The developer of ICEBlock, an app that allows users to report sightings of immigration agents, has filed a lawsuit against US Attorney General Pam Bondi and other federal officials.
In the lawsuit, seen by The National, app developer Joshua Aaron alleges that the US Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security, and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement illegally coerced Apple into removing the app from its App Store after it had been downloaded more than one million times.
βSoftware programs like ICEBlock are a form of speech protected by the First Amendment,β the lawsuit filed in Washington district court reads. βThe First Amendment similarly protects Mr Aaronβs right to create, distribute, and promote ICEBlock.β
The developer of ICEBlock says that the DOJ and other government entities used coercion to convince Apple to remove the app from its iPhone App Store.
Noam Biale, one of the lawyers representing Mr Aaron, said he would pursue the case all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary.
βWe will take this as far as we need to so we can vindicate Josh's rights and the rights of users everywhere,β he said, adding that ICEBlock represents a fundamental right of people to βcommunicate with each other and disseminate informationβ.
βWe're not going to hide. They [DOJ] did something wrong and we're going to take the fight to that point.β
His app, which first appeared in Apple's iPhone App Store in April, uses crowdsourced data to report and track sightings of US immigration agents.
It alerts users to the presence of ICE officials in an 8km radius.
The idea for the app came after US President Donald Trump's push to accelerate deportations of people living in the US illegally, which was a key pillar of his election campaign as he sought to return to the White House.
During an interview with The National in July, Mr Aaron, who is Jewish, said that he decided to create the app after meeting Holocaust survivors and learning about Adolf Hitler's rise to power in Nazi Germany.
Mr Trump's aggressive deployment of ICE agents has come under fire from critics and immigration law experts, who say people are being denied due process as they are arrested and sent to detention centres or deported.
In the weeks that followed ICEBlock's debut, its popularity soared near the top of iPhone App Store download charts in various parts of the US.
It quickly became the source of anger within the Trump White House.
In July, the US Attorney General told Fox News that the Justice Department was βlooking intoβ the developer.
Mr Aaron's wife, who worked for the federal government, was terminated amid accusations that she played a role in developing the app, which she denied.
Despite the accusations and mounting anger from the Trump administration about ICEBlock, it remained in Apple's App Store, with Mr Aaron pointing out that he dealt with Apple employees and lawyers to get the app approved, and noted that ICE
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