Justices' Broad View of 'Families' Is Tested in Trump Travel Ban

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The Trump administration may not view grandparents, aunts, uncles and others as having close enough family relationships in the United States to be excluded from the government's travel ban, but the U.S. Supreme Court on at least two occasions, in different contexts, has recognized the importance of those family bonds.

The justices soon may be asked to weigh just how important those relationships are in the latest dispute over President Donald Trump's executive order banning some travel into the United States.

The order restricting travel to the United States by foreign nationals from six predominantly Muslim countries for 90 days and refugees for 120 days took effect June 29, three days after the U.S. Supreme Court partially lifted lower court injunctions that had blocked the order. The Trump administration then issued guidance on who was affected by the Supreme Court's action.

Government officials said the travel ban would apply to grandparents, grandchildren, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, brothers-law and sisters-in-law, and fiances of persons in the United States. (The administration subsequently excluded fiances from the ban.)

Challengers to the executive order immediately returned to the Hawaii federal trial judge who originally issued an injunction against the ban. They asked the judge, Derrick Watson, to clarify the scope of his injunction in light of the Supreme Court's action.

Represented by Hogan Lovells partner Neal Katyal, they argue the administration has interpreted too narrowly the high court's order. The justices said those immigrants excluded from the travel ban are foreign nationals with close familial relationships to individuals in the United States. The court also said the travel ban would not affect those whose relationships to entities in this country are formal, documented and formed in the ordinary course, rather than for the purpose of evading the executive order.

In this case, the government has ordered consulates to exclude aliens who have some of the most elemental relationships known to human society, from grandparents to nephews, Katyal wrote in court papers filed on June 29.

The U.S. Department of Justice subsequently defended its guidance on who would be denied entry into the United States. The government said it would ask the Supreme Court for clarification if the trial court rules for the challengers. A ruling could come as soon as this week.

What the Supreme Court Said About Close Familial Relationships

Nearly two decades ago in one of the high court's infrequent forays into family law, the justices considered Washington state's child visitation law. Grandparents had petitioned for visitation rights under the state law, but the parents of their grandchildren objected. The grandparents lost in the Supreme Court, which said the state visitation law was so broad that it interfered with the rights of parents to raise their children.