Since President Donald Trump took office, raids from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement have been on the rise in Ogden, with documented sightings reported throughout the city and surrounding areas.
With tensions rising, it brings to light questions about the safety of students on campus, especially with it being a state-funded college. States can be ordered to work with federal agents, including immigration agencies such as ICE.
This means that students can be stopped by ICE on campus, which Weber State University has acknowledged could happen in an email that was sent to only international students. The email contained “good practices” that international students should abide by, like having multiple valid forms of identification on them, including an I-20 and I-90.
An anonymous source affiliated with Weber State claimed that the university had found out that certain centers and faculty had been keeping Red Cards on hand. The university ordered those specific locations and people to dispose of the Red Cards, stating that they weren’t authorized to have them.
Weber made faculty and staff throw away valuable resources that were created to help immigrants and undocumented individuals understand what their rights are. On the card, it includes basic rights that state what to do if a person is ever stopped by an immigration officer.
“Do not open the door. Do not answer any questions. Do not sign anything. Ask the agent if you are free to leave. Give this card to the agent,” is written on one side of the Red Card, with an available script on the other side that can be read.
While the higher-ups within the university took part in censorship, that doesn’t mean it was entirely successful; many believe that the students are the most powerful entity in any university.
Students are allowed to distribute flyers and educational materials around campus, with Red Cards being the most passed around in the past few weeks, especially since Trump took office again on Jan. 20.
Multiple students who wish to remain anonymous due to fears of retaliation have been behind the passage of Red Cards to various international and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Dreamer students. They have even organized various secret phrases that can be used to request access to a Red Card, along with information on websites that have Red Cards translated into different languages to be used.
Weber State Police Department and Weber State University’s PR team declined to comment on the rights of students, only sending out an announcement that states, “The federal government engages its officers specifically to enforce immigration matters. The WSUPD does not ask anyone about their immigration status and does not detain anyone solely on the basis of their immigration status.”
While on-campus police won’t ask about a student’s immigration status, if a federal agency demands to step onto campus grounds, they have to be admitted. The rights of students on campus are a muddled affair and one that university officials don’t seem keen on answering.
Weber State is a university that prides itself on welcoming everyone and will do everything it can to help its students, but the limited protection for ICE raids leaves many international students feeling that the university’s care expires when it comes to them.
Gary • Feb 20, 2025 at 9:18 pm
Respectable Journalists are often expected to refrain from including such political bias in their articles. Also you mentioned the rights of legal and illegal immigrants but only the legal immigrants have those rights seeing as the very act of illegal immigrants being here is illegal
Bill • Feb 15, 2025 at 1:24 pm
You are writing this on behalf of the University, pretty sure this is illegal.
Brisa Odenthal • Feb 18, 2025 at 10:28 am
Hi Bill,
The Signpost is actually an independently-run student newspaper. We do not write on behalf of the university nor does the university have any say in what we publish.
Scott • Feb 7, 2025 at 4:09 pm
These are troubling times for many students, particularly our international friends and classmates. I’m glad to see the Signpost is keeping their safety, comfort, and opportunity for equal scholarly success in mind with reports like this.
Moriah • Feb 6, 2025 at 12:59 pm
Thank you for addressing this, and for bringing this information to public attention.
Cody Turek • Feb 6, 2025 at 12:58 pm
Having been stopped by the police while studying abroad, I understand the uncertainty and stress of being in that situation. I wish a picture of the Red cards mentioned would’ve made it into the paper—I’m not often on campus and was only informed by the WSU Post that they’re being distributed. I pray our international students are protected, and if stopped, handled with the same understanding and decency the Japanese police showed me.
Alex Erskine • Feb 6, 2025 at 8:33 am
I appreciate and applaud the Sign Post for publishing information even when it is critical of WSU actions. It’s encouraging to know WSU respects free speech and press. Thank you!