The ruling is considered a victory for Halil, but does not guarantee that he will be redirected from detention facilities in Southern Louisiana.
A US federal court judge found him in favor of pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil and allowed him to challenge the legality of arrests in New Jersey, not Louisiana.
Tuesday’s decision by US District Judge Michael Farbeers was the second time President Donald Trump’s legal team failed to move a Columbia student case to Louisiana’s 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, the country’s most conservative court of appeals.
Khalil’s lawyer, Baher Azmy, said his team is grateful that the government has understood “transparent attempts” to protect “unconstitutional” and “cold” actions that are trying to manipulate the jurisdiction of US courts.
Dr. Noor Abdallah, pregnant wife of American citizen Halil, said that she was relieved by the decision, but “there is still much work to do.”

The lawsuit on Tuesday was a victory for Halil, but it only settled a jurisdictional dispute that allowed courts to hear his attempts to challenge the legality of the Trump administration’s efforts, a dispute that occurred when Khalil was held in a new jersey detention facility when Khalil was held for several hours before he was arrested by Louiana after being arrested in Manhattan on March 8th, and then allowed his attempt to challenge his efforts.
The Halil case is seen as a test of Trump’s efforts to deport pro-Palestinian activists who have not been charged with crimes.
The Trump administration said it had revoked visas for hundreds of foreign students who say they have participated in demonstrations that swept university campuses across the United States in protest of Israel’s military support for the war on Gaza.
Lawyers say the Trump administration has inappropriately targeted people to preserve certain political views.
Khalil’s lawyers also asked Justice Farbiarz to release his client from detention in Louisiana as an effort to deport him in another case in order to allow him to be with his wife for the birth of his son.
A doctor’s letter filed in court estimates that the baby will be due on April 28th.