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CAIR Moves to Block Columbia From Sharing Pro-Hamas Group Records With Congress

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(TJV NEWS) The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is working to prevent Columbia University from turning over documents to Congress about the campus activities of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), according to court filings reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon. The records request stems from a Senate investigation into the group’s finances, potential links to terrorist organizations, and alleged threats to campus safety.

The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) had asked Columbia to produce a range of records by Wednesday. But CAIR, representing protest leader Mahmoud Khalil and several other anti-Israel foreign students, filed a legal challenge to delay the disclosure. The Washington Free Beacon reports that CAIR’s legal defense team argued the documents could implicate their clients and sought a 30-day review period to evaluate and possibly challenge their release.

Federal Judge Arun Subramanian responded by ordering a short delay, requiring Columbia to hold off until Friday to allow CAIR time to review the material, court documents show.

This legal battle comes as Columbia seeks to reinstate hundreds of millions in federal funding that was frozen under the Trump administration. According to the Washington Free Beacon, restoring that funding requires the university to demonstrate stronger action against anti-Semitism—an effort facing pushback from both some faculty and activist groups like CAIR.

In its lawsuit filed March 14, CAIR claimed Columbia’s cooperation with congressional investigations threatens students with retaliation and harassment. The suit referenced a February request from the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, which demanded disciplinary records related to illegal demonstrations, including the occupation of Hamilton Hall.

The Washington Free Beacon notes that earlier this month, CAIR secured a favorable court order from Judge Subramanian, allowing a 30-day review of documents Columbia plans to release—particularly those including student records. That order is now at the center of the dispute over the Senate HELP Committee’s request.

Columbia stated in a recent court filing that the records it intends to submit do not include student records and are therefore not covered by the judge’s earlier order. “Columbia is carefully tailoring its upcoming response,” the university wrote, to ensure it complies with the court’s April 4 ruling. The school also said it would inform the Senate HELP Committee about the court order and ensure that no student names or identities are included.

Despite these assurances, CAIR will still be allowed a brief review period before the documents are handed over, according to the Washington Free Beacon.

Meanwhile, Columbia SJP continues to face scrutiny. Though suspended from campus in November 2023, the group remains active under the coalition Columbia University Apartheid Divest. Last month, families of victims of the October 7 Hamas attack filed a lawsuit accusing Columbia SJP of aiding and abetting Hamas, naming Khalil as a defendant.

The Washington Free Beacon reports that CAIR’s legal maneuvers could ultimately complicate congressional investigations into antisemitism and pro-Hamas activity at Columbia, highlighting the broader implications of the group’s efforts to block the university’s cooperation.

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1 COMMENT

  1. The Council on American Islamic Relations. CAIR, often uncritically quoted by news media as a civil rights group, is a Muslim Brotherhood spin-off. The Brotherhood, born in Egypt in 1928 with an anti-Western, anti-Jewish and anti-secular ideology, has been the mothership of many Sunni terrorist groups. As for CAIR itself, it was an unindicted co-conspirator in the 2009 federal Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development retrial, in which the foundation was convicted of funneling more than $12 million to Hamas. Five men received prison terms, including Ghassan Elashi, a founder of CAIR’s Texas chapter, who got 65 years.

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