International students targeted: Lawsuits filed over abrupt US visa cancellations

Several international students have taken legal action against the US government following sudden and unexplained visa cancellations that have disrupted their academic lives. The lawsuits, filed in multiple federal courts, allege that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) revoked student visas without due process, leaving hundreds of students at risk of deportation and detention.
According to the Associated Press, the legal complaints argue that students were not given adequate justification or warning before their legal status was terminated. Students from prestigious institutions including Harvard, Stanford, the University of Maryland, Ohio State University, and several small liberal arts colleges have been affected.
Legal status revoked without explanation
In recent weeks, many colleges discovered their international students’ legal residency status had been terminated after checking a DHS-managed database. Traditionally, changes to a student’s visa status would follow notification from the institution. However, these recent actions appear to reflect a broader policy shift. In a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Michigan, attorneys argued that “the timing and uniformity of these terminations leave little question that DHS has adopted a nationwide policy, whether written or not, of mass termination of student (legal) status,” as quoted by the Associated Press.
Students report having their visas revoked for minor infractions, including outdated traffic violations. In many cases, the reason for cancellation remains unclear. The Associated Press reported that in New Hampshire, a federal judge recently issued a restraining order in the case of Xiaotian Liu, a Dartmouth College student from China, who lost his legal status without explanation.
Colleges left in the dark
Academic institutions across the country have expressed alarm over the visa cancellations. The University of Massachusetts Boston reported that two students and five others, including recent graduates in training programs, had lost their legal residency. Chancellor Marcelo Suárez-Orozco wrote in a campus email that “these are unprecedented times, and our normal guiding principles for living in a democratic society are being challenged,” as quoted by the Associated Press.
Sarah Spreitzer from the American Council on Education told the Associated Press that the public actions by DHS and ICE are creating fear among students. She said, “the threat of this very quick removal is something that’s new.”
Wider implications and growing concern
Legal experts and advocates view these visa terminations as part of the Trump administration’s broader immigration crackdown. Michelle Mittelstadt of the Migration Policy Institute told the Associated Press that this scrutiny reflects a much wider trend affecting immigrants in all categories.
Colleges continue to press for clarity while urging students to travel with all immigration documents. Many fear that these actions may discourage future international applicants from pursuing education in the US.