Federal judges in Maryland and Washington state also heard arguments on separate lawsuits challenging the travel ban on Wednesday.
In Seattle, where the first nationwide hold was placed on Trump’s initial order, a group of states led by Washington were pushing to have the previous restraining order apply to the portions of the revised order.
But U.S. District Judge James Robart, a President George W. Bush appointee, said the orders were substantially different and intended to deny the motion, according to multiple reports.
The administration made several deliberate changes designed to hold up better in court, such as dropping Iraq from the list of banned nations, scrapping an indefinite ban on Syrian refugees, removing language giving preference to religious minorities when the refugee program resumes, and specifically exempting legal U.S. residents and certain visa holders.