Precedent Could Allow Fliers to Contest Travel Bans Though the case itself is still far from over, a major victory was scored for opponents of the US no fly list when US District Judge Anna Brown ruled that the ability to travel internationally by airplane is a constitutionally protected right.
The finding is part of an ongoing lawsuit by 13 Americans placed on the no fly list, who say they have been barred from travel without any due process, and with no way to get off the list.
The Justice Department has insisted that flying is not a right and banning someone from flying is just a minor inconvenience. They also maintain that there is a clear path to appeal being on the list.
In theory thats true, and a person on the no fly list could go to the US appeals court to get removed. In practice the government never officially acknowledges that anyone is on the list, however, and keeps the reason for adding someone classified, so theres no way to contest the secret lists secret justification.
Judge Brown did not yet rule on any specific remedy, however the very fact that she conceded travel as being in the interest of liberty suggests she is taking the case seriously, and wont simply shrug it off as a prerogative of the administration to unilaterally decide who can and cant travel by airplane.
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