A judge has ordered the release of two Iranian-born LSU students from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center, where they have been detained since late June.
Pouria Pourhosseinhendabad and Parisa Firouzabadi, a married couple enrolled in the mechanical engineering Ph.D. program at LSU, were released this week on the recommendation of a federal magistrate, according to a news release from the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana.
The pair were arrested at their off-campus apartment in Baton Rouge in late June. Both have legal status to study in the United States, according to the ACLU.
The couple’s attorneys allege their arrests were illegal. According to the release, ICE used state police to get the couple to step out of their apartment to discuss a hit-and-run they reported previously so that ICE could arrest them.
“Pouria and Parisa came to the U.S. legally, have no criminal records, and have spent years taking classes and pursuing their studies,” said Sarah Gillman, who leads strategic U.S. litigation for the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organization. “Faced with undeniable evidence that the Trump administration arbitrarily and unlawfully targeted them on the basis of their nationality, after filing of federal lawsuits for both Pouria and Parisa, they were released.”

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