
According to a Justice Department attorney at a Friday hearing in the Northern District of California, the Trump administration is restoring the legal status of international students whose records were terminated in recent weeks.
Elizabeth D. Kurlan stated that international students’ records will be reactivated while Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) develops a “framework for status record termination.” This reversal follows the administration’s recent revocation of hundreds of international student visas, their records, and legal statuses, particularly affecting those involved in political activism or with previous issues like DUIs.
“ICE still maintains the authority to terminate a SEVIS record for other reasons, such as if a student fails to maintain his or her nonimmigrant status after the record is reactivated, or engages in other unlawful activity that would render him or her removable from the United States,” Kurlan explained during the hearing.
Immigration attorneys and universities reported that many students discovered their records were suddenly restored Thursday afternoon, with little explanation. “It’s like somebody flipped a light switch on,” said Jath Shao, a Cleveland-based immigration attorney with a client affected by the reversal.
The changes have been inconsistent. UC Berkeley reported that twelve of their twenty-three affected students had their records reinstated. Rochester Institute of Technology and attorneys representing students nationwide described similar partial reinstatements.
David Wilson, representing about twenty Minnesota students, noted continued uncertainty despite status restorations. “That means they’re kind of trapped in the country. So that’ll be the next phase of seeking clarity as to what the government’s doing,” Wilson said, explaining that many students’ visas remain revoked despite restored SEVIS records.
Elora Mukherjee, director of Columbia Law School’s Immigrants’ Rights Clinic, warned that the termination will still appear on students’ records, potentially affecting future applications for green cards or other relief. “The time that they had their SEVIS status terminated could still have harmful effects for those students,” she said. “It’s not enough for the federal government to simply restore service records; the government would need to somehow make the students whole.”
Shao called the development “small, but positive” while emphasizing that more action is needed to guarantee students’ security in the U.S. “By now, it’s obvious that the Trump administration spent the four years of Biden plotting their revenge on the immigration system,” Shao said. “But once some brave students and lawyers went to the courts, the administration’s defenders were unable or unwilling to explain the rationale.”
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