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ACLU Sues For Information Related To Trump Travel Bans

Kay Aull, from left, holds a sign and chants with Beth Kohn, Paul Paz y Mino and Karen Shore outside of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2017.
Associated Press
Kay Aull, from left, holds a sign and chants with Beth Kohn, Paul Paz y Mino and Karen Shore outside of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2017.
ACLU Sues For Information Related To Trump Travel Bans
ACLU Sues For Information Related To Trump Travel Bans GUEST: Mitra Ebadolahi, border litigation project staff attorney, American Civil Liberties Union of San Diego and Imperial Counties
ACLU Sues For Information Related To Trump Travel Bans
The American Civil Liberties Union has filed more than a dozen lawsuits nationwide seeking government documents related to the implementation of the Trump administration's travel bans.

The American Civil Liberties Union has filed more than a dozen lawsuits nationwide seeking government documents related to the implementation of the Trump administration's travel bans.

The organization announced efforts Wednesday to sue for records from 14 Customs and Border Protection offices, including in Chicago, Los Angeles and Houston.

The ACLU said it first sought details through Freedom of Information Act requests, but government officials "failed to substantively respond."

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CBP officials did not return a message Wednesday.

The organization is looking for documents showing how the bans were carried out at airports. The lawsuits cover Atlanta, Baltimore, Detroit, Boston, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Miami, Tampa, Florida; Portland, Oregon; and Tucson, Arizona.

Mitra Ebadolahi, of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties, said the organization wants those records to find out if the travel bans were being enforced lawfully because there was a lot of confusion at the time.

“We had heard reports that, for instance, after federal judges had told federal government to stop putting people back on airplanes and denying them entry into the United States that CBP officers were nonetheless doing that," Ebadolahi said. "We had heard reports that CBP officers were refusing to let attorneys speak with individuals who were being detained and who were seeking assistance of counsel.”

RELATED: San Diego City Council Supports Lawsuit Against Trump Travel Ban

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The revised ban suspends visas from six predominantly-Muslim countries and halts the U.S. refugee program. Two judges have blocked the ban. The Trump administration is appealing.