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U.S. Customs and Border Protection canceled the visas of 27 people, including some who worked on a Disney Cruise Line ship, after determining they were involved in child sexual abuse images. The agency boarded eight cruise ships in late April and returned those individuals to their home countries. The company said it has a zero-tolerance policy and cooperated with law enforcement.
The IndependentU.S. immigration authorities canceled the visas of more than two dozen people, including some who worked on a Disney Cruise Line ship, after determining their involvement in child sexual abuse images. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a statement Friday that authorities boarded eight cruise ships in late April.
The agency determined that 27 people, mostly from the Philippines, were involved in the receipt, possession, transportation, distribution or viewing of child sexual abuse images. The agency canceled their visas and returned them to their home countries.
The agency did not say if any passengers aboard the ships were believed to be victims. It also did not disclose which ships agents boarded, why those ships were targeted or where the operations took place. The statement said no additional information was available.
At least some of the ships had docked in San Diego.
Line said in a statement that the company has a zero-tolerance policy for this type of behavior and fully cooperated with law enforcement. While the majority of these individuals were not from the cruise line, those who were are no longer with the company.
Immigrant and workers' rights groups said they had been trying without success to obtain information about the status of the workers and the reason behind the enforcement action.
Prado, with one of the groups, Unión del Barrio, said they held a news conference Tuesday in San Diego after previously receiving a generic statement from Customs and Border Protection. The statement the agency subsequently released to news organizations this week did not appear to be on the agency's website.
That information should be readily accessible, he said. Prado said his group wants to better understand what kind of monitoring or surveillance might have been occurring ahead of the workers being detained and whether due process rights were followed.
He acknowledged skepticism around information released by agencies like Customs and Border Protection. “At this point, we doubt, we question their claims and so we do want to follow up with some of these workers to find out exactly what took place,” Prado said.
Customs and Border Protection has said that a criminal charge is not required for someone's visa to be revoked.
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