Multiple student organizations, as well as the student body president at North Carolina State University, have come together to research the possibility of making NCSU a campus where Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) cannot be called and is not allowed on campus, according to emails obtained by Campus Reform.

On Oct. 1, a university police officer questioned an individual who was at a construction site after-hours and found out that ICE had issued a detention order for the person in question , according to The Technician.

“Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s temporary presence so close to our classrooms, our work, and our homes is startling."

“Upon running the individual’s identification, the officer discovered that the individual was a previously deported felon. The database results informed the officer to detain and report the individual to local immigration authorities,” a statement by the university police department read. “As a law enforcement agency, the NC State Police Department is required to inform the appropriate authorities in such situations.”

[RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: Sanctuary city college rescinds ICE career fair invitation]

Following the incident with ICE, Jess Errico, the student body president, released a statement condemning the agency’s presence on campus, stating that “Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s temporary presence so close to our classrooms, our work, and our homes is startling and a source of fear and anxiety to many in the Wolfpack community.”

“We would like to request that Student Government take the initiative on researching the precedent for a public university having policies in which university police is not allowed to call ICE,” NCSU student Chandra Manivannan wrote in an email to Errico on Nov. 13. “We would also like to know whether there are university policies at NCSU in which ICE is not allowed on campus.”

NCSU's Graduate Student Worker Union, Association for Latino Professionals for America, Young Democratic Socialists of America, Latinas Promoviendo Comunidad/Lambda Pi Chi Sorority, Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity, Afrikan American Student Advisory Council, Latin American Student Association, Mi Familia, and Students for Immigrant Rights are all working to limit the way in which ICE can operate at the school.

[RELATED: Students create app to warn about ICE agents on campus]

Representatives from the organizations requested to meet with Errico, as well as NCSU Assistant Director for Community Outreach and Engagement at the Department of Multicultural Student Affairs Marcela Torres-Cervantes. They asked that representatives from university police not attend, as university police will be involved in a later meeting.

In response to the email by Manivannan, Errico first took the opportunity to address the organizations’ frustration with her response to the ICE incident in early October and said that an opportunity was missed.

“In reflecting back over your frustration with my responsiveness, my first and best opportunity to have avoided this was simply to have reached out to you as soon as I became aware of the ICE incident,” Errico wrote in a Nov. 14 email. “A powerful opportunity for us to collaborate, leverage our respective strengths, and present a united front was missed, and I sincerely regret that.”

[RELATED: Yale law prof encourages people to ‘hide immigrants from ICE’]

Bria Edwards Swann, chairwoman for the school's Afrikan-American Student Advisory Council, said in a statement to Campus Reform that the effort is their way of supporting the Latinx community.

"The Afrikan-American Student Advisory Council stands in solidarity with the Latinx and undocumented student communities on the campus of NC State and the greater Raleigh community. The incident that occurred on campus in October and during Latinx Heritage Month was a gross misconduct by the NC State police and was not in accordance to with [sic] the statutes set by the city of Raleigh,” Swann said. “AASAC will continue to support the Latinx community and finds [sic] ways to aid and advocate the movement and policy change on this campus and with NC State police.”

Any city in North Carolina that is a “sanctuary city" could risk losing money from the state, according to a bill passed by the North Carolina Senate and House in 2015, reported the Charlotte News & Observer.

Asked for a comment on the issue, NCSU State Campus Police Chief Jack Moorman told Campus Reform, "The priority of the NC State University Police Department is the safety and security of our students and employees, and our overall campus community. The Department carries out its law enforcement duties and operations in compliance with all federal and state laws. There have been no changes to our policies or procedures."

Campus Reform reached out to NCSU and each of the student groups included in the email chain but did not receive any responses in time for press.

Follow the author of this article on Twitter: @asabes10