Update: As you might have guessed, the trip was, indeed, legal. Reuters reports that the U.S. Treasury Department okayed the visit.

Like any number of us, two Republican congress members want to know more about Jay-Z and Beyoncé's recent visit to Cuba. Reuters reports that U.S. Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Diaz-Balart-- who represent districts in Florida with large Cuban-American populations-- are inquiring as to the nature of the couple's visit, given the U.S.'s restrictions against tourism in Cuba.

The couple were reportedly on vacation there celebrating their fifth wedding anniversary with their mothers. The two representatives are seeking information from Adam Szubin, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, "regarding the type of license that Beyoncé and Jay-Z received, for what purpose, and who approved such travel."

"Cuba's tourism industry is wholly state-controlled," Ros-Lehtinen and Diaz-Balart wrote. "Therefore, U.S. dollars spent on Cuban tourism directly fund the machinery of oppression that brutally oppresses the Cuban people." The State Department said it had no prior knowledge of the trip, and no one seems to know if a license was obtained for the trip.

There are, of course, loopholes in the U.S.-Cuba tourism restrictions-- you can get a license for academic, religious, or cultural exchanges (and many would argue that every breath Beyoncé and Jay-Z take signifies a religious or cultural exchange).