Mohammed Abdullah Tawfeeq, who has a green card, says in a federal lawsuit filed on Monday in Atlanta that he was improperly detained and subjected to additional screening when he arrived on Sunday from Iraq.
Tawfeeq, who has worked for CNN since 2004, came to the US as a refugee and became a legal permanent resident in June 2013, the suit says. He traveled to Iraq in mid-October for work and then spent time with family there after completing his assignment.
He was asked why he was in Iraq for so long and what he does for a living before being sent for secondary inspection, where he was told officials needed to "seek 'an email' concerning whether he would be allowed into the United States," the lawsuit says.
After about 30 minutes, Tawfeeq was asked whether he'd been fingerprinted, and he said he'd been repeatedly fingerprinted by the US government while embedded with the US military in Iraq, the lawsuit says. A few minutes later, officials told him he was free to enter the US but didn't give any explanation for their decision and didn't give him any entry documents or stamp his passport.
Homeland Security spokeswoman Gillian Christensen said the agency, which includes Customs and Border Protection, does not comment on pending litigation. The State Department didn't immediately respond yesterday.
Christensen referred a reporter to a transcript of comment made on Tuesday by Customs and Border Protection Acting Commissioner Kevin McAleenan, in which he said, "To make sure everybody understands how the process is working today, lawful permanent residents and special immigrant visa holders are allowed to board their flights foreign and will be processed for a waiver upon arrival."
Applying the order to legal permanent residents violates federal law and the US Constitution, the lawsuit says. It asks a judge to rule that the officials' actions were unlawful and to prohibit the president's order from being applied to returning legal permanent residents.
CNN said in a statement: "This is a basic request to clarify and assert his rights under the law. We support him in this effort and hope it is resolved quickly."
The network has been a frequent target of Trump's ire for its coverage, and White House reporter Jim Acosta verbally tangled with Trump in his first news conference as president-elect. Politico reported yesterday that the administration has been freezing CNN out by not making its officials available for interviews.
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