Education
Why Did the N.Y.P.D. Hand Over a Sealed Arrest to Homeland Security?
The New York Police Department is investigating why officers gave U.S. authorities the sealed arrest record of a New Jersey woman who was detained at a protest last year — information that immigration officials are now using to seek her deportation.
Under New York State law and department policy, sealed records of arrests or summons cannot be released. But the police gave the documents to Department of Homeland Security investigators who had requested them as part of what the investigators said was a criminal investigation, Commissioner Jessica Tisch and the woman’s lawyer said on Tuesday.
The documents, the lawyer said, then became part of the government’s case for deporting the woman, Leqaa Kordia, 32, who is Palestinian.
The case, first reported by The Associated Press, emerged as the Trump administration pressured Mayor Eric Adams to cooperate with its deportation campaign. Commissioner Tisch has repeatedly said that New York’s sanctuary laws bar police officers from cooperating with federal officials on immigration cases, which are considered civil violations.
Ms. Kordia, who does not have a valid visa, was arrested during a protest in April 2024, when scores of demonstrators gathered at Columbia University to protest the war in Gaza.
On Tuesday, Commissioner Tisch said at a City Hall news conference that an official from Homeland Security Investigations in New Jersey had asked for information about Ms. Kordia, saying that she was being investigated in connection with money laundering.
Ms. Kordia’s lawyer said later that the commissioner’s statement was the first that he or his client had heard of such an investigation.
Commissioner Tisch said that while the city’s sanctuary laws bar it from helping immigration authorities in civil deportation cases, criminal investigations are a different matter. The Police Department handed over information, “which was all done according to procedure,” she said, without specifying precisely what was transmitted to federal investigators.
“That is definitely an instance where we would share information,” she said, adding that department officials would look into how the summons record that was part of a sealed case was also provided.
Arthur Ago, a lawyer at the Southern Poverty Law Center who represents Ms. Kordia, said that she was born in Jerusalem and raised on the West Bank. She went to the protest at Columbia to mourn relatives killed during the war in Gaza, he said.
At the protest last year, Ms. Kordia was given a summons for disorderly conduct, Mr. Ago said. The case was dismissed shortly after, he said, and she was not charged with other violations.
After the arrest, Ms. Kordia returned to New Jersey, where she had been trying to start a business selling candles and small gifts. It was unclear when immigration authorities began building a case against her.
On March 13, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in New Jersey arrested Ms. Kordia. She was put on a plane and sent to Prairieland Detention Facility in Alvarado, Texas, where she is fighting deportation, Mr. Ago said.
The following day, an officer who works at the Police Department’s Real Time Crime Center, a hub that provides detectives with data, gave Homeland Security a four-page report that had been sealed. Ms. Kordia had been standing with about 100 other protesters, blocking a gate on campus, according to the report, which said she had no record of criminal complaints or investigations.
Mr. Ago said that he learned that federal officials had the report about his client’s protest arrest when he reviewed Ms. Kordia’s immigration case file. Mr. Ago said that Ms. Kordia had posted nothing on social media and her arrest was not publicized, he said, raising questions about how federal officials had learned about her.
Mr. Ago said in a statement that the Homeland Security Department “has never communicated to us or indicated in court that Ms. Kordia is under investigation for money laundering.”
“The allegation comes as a complete surprise, is entirely unfounded, and we categorically deny it,” Mr. Ago said. “We are prepared to fight this allegation in court.”
Mr. Ago said that federal officials had submitted documents in immigration court describing Ms. Kordia as “a low risk of danger and a low risk of flight.” But during proceedings, lawyers for the federal government described her as a danger, though they did not provide details, Mr. Ago said.
Homeland Security and ICE officials did not respond to repeated requests for comments Tuesday.
The case suggests that the Trump administration is using the pretext of criminal investigations to speed deportations, said Peter L. Markowitz, an immigration law professor at the Cardozo School of Law who helped draft the city’s sanctuary laws.
He said it is proper for the Police Department to share information with federal authorities about criminal investigations that are not related to immigration enforcement. But he said that the Trump administration’s actions mean that requests cannot be taken at face value.
“Given the Trump administration’s track record of playing fast and loose with facts to skirt legal constraints, it is incumbent on the Police Department to do more in the future to confirm that they are not illegally entangled in Trump’s mass deportation programs,” Mr. Markowitz said.
The administration has aggressively pursued people who have participated in Gaza protests at campuses.
Ms. Kordia arrived in the United States in 2016 on a tourist visa, Mr. Ago said, but began taking classes to improve her English and was granted a student visa within a year.
Soon after, Ms. Kordia’s mother, a naturalized U.S. citizen, petitioned for an I-130 visa — a document that would establish that Ms. Kordia was her daughter and pave the way toward citizenship, Mr. Ago said.
But in 2022, Mr. Ago said, Ms. Kordia got bad advice from a school official who told her she could drop her student visa, because she had received a notice that her I-130 application had been approved.
That move left her without a valid visa, Mr. Ago said. It is on that basis that immigration officials have moved to have her deported, he said.
In March, Department of Homeland Security officials knocked on the front door of Ms. Kordia’s home in New Jersey, Mr. Ago said. They spoke to her mother, who immediately called Ms. Kordia at work, Mr. Ago said.
Ms. Kordia spoke over the phone with the officials, who told her to come the following week to their office. They did not say what they wanted, but Ms. Kordia called a lawyer who agreed to come with her, Mr. Ago said.
When Ms. Kordia appeared at the office on March 13, officials told her lawyer to sit in the hallway while they spoke with her. Soon after, they told the lawyer that Ms. Kordia was being detained.
Maia Coleman contributed reporting.
Education
Opinion | 13 George Washington Interpreters on Embodying an Icon
In our national memory, George Washington is a mythic figure, cast in metal, carved in stone. His leadership, first as general, then as president, is so intertwined with the roots of this country that it is sometimes hard to separate the man from the idea of America. How does one imagine the living presence of such an icon, much less embody him?
There is a small fraternity of men bold enough to try. At historical parks and commemorations from Virginia to Seattle, these interpreters (their preferred term) transform themselves into Washington. Each has his own approach, but what all their representations seek to capture is a legacy that has endured from his time to ours. If America, at least in part, is an idea, then our national project becomes, like theirs, an act of interpretation, an imperfect attempt to translate some idealized vision into the messy reality of our own time.
— Ezekiel Kweku
“By some strange quirk
of genetics, I have
Washington’s exact
dimensions. Where my
sleeves fall on my wrist,
the size of my chest, the
size of my thighs, where
the breeches fall to my
knees, are all identical.”
John Koopman, 67, often performs
while riding his horse, Bear. He
has portrayed Washington for 20 years.
James Fryer, 70, wears a replica of a general’s uniform that Washington designed himself. He recently completed training to portray Washington for the nonprofit Historic Philadelphia.
“Some people portray George as a marble statue. I don’t do a marble George. I am interested in talking to everyone, even those who yell at me because George was a slave owner. I want to respect them, try to educate them, or maybe even inspire them.”
Vern Frykholm, 77, was moved to bring his interpretation of Washington to Washington State, where he lives, after seeing a 2011 performance in Pennsylvania.
Dean Malissa, 73, signs his personal
correspondence, including emails,
as Washington did: “Your Most Humble
and Obedient Servant.” He became
the Official George Washington
at Mount Vernon in 2004, and held
that role for nearly 20 years.
“I describe him sometimes as just a dude. I look at him and think, I could see myself in the same world, making similar bad decisions or similar good decisions.”
Daniel Cross, 39, portrayed a young Washington at Virginia’s Colonial Williamsburg until last year. He now works with organizations around the country.
Curt Radabaugh, 62, has 13,000 history books in his personal library, including several hundred about Washington. He is a veteran of the U.S. Marines and a retired police officer.
“He’s a mentor, a father
figure, and not only in the
sense that he’s a patriarch
of the country. Because
I grew up without a
father, he kind of became
my surrogate father.”
Brian Hilton, 58, says he researches
Washington’s era every morning before
his children get up and at night after
they go to bed. He is a high school history
teacher near Richmond, Va.
Daniel Shippey, 57, partners on interpretations with his wife, Kelly, who portrays Martha Washington. Kelly researched 18th-century hair techniques to create her husband’s costume hairstyle. They live in Virginia.
“You’re playing the myth of George Washington as well as the historical figure. I make his voice a little firmer and deeper than it probably was in real life. I play him a little funnier than he probably was. In reality, if you came to see him, he probably wouldn’t talk to you as much as I do.”
Doug Thomas, 53, is Washington’s second cousin nine times removed.
John Godzieba, 67, has reenacted
the crossing of the Delaware as
Washington every Christmas for the
past 16 years at Pennsylvania’s
Washington Crossing Historic Park.
“In many ways I don’t look like him. My eye color is wrong. My nose is wrong. My hair color is wrong. I wouldn’t have cast myself in this role.”
Ron Carnegie, 64, has portrayed Washington at Colonial Williamsburg for 20 years.
Ryan Williams, 37, is a veteran who specializes in playing a young Washington during the French and Indian War. He lives in Virginia.
“Some people portray
Washington almost
like a superhero.
I like to bring out that
he has faults. He’s a
person like you or me.”
Michael Grillo, 64, is a historical
tailor who hand-sews his own clothes
for reenactments. He also makes
period props, including two American
battle flags and pewter mugs
engraved with Washington’s crest.
Martin Schoeller is a photographer and director known for his close-up portraits of everyone from world leaders and celebrities to female bodybuilders. For this project, he used a large format camera to photograph 13 historical interpreters of George Washington — many of whom arrived in full uniform — over three days in Virginia and New York City.
Additional reporting by Tenzin D. Tsagong. Interviews have been edited and condensed for length and clarity. Top quotes from Brian Hilton, Daniel Shippey and Daniel Cross.
Produced by Sara Barrett, Danny DeBelius and Sam Whitney. Additional production by Olivia James.
Education
This Little Robot Cleans Windows
One task the robots can take from us? Cleaning. Especially hard-to-access windows. So when writers Caroline Mullen and Evan Dent found this little guy — whose government name is “EcoVacs Winbot Mini” — they were intrigued. Could he clean the uncleanable? Caroline and Evan put their robot friend to the test at both the Wirecutter office and a high-rise apartment. Is a robo-window cleaner more effective than scrubbing yourself?
Education
Video: School Year Cut Short and Aid Delivery Slowed Amid Fuel Crisis in Cuba
new video loaded: School Year Cut Short and Aid Delivery Slowed Amid Fuel Crisis in Cuba
By McKinnon de Kuyper
June 22, 2026
-
Movie Reviews3 minutes agoMovie Review – The Isolate Thief (2025)
-
World13 minutes agoJesse Eisenberg on Why It Would Be ‘Silly’ to Leave U.S. Because of Trump, Says ‘The Debut’ Is ‘The Opposite of AI’ Following A24 DeepMind Partnership
-
Lifestyle58 minutes agoSunday Puzzle: Five plus two, two plus five
-
Technology1 hour agoXbox is a disaster
-
World1 hour agoWorld leaders, dignitaries pay tribute to America on historic 250th birthday
-
Politics1 hour agoExpert who fled Cuba warns of ‘vicious cycle’ that will lead to ‘communists in double digits’ in Congress
-
Health1 hour agoJuly 4 heat delays America 250 celebration as State Fair guests share love of USA
-
Sports1 hour agoToronto Maple Leafs top pick Gavin McKenna reveals that he’s changing his jersey number