A Somali-American family of six detained at the U.S.-Canada border for more than 10 hours in 2015 after the father's name was found on a terror watch list has sued the U.S. government for allegedly violating their constitutional rights.
The family was released after authorities determined the father wasn't a threat, but the experience terrified the family's children, caused the father to pass out at one point and shook the parents' faith in the rule of law, according to their suit.
"My family and I were detained at gunpoint," Sagal Abdigani said in a statement posted on the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) website Thursday. Abdigani was held with her four children while her husband, Abdisalam Wilwal, was questioned. "I'm afraid it will happen again," she wrote.
The family wants Wilwal's name removed from the terrorist watch list and a prohibition against any future arrests or detentions involving them because of the list.
Their lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court Thursday, was submitted by attorneys for the ACLU and Robins Kaplan.
The family was not available for an interview Thursday. The Department of Homeland Security's press office did not respond to an e-mail requesting comment.
According to the lawsuit:
The family left from their Eagan home bound for Regina, Saskatchewan, to visit Abdigani's sister in March of 2015. They crossed the border at Portal, N.D., but a Canadian border official there told them their records included a notation from U.S. officials, and that they might be questioned "more than usual" upon return.