It looks like the clothing label has come under fire once again. A federal judge in Denver is deliberating over an injunction filed against Abercrombie & Fitch Co. and J.M. Hollister LLC following a ruling that the near 250 of the clothing stores are unfriendly to the disabled.

The brand targets the youth to wear their chill, So-Cal inspired clothing line. The Associate Press reported that the lawsuit was filed on behalf of a Colorado customer who claimed they had difficulty navigating through the retail store.

The suit was filed back in 2009 when disabled customer Julie Farrar had trouble entering the store and was forced to go through the side door.

The lawyer who represents the disabled customer compared the difficulty that the disable face in the store to the fight against racial segregation in the 1960s.

"Attorneys for Hollister objected to the race reference in court documents that referred to the side doors as "a separate, segregated entrance," calling it "grossly inaccurate and needlessly inflammatory" and asked that it be stricken.

Disabled Colorado resident Farrar made a statement following the Wednesday ruling, she said:

"As a person who has grown up with a disability who was excluded from many public and private buildings and experiences (including) school, dining, shopping, arguably because those buildings were built pre-ADA (Americans With Disabilities Act), I am simply referencing an attitude of exclusion that was prevalent during that time."

She continued to say, "The (side) entrances are artificial two steps up and two steps down, built to create an atmosphere for marketing purposes. That is what makes them illegal."

The companies have countered by saying it would physically impossible for them to install ramps located in shopping malls.

"And closing off elevated entrances would be "the worst and least acceptable" of the three solutions because it would be confusing to customers and cause "immense ... loss in sales and revenue" and "permanent damage to the Hollister brand."