Despite the fact that a federal appeals court ruled unanimously against Donald Trump's executive order calling for a travel ban on immigrants and refugees from seven majority-Muslim countries, Muslim travelers are still facing problems when trying to enter the U.S., including having their Global Entry cards taken away.

On Thursday, Mic reported that according to immigration lawyers, a large number of Muslim travelers, including American citizens and green card holders, were having their Global Entry cards revoked. Global Entry is a program offered by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection that allows pre-approved, expedited clearance for "low-risk" travelers (i.e. those without a criminal history) coming to the U.S. Its purpose is to allow people to skip long customs and border protection lines at airports.

Now, however, Muslim travelers are being turned away from the program with little to no explanation. "The reasoning I received was that I 'failed to satisfy CBP low-risk status,'" Hasan Askari, who emigrated to the U.S. from Pakistan, told Mic about his denial from Global Entry after he'd already been approved for the program. "I provided all the right information. I don't even have a speeding ticket. There's nothing in my record at all."

Immigration lawyers told Mic that the only thing that separates these applicants from thousands of others is their religion. "All we know is what we're seeing and it's only Muslims — people, including U.S. citizens, who haven't really traveled to the banned countries — who are having their Global Entry revoked," Greg Siskind, attorney and board member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, explained. "Some of the people are American-born citizens and others naturalized citizens, but the common thing we're seeing is that they're all Muslim."

Are these types of revocations normal under the Global Entry application process? Customs officials haven't publicly given recent program admission numbers, but according to the numbers supplied by customs and border officials in 2012, there's a potential anomaly. In a New York Times article on the subject, John Wagner, the executive director of admissibility and passenger programs for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said that only 3-5% of the 30,000 monthly applicants to the program are rejected (around 900-1,500 per month), largely due to records of criminal activity or non-compliance with the law. The customs and border protection office, however, hasn't commented on the recent allegations that they're denying people who don't have criminal backgrounds and would normally be accepted pre-Muslim ban.

As for Trump's next steps, the president has publicly stated that he'll be signing a new executive order related to the Muslim ban next week, but he's given no details to how it will differ from the current one, which was struck down in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Related: The Muslim Ban: Everything You Need to Know

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