Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh on Monday joined a coalition of 18 attorneys general who have filed a lawsuit seeking to block the Trump administration’s decision to make international students leave the U.S. if they intend to take classes entirely online starting this fall.

The suit, which follows legal action taken by individual institutions including Johns Hopkins University, seeks to stop the rule from going into effect. It was filed in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts.

“This reversal is a cruel attempt to throw hundreds of thousands of international students out of the country,” Frosh said in a statement. “The more than 20,000 international students attending universities in Maryland contribute $800 million every year to Maryland’s economy, $100 million to the University System (of Maryland), and support 9,500 jobs. This rule will further deepen the system’s financial losses due to COVID-19.”

On March 13, Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued guidance allowing foreign students to take classes online for the duration of the coronavirus emergency. That guidance was abruptly reversed last week. Colleges have until Wednesday to tell ICE whether they intend to offer only remote classes in the fall and to certify for each international student that their coursework will be in person or a hybrid of in-person and online learning. The attorneys argue that the rule change came down when many faculty, staff and students are not on campus and may not be in the country or registered for classes.

USM Chancellor Jay Perman said there are more than 5,300 foreign students enrolled at University System of Maryland institutions. Read more at WBAL