeking to block Trump funding cuts Traffic offenses, outside of driving while intoxicated and hit and run, rose almost fourfold as the most serious conviction on record for those arrested, the largest increase in the top 10. Those offenses were followed by increases in the immigration crime of illegal entry, meaning crossing the border in secret, which tripled. The increase in traffic violations as a source of immigration arrests is a reason for cities to consider limiting traffic stops, said Daniela Gilbert, director of the Redefining Public Safety Initiative at the Vera Institute of Justice, a nonprofit devoted to ending mass incarceration. 'It's an important point to consider intervening in so that there can be less interaction, and so ICE has less opportunity to continue its indiscriminate dragnet of enforcement,' Gilbert said. The institute argues in general that traffic stops should be limited to safety issues rather than low-level infractions such as expired registrations or single burned-out taillights, both because they do not improve public safety and because they disproportionately affect drivers of color. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Such policies limiting stops under some conditions are in place in 10 states and in cities in six other states, according to the institute. The most recent state polices took effect last year in California and Illinois, while a policy is set to take effect in October in Connecticut. The most recent city policies were in Denver and in East Lansing and Ypsilanti, Michigan. Six other states have considered legislation recently. Stateline reporter Tim Henderson can be reached at thenderson@ SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store