As Khalil Sues Columbia and
Congress Seeks to Amend US Will
Only Consent if TRO Dropped
by
Matthew Russell Lee, Patreon Book
Substack
SDNY
COURTHOUSE,
March 26 – In a case by
Columbia University students
seeking among other things to
block their school from
answering subpoenas from the
Committee on Education and the
Workforce in the House of
Representatives on March 25
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge Arun Subramanian held an
oral argument. Inner City
Press was there. From the thread:
Abbas: We also
want Columbia to be enjoined
from complying with the March
13 letter Judge: So you're
requesting all of the relief
you've requested? Abbas: We
could agree to some Speech or
Debate Clause nips and tucks-
Judge: So
Paragraph 3 is out? Abbas: No,
in
Abbas: We'd just
suggest a caveat, "consistent
with the Speech and Debate
Clause."
On March 26
plaintiffs' counsel wrote in
seeking to file an amended
complaint by April 1, noting
that the executive branch and
Congressional defendants would
only "consent to Plaintiffs
amending their complaint for a
second and final time, should
they agree to drop their
current Motion for a Temporary
Restraining Order and
Preliminary Injunction, which
is premised on a complaint
that will soon no longer be
operative. Otherwise, the
Executive Branch Defendants
and Congressional Defendants
do not consent.” Filing on
Patreon here
Inner City
Press will remain on alert for
Judge Subramanian's ruling(s),
and will stay on the case.
The case is
Khalil, et al. v. The Trustees
of Columbia University in the
City of New York et al.,
1:25-cv-2079 (Subramanian)
***
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