US Customs System Outage Grounds Travelers

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A nationwide Customs and Border Protection system outage stranded thousands of travelers at airports on Monday.

Folks trying to enter the US via a handful of cities were met with long lines and excessive delays as customs officers manually processed international passengers.

Issues were reported in Atlanta, Ft. Lauderdale, Los Angeles, Miami, and Washington, D.C., as well as Baltimore, Boston, Newark, and San Francisco. All airports came back online Monday night, following what CBP called "a temporary outage" of its processing systems.

"US Customs and Border Protection is experiencing a temporary outage with its processing systems at various air ports of entry and taking immediate action to address the technology disruption," the agency said in a statement to ABC News.

"CBP officers continue to process international travelers using alternative procedures until systems are back online," it continued. "Travelers at some ports of entry are experiencing longer than usual wait times and CBP officers are working to process travelers as quickly as possible while maintaining the highest levels of security."

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US Customs and Border Protection did not immediately respond to PCMag's request for comment. According to a tweet, however, there is no indication the disruption was malicious.

According to social media accounts, conditions at Miami International Airport were particularly harsh: an army of angry, hungry people crowded the hallways for three-plus hours as rising temperatures caused fainting and vomiting.

Similar scenes were depicted at Washington Dulles International Airport, where Twitter user Richard Walker documented "36 unusable passport express kiosks, 20 unused global entry" stalls, eight agents, and a one-hour wait.

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