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What’s Next for Mahmoud Khalil? A Fight to Keep His Case in New York.

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What’s Next for Mahmoud Khalil? A Fight to Keep His Case in New York.

The first legal battle for Mahmoud Khalil, the recent Columbia University graduate who was arrested and moved to Louisiana last week, is the fight to keep his case in New York.

The issue may seem minor compared with the First Amendment concerns raised by the arrest of Mr. Khalil, a legal permanent resident who was a prominent figure in pro-Palestinian demonstrations on the Columbia campus and whom the Trump administration is seeking to deport.

But where Mr. Khalil’s case is heard could have profound consequences, not just for him but for anyone else the White House targets for removal from the United States. If Mr. Khalil remains in Louisiana, his case is likely to end up in one of the nation’s most conservative appeals courts, which could determine whether the law the government has cited as the rationale for his detention is allowed to stand.

The White House has accused Mr. Khalil of siding with Hamas terrorists during the Columbia protests and spreading antisemitism. That accusation, which Mr. Khalil’s lawyers deny, is not criminal, and in fact, Mr. Khalil has not been charged with any crime.

Instead, Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, has cited a little-used law to justify the detention. The measure says Mr. Rubio can initiate deportation proceedings against any noncitizen whose presence in the United States he deems a threat to the country’s foreign policy aims.

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That law, which would seem to grant the Trump administration almost unchecked power in deporting noncitizens, appears not to have been reviewed by an appeals court, which could determine whether it is constitutional. And if Mr. Khalil’s immigration case plays out in Louisiana, it will most likely be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which presides over federal court cases that come from Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi.

It is one of the country’s most conservative appeals courts. Most of its judges were nominated by Republican presidents, including six by President Trump during his first term.

“The Fifth Circuit is the court I’d least want to be in if I were Khalil,” said Steve Vladeck, a professor at Georgetown University’s law school who studies constitutional issues and has written about Mr. Khalil’s case. He added, “It is a court where immigrants in general have a historically poor track record, and it’s a court in which judges are going to be most sympathetic to the government’s ability to point at someone and say, ‘You supported Hamas.’”

If judges in that court were to decide against Mr. Khalil, he could appeal to the Supreme Court. But there is no guarantee that the justices in Washington would take his case, and even if they did and found in his favor, the government is likely to continue to revoke green cards in the interim, citing the same statute that informs Mr. Khalil’s case. Other detainees might have little legal basis to fight the government’s accusations.

On the other hand, if Mr. Khalil’s immigration case was to play out in New York — where his lawyers first called for his release — any appeal would arrive at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. That court includes more judges appointed by Democratic presidents and is widely considered a less partisan venue. And in the meantime, Mr. Khalil, if he was released, would have access to his family. His wife, Noor Abdalla, is expecting a baby next month.

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On Monday, Mr. Khalil’s lawyers also sought to stop the Trump administration from detaining and deporting others under the same justification. They asked the New York judge overseeing his case, Jesse Furman, to prohibit the government from enforcing what they called a policy of arresting, detaining and deporting noncitizens who expressed support for Palestinian rights or criticized Israel.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request to comment on that characterization or on the lawyers’ move.

Mr. Khalil’s lawyers have sought his release and return to New York from almost the moment he was arrested, on the evening of March 8. The timing of his arrest and transfer to Louisiana is key to understanding their case.

Video of the arrest filmed by Ms. Abdalla and released by the American Civil Liberties Union shows that agents from the Department of Homeland Security handcuffed Mr. Khalil in the lobby of his apartment building, which is owned by Columbia. After his wife, holding back tears, repeatedly asked where Mr. Khalil was being taken, the agents responded “26 Federal Plaza,” the address of New York’s downtown immigration court. Amy Greer, one of Mr. Khalil’s lawyers, was told the same thing.

Ms. Greer worked through the night on a legal filing known as a habeas petition, a vehicle for challenging unlawful detentions. Occasionally, she checked an online locator to make sure of Mr. Khalil’s location. At 1:35 a.m. on March 9 and again at 4:29 a.m., the locator said that Mr. Khalil was in New York.

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She filed her petition at 4:40 a.m. in a New York federal court, where it was assigned to Judge Furman. But the government has since said that Mr. Khalil arrived in New Jersey more than an hour before that. He was taken there, they say, because the New York facility does not have beds or overnight medical staff, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement policy dictates that no detainee should be held in such a facility for longer than 12 hours.

Around noon on March 9, Mr. Khalil was brought back into New York, to Kennedy International Airport. He was then flown to Dallas and then to Louisiana, where he has been held since.

The following day, Judge Furman ordered the government not to remove Mr. Khalil from the country. There is no indication that the government has ignored the judge as it may have in other recent deportation cases. Mr. Khalil’s first hearing in immigration court is scheduled for March 27.

The arguments in front of Judge Furman have piled up, with Mr. Khalil’s lawyers imploring the judge to return their client to New York and the government insisting that the proper venue for his case is the district in which he is being held.

The law that dictates where a case is heard is complex. The government has argued that, particularly since Mr. Khalil’s lawyers did not file their petition in the appropriate court, any detention case should be heard in Louisiana.

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Mr. Khalil’s lawyers have argued that the government frustrated Ms. Greer’s efforts to file her petition in the right place. Accordingly, they argue, the law says that his case should be heard in New York.

Judge Furman could rule as early as Monday. He has insisted that he has no view on the issues at play in the case — which include core concerns about First Amendment rights amid Mr. Trump’s immigration crackdown and vow to fight antisemitism — but has acknowledged their importance.

If Judge Furman decides the case should not be heard in New York, Mr. Khalil’s lawyers have asked for the opportunity to transfer it to New Jersey. If the case were to play out there, any appeal would be heard in yet another appeals court — the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit — and Mr. Khalil would be closer to his family.

Education

A Time of Growth for Museums for Children

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A Time of Growth for Museums for Children

This article is part of our Museums special section about how institutions are commemorating the past as they move into the future.


As kidSTREAM prepares to open in Ventura County, it joins a national wave of new children’s museums, expansions of existing institutions and a broadened lineup of programming aimed at young visitors.

Originally opened in 1963 as the Junior Museum of Oneida, the institution has relocated several times and reopened last May in a 14,000-square-foot space. A two-story climber anchors the main floor, allowing children to navigate ramps, platforms and woven rope pathways. The museum houses five themed galleries, including World Market, which introduces music, art and cultural traditions from around the world, and Let’s Experiment, devoted to STEAM-based learning through prism and light exploration, an animation station and other hands-on activities.

Founded by two mothers, Erin Gallagher and Meg Hagen, the museum opened last September in a former farm and garden center. They set out to establish a dedicated children’s institution to serve as an anchor for the community. The 6,400-square-foot space includes 12 exhibit areas focused on STEM exploration, art, engineering, imaginative play and sensory activities. It also offers family and after-school programs, as well as designated sensory-friendly hours. An additional 4,000 square feet of outdoor play space is expected to open in late spring.

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In March, the 90,000-square-foot museum expanded with the Gallery of Wonder, a 9,000-square-foot early childhood space designed for children from infancy to age 5. The gallery includes five interactive environments. Into the Woods invites climbing, swinging and fort building in a forest setting, while Under the Waves offers a softly lit ocean cove with sensory-focused light and sound where children can play with puppets. Viva Village centers on community life, encouraging children to role-play everyday helpers. Tot*Spot, reimagined as an oversized garden, caters to infants and toddlers, while the outdoor Treetop Terrace is a space for active play.

The museum debuted two permanent exhibits in October as part of a broader transformation. Galactic Builders is a 1,788-square-foot space-themed environment that invites children to design rockets, engineer rovers and explore physics concepts through hands-on exploration. SKIES is a quieter, sensory-focused space featuring reading nooks, a dedicated area to rest and recharge and immersive visuals of sunrises, sunsets and drifting clouds. Together, the additions expand the museum’s interactive footprint by more than 4,500 square feet and mark the first phase of a multiyear effort to update its learning environments for young visitors.

In November, the museum unveiled a $11.6 million expansion that doubled its footprint to more than 30,000 square feet. The addition includes three galleries, two of which house permanent exhibits. The Sunflower Gallery is a hands-on environment where children can explore the prairie ecosystem and includes a two-story sunflower structure they can climb. The Hall of Bright Ideas celebrates creative Kansans with engineering-based activities. A third gallery will host traveling exhibitions, and the expansion adds three laboratory classrooms for STEAM programs and camps.

Conceived by a former preschool teacher and children’s cartoon artist, Mike Bennett, the Portland Aquarium opened last June as an animal-free, cartoon-style aquarium. Bennett said he wanted marine science to feel like “stepping inside a hand-drawn cartoon.” The 5,000-square-foot space showcases six ocean biomes, including the Wreck, focused on deep-sea carnivores and mysterious creatures, and the Open Ocean, highlighting some of the largest animals that swim in the seas. Throughout, visitors encounter illustrations of more than 100 marine species, including sea otters, jellyfish and great white sharks. Each child receives a guidebook created in collaboration with marine biologists to use throughout the galleries.

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Video: Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat

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Video: Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat

new video loaded: Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat

Cats are notoriously difficult to buy toys for, so we enlisted the help of Oreo — a lazy yet discerning bodega cat — and Michelladonna of “Shop Cats” to test a few options with pets writer Mel Plaut.

March 31, 2026

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Video: YouTube’s C.E.O. on the Rise of Video and the Decline of Reading

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Video: YouTube’s C.E.O. on the Rise of Video and the Decline of Reading

new video loaded: YouTube’s C.E.O. on the Rise of Video and the Decline of Reading

On “The Interview,” Neal Mohan, YouTube’s C.E.O., talks about the platform’s role in an age of post-literacy and his belief that video serves as a vital “visual library” for a new generation of learners.

March 31, 2026

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