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Posted: 2022-01-13T19:40:30Z | Updated: 2022-01-13T19:40:30Z

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Attorneys for a woman who left her Alabama home to join the Islamic State terror group plan to continue fighting for her and her young son even though the Supreme Court declined to consider her lawsuit seeking to re-enter the United States, one of the lawyers said Wednesday.

Hoda Muthana and her 4-year-old child, the son of a man she met while with IS, have been living in a Syrian refugee camp for nearly the entire life of the child, and its unclear what steps might come next to argue for their admittance into the United States, said Christina Jump, who represents the womans family.

But Jump, who works with the Constitutional Law Center for Muslims in America, said attorneys are considering options.

We intend to stand by Hoda and her son and their rights to citizenship, she said. We do intend to keep working on her behalf.

The Supreme Court on Monday refused to hear the appeal of a lawsuit filed by relatives on behalf of Muthana, who was born in New Jersey and fled her home in suburban Birmingham in 2014 to join Islamic State, apparently after becoming radicalized online.