As enforcement of a limited version of the Trump administration’s travel ban took effect at 8 p.m. Thursday, the scene at Logan International Airport was calm, in stark contrast to the chaos that followed the initial executive order in January.
A small contingent of immigration attorneys and demonstrators were waiting at Terminal E on Thursday evening and said they had no immediate reports of detained passengers.
Susan Church, one of the lawyers, said a passenger had arrived earlier Thursday before the ban was back in place.
Church was joined by a couple of demonstrators who held signs decrying the ban, including Meredith Reiches, of Somerville.
“It’s good to have a location that can be visible locus for protest,’’ said Reiches, whose sign said YOU ARE WELCOME HERE.
Her friend, Rachel Hands, also of Somerville, held a sign that read “No ban, no wall,’’ in reference to Trump’s planned border wall with Mexico.
Both women said they felt compelled to speak out against the revised ban, as they did against prior iterations.
“We’re sorry to have to be back here,’’ Reiches said.
Church said earlier in the day that immigration attorneys would be stationed at the airport Thursday night as a precaution. She was one of the Boston lawyers who persuaded two local federal judges to issue a rare middle-of-the-night restraining order on Trump’s January order.
“We expect there will not be a crazy impact at all this weekend because the Department of State cable says anyone with a valid visa will not have a visa revoked,’’ Church said. “I don’t think it’s going to be as crazy as last time, but it’s not going to be simple either.’’
There are no nonstop flights coming in to Boston tonight from the six affected countries of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen, according to the Massachusetts Port Authority. But travelers holding passports from those countries who are arriving from other airports could potentially be affected.
After the January executive order — which included Iraq — took effect, chaos took hold in airports across the country, including detentions and protests at Logan. Following the travel ban’s legal block, the Trump administration issued a revised version in March, removing Iraq from the list and exempting green card holders.
That order was also blocked by federal courts in Maryland and Hawaii. On Monday, the Supreme Court allowed parts of the revised travel ban to go forward. The court said the ban could not be enforced against foreign nationals who have a “bona fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States.’’
“The hope is that most of the folks that are trying to get into the country have a bona fide relationship with a US person,’’ said Matthew Segal, legal director at the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts. “The hope is there will be no drama at the airport. . . . If the government abides by what the Supreme Court says, there won’t be any problems.’’
Greg Romanovsky, chair of the New England Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said that local US Customs and Border Protection officials indicated they were still waiting guidance as of Thursday afternoon on handling the travel ban.
“What we’re hoping to see is going to be business as usual for the airport folks,’’ Romanovsky said. “They were really not looking forward to having to verify each person’s ‘bona fide relationship’ with the United States.’’
Romanovsky was among those at Logan on Thursday to see how the ban would be implemented.
Both Church and Segal said they continue to advise people from the affected nations not to travel outside of the United States if they are already here.
“It’s a very tricky situation. Everything is rapidly changing with courts issuing decisions the way they’ve been issuing them,’’ Church said.
Travis Andersen and Cristela Guerra of the Globe Staff contributed to this report.