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Alien Tort Statute

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Alien Tort Statute
Great Seal of the United States
Other short titlesAlien Tort Claims Act
Enacted bythe 1st United States Congress
Citations
Statutes at LargeStat. 73
Codification
U.S.C. sections created28 U.S.C. § 1350
Legislative history
United States Supreme Court cases

The Alien Tort Statute (codified into positive law in 1948 as 28 U.S.C. § 1350; ATS), also called the Alien Tort Claims Act (ATCA), is a section in the United States Code that gives federal courts jurisdiction over lawsuits filed by foreign nationals for torts committed in violation of international law. It was first introduced by the Judiciary Act of 1789 and is one of the oldest federal laws still in effect in the U.S.

The ATS was rarely cited for nearly two centuries after its enactment, and its exact purpose and scope remain debated.[1][2] The U.S. Supreme Court has interpreted the Act's primary purpose as "[promoting] harmony in international relations by ensuring foreign plaintiffs a remedy for international-law violations in circumstances where the absence of such a remedy might provoke foreign nations to hold the United States accountable."[3]

Since 1980, courts have generally interpreted the ATS to allow foreign nationals to seek remedies in U.S. courts for human rights violations committed outside the United States, provided there is a sufficient connection to the United States.[4] Both case law and jurisprudence differ on what characterizes a sufficient U.S. connection, particularly with respect to corporate entities.[2]

Text

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The statute reads as follows:

The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.[5]

History

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The ATS was part of the Judiciary Act of 1789, which was passed by the First U.S. Congress to establish the federal court system.[6] There is little surviving legislative history regarding the Act, and its original meaning and purpose are uncertain.[7][8] Scholars have surmised that it was intended to assure foreign governments that the U.S. would seek to prevent and remedy breaches of customary international law, especially breaches concerning diplomats and merchants.[9]

The ATS may have been enacted in response to a number of international incidents caused by the unavailability of remedies for foreign citizens in the U.S.[10] The peace treaty ending the American Revolutionary War provided for the satisfaction of debts to British creditors, but several states refused to enforce the payment of such debts, prompting threats of retaliation by Great Britain.[note 1] In 1784, French diplomat François Barbé-Marbois was assaulted in Philadelphia, but no legal remedy was available to him, as any prosecution was left to the discretion of local authorities.[1] The incident was notorious internationally and prompted Congress to draft a resolution asking states to allow suits in tort for the violation of the law of nations; few states enacted such a provision, and Congress subsequently included the ATS in the Judiciary Act of 1789.

However, until 1980 the ATS remained largely dormant, being invoked in only two reported court decisions.[11]

Revitalization: Filártiga v. Peña-Irala

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In 1980, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit decided Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, which "paved the way for a new conceptualization of the ATS".[11] In Filartiga, two Paraguayan citizens resident in the U.S., represented by the Center for Constitutional Rights, brought suit against a Paraguayan former police chief who was also living in the United States.[12] The plaintiffs alleged that the defendant had tortured and murdered a member of their family, and they asserted that U.S. federal courts had jurisdiction over their suit under the ATS. The district court dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, holding that the "law of nations" does not regulate a state's treatment of its own citizens.

The Second Circuit reversed the decision of the district court. First, it held that the ATS, which allowed jurisdiction in the federal courts over a suit between two aliens, was a constitutional exercise of Congress's power, because "the law of nations ... has always been part of the federal common law", and thus the statute fell within federal-question jurisdiction.[13] Second, the court held that the contemporary law of nations had expanded to prohibit state-sanctioned torture. The court found that multilateral treaties and domestic prohibitions on torture evidenced a consistent state practice of proscribing official torture. The court similarly found that United Nations declarations, such as the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, manifested an expectation of adherence to the prohibition of official torture. The court therefore held that the right to be free from torture had become a principle of customary international law. However, one of the judges on the panel hearing the case later wrote that Filartiga "should not be misread or exaggerated to support sweeping assertions that all (or even most) international human rights norms found in the Universal Declaration or in international human rights treaties have ripened into customary international law enforceable in the domestic courts".[14]

Since Filartiga, jurisdiction under the ATS has been upheld in dozens of cases.[15]

First U.S. Supreme Court hearing: Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain

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The first U.S. Supreme Court case to directly address the scope of the ATS was Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain in 2004.[16] The plaintiff, Alvarez, brought a claim under ATS for arbitrary arrest and detention. He had been indicted in the United States for torturing and murdering a Drug Enforcement Administration officer. When the United States was unable to secure Alvarez's extradition, the United States paid Sosa, a Mexican national, to kidnap Alvarez and bring him into the U.S. Alvarez claimed that his "arrest" by Sosa was arbitrary because the warrant for his arrest only authorized his arrest within the U.S. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that Alvarez's abduction constituted arbitrary arrest in violation of international law.

The Supreme Court reversed and clarified that ATS did not create a cause of action, but instead merely "furnish[ed] jurisdiction for a relatively modest set of actions alleging violations of the law of nations."[16] Such actions must "rest on a norm of international character accepted by the civilized world and defined with a specificity comparable to the features of the 18th-century paradigms we have recognized."[17] Although the scope of ATS is not limited to violations of international law recognized in the 18th century, with respect to recognizing contemporary international norms, the Court's opinion stated that "the judicial power should be exercised on the understanding that the door is still ajar subject to vigilant doorkeeping."[18]

In Alvarez's case, "a single illegal detention of less than a day, followed by the transfer of custody to lawful authorities and a prompt arraignment, violates no norm of customary international law so well defined as to support the creation of a federal remedy."[19]

Ongoing controversy

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Exercising legal jurisdiction in the United States over matters that occurred abroad is a controversial practice and some have suggested that Congress eliminate it.[20] Others believe that a multilateral solution, including through either the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development or the UN, would be more appropriate.[21]

Scope of the statute

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"Violation of the law of nations"

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The Supreme Court held in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain that the ATS provides a cause of action for violations of international norms that are as "specific, universal, and obligatory" as were the norms prohibiting violations of safe conducts, infringements of the rights of ambassadors, and piracy in the 18th century.[22] Courts have found matters actionable under the ATS to include torture; cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment; genocide; war crimes; crimes against humanity; summary execution; prolonged arbitrary detention; and forced disappearance.[23]

Since Sosa, courts have struggled to define the level of specificity required for a norm to be actionable under the ATS.[24] For example, subsequent to Sosa, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit overturned prior lower-court decisions that had found cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment actionable, noting that Sosa repudiated the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as a source of law under the ATS.[25] Similarly, courts have held that economic, social, and cultural rights are too indeterminate to satisfy Sosa's specificity requirement. For example, in Flores v. Southern Peru Copper Corp., the Second Circuit stated that the rights to life and to health are too indeterminate to constitute a cause of action under the ATS.[26]

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, however, has held that the limits of a norm need not be defined with particularity to be actionable; rather, the norm need only be so defined that the particular acts upon which a claim is based certainly fall within the bounds of the norm.[27] In Doe v. Qi, the court stated, "The fact that there may be doubt at the margins – a fact that inheres in any definition – does not negate the essence and application of that definition in clear cases." The court also described how to determine whether specific actions fall within the proscriptions of an international norm, holding that the actions alleged should be compared with actions that international adjudicatory bodies have found to be proscribed by the norm in question. It therefore examined decisions by institutions such as the Human Rights Committee, the European Court of Human Rights, and the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights to determine that pushing, hitting, and choking a plaintiff during one day of incarceration did not constitute cruel, unusual, or degrading treatment, whereas forcing a hand into a plaintiff's vagina did constitute cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.

Corporate liability under the statute

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In 2011, there was a circuit split regarding whether corporations, as opposed to natural people, could be held liable under the ATS. In 2010 the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. that "customary international law has steadfastly rejected the notion of corporate liability for international crimes" and thus that "insofar as plaintiffs bring claims under the ATS against corporations, plaintiffs fail to allege violations of the law of nations, and plaintiffs' claims fall outside the limited jurisdiction provided by the ATS".[28] However, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals,[29] the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,[30] and the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals all ruled that corporate liability is possible under the statute.[31]

The U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari on October 17, 2011, to answer the question of corporate liability. After arguments on February 28, 2012, the Court ordered the case to be reargued the following term on the separate question of extraterritoriality.[32] On April 17, 2013, in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., the Court issued a decision affirming the Second Circuit's decision, but on different grounds, holding that the ATS did not create jurisdiction for a claim regarding conduct occurring outside the territory of the United States, leaving the question of corporate liability unresolved.

In Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, the Supreme Court again revisited the question of corporate liability and ruled that foreign corporations may not be sued under the ATS.[33] However, the only parts of the opinion that commanded a majority of the court expressly limited its holding to suits against foreign corporations. The concurring opinions by Justices Alito and Gorsuch focused on foreign relations concerns with foreign corporations. Justice Alito expressly limited his concurrence to foreign corporations: "Because this case involves a foreign corporation, we have no need to reach the question whether an alien may sue a United States corporation under the ATS."[34] Because the majority opinion was limited to foreign corporations, it is possible that Jesner does not settle the question of corporate liability for U.S. corporations.[35]

Prominent cases under the statute

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Doe v. Unocal

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In September 1996, four Burmese villagers filed suit against Unocal and its parent company, the Union Oil Company of California; in October 1996, another fourteen villagers also brought suit.[36] The suits alleged various human rights violations, including forced labor, wrongful death, false imprisonment, assault, intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligence, all relating to the construction of the Yadana gas pipeline project in Myanmar, formerly Burma.

In 2000, the district court dismissed the case on the grounds that Unocal could not be held liable unless Unocal wanted the military to commit abuses, and that plaintiffs had not made this showing. Plaintiffs appealed and ultimately, shortly prior to when the case was to be argued before the Ninth Circuit en banc court in December 2004, the parties announced that they had reached a tentative settlement. Once the settlement was finalized in March 2005, the appeal was withdrawn and the district court opinion from 2000 was also vacated.

According to a joint statement released by the parties, while the specific terms were confidential, "the settlement will compensate plaintiffs and provide funds enabling plaintiffs and their representatives to develop programs to improve living conditions, health care and education and protect the rights of people from the pipeline region. These initiatives will provide substantial assistance to people who may have suffered hardships in the region."[37]

Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC

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On April 3, 2017, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, which asks the question: "Whether the Alien Tort Statute ... categorically forecloses corporate liability".[38] The case arose when plaintiffs and their families were injured by terrorist attacks in the Middle East over a ten-year period. American nationals brought their claim under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2333(a), and foreign nationals brought their claim under the ATS. The plaintiffs alleged that Arab Bank helped finance terrorism by allowing Hamas and other terrorist groups to use bank accounts for terrorists and to pay the families of suicide bombers.[39]

The District Court, following the Second Circuit decision in Kiobel that corporations are immune from liability under the ATS, dismissed the ATS suit. The Second Circuit, also adhering to Kiobel, affirmed.[40]

On April 24, 2018, the Supreme Court ruled that foreign corporations may not be sued under the Alien Tort Statute.[33] Justice Kennedy wrote for a splintered majority. In the majority opinion, the Court expressed its concern for foreign relations problems if the Court were to extend liability to foreign corporations. "For 13 years, this litigation has 'caused significant diplomatic tensions' with Jordan, a critical ally in one of the world's most sensitive regions ... These are the very foreign-relations tensions the First Congress sought to avoid."[41] Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch concurred.

Justice Sotomayor wrote a 34-page dissent, arguing the decision "absolves corporations from responsibility under the ATS for conscience-shocking behavior".[42] According to Sotomayor, immunizing corporations from liability "allows these entities to take advantage of the significant benefits of the corporate form and enjoy fundamental rights ... without having to shoulder attendant fundamental responsibilities."[43]

Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum

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The plaintiffs in Kiobel were citizens of Nigeria who claimed that Dutch, British, and Nigerian oil-exploration corporations aided and abetted the Nigerian government during the 1990s in committing violations of customary international law.[28] The plaintiffs claimed that Royal Dutch Shell compelled its Nigerian subsidiary, in cooperation with the Nigerian government, to brutally crush peaceful resistance to aggressive oil development in the Niger River Delta.[44] Plaintiffs sought damages under the ATS. The defendants moved to dismiss based on a two-pronged argument. First, they argued that customary international law itself provides the rules by which to decide whether conduct violates the law of nations where non-state actors are alleged to have committed the wrong in question. Second, they contended that no norm has ever existed between nations that imposes liability upon corporate actors. On September 29, 2006, the district court dismissed the plaintiffs' claims for aiding and abetting property destruction; forced exile; extrajudicial killing; and violation of the rights to life, liberty, security, and association. It reasoned that customary international law did not define those violations with sufficient particularity. The court denied the defendants' motion to dismiss with respect to the remaining claims of aiding and abetting arbitrary arrest and detention; crimes against humanity; and torture or cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. The district court then certified its entire order for interlocutory appeal to the Second Circuit based on the serious nature of the questions at issue.

In a 2–1 decision issued on September 17, 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that corporations cannot be held liable for violations of customary international law, finding that: (1) under both U.S. Supreme Court and Second Circuit precedents over the previous 30 years that address ATS suits alleging violations of customary international law, the scope of liability is determined by customary international law itself; (2) under Supreme Court precedent, the ATS requires courts to apply norms of international law—and not domestic law—to the scope of defendants' liabilities. Such norms must be "specific, universal and obligatory"; and (3) under international law, "corporate liability is not a discernible—much less a universally recognized—norm of customary international law",[28][45] that the court could apply to the ATS, and that the plaintiffs' ATS claims should indeed be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

Kiobel petitioned the Supreme Court for review of the Second Circuit's decision, and this was granted on October 17, 2011. Oral arguments were held on February 28, 2012,[46][47] The arguments received considerable attention in the legal community.[48][49] Unexpectedly, the Court announced on March 5, 2012, that it would hold additional arguments on the case during the October 2012 term, and directed the parties to file new briefs on the question "Whether and under what circumstances the Alien Tort Statute ... allows courts to recognize a cause of action for violations of the law of nations occurring within the territory of a sovereign other than the United States."[50] The case was reargued on October 1, 2012; on April 17, 2013, the Court held that there is a presumption that the ATS does not apply outside the United States.[51]

Sarei v. Rio Tinto

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In 2000, residents of the island of Bougainville in Papua New Guinea brought suit against multinational mining company Rio Tinto. The lawsuit is based on a 1988 revolt against Rio Tinto, and the plaintiffs allege that the Papua New Guinea government, using Rio Tinto helicopters and vehicles, killed about 15,000 people in an effort to put down the revolt.[52] On October 25, 2011, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting en banc, issued a divided opinion holding that certain claims against a foreign corporation implicating the conduct of a foreign government on foreign soil could proceed under the ATS. The company filed a petitioned the Supreme Court for review of the decision; on April 22, 2013, the Supreme Court remanded the case back to the Ninth Circuit for further consideration in the light of its decision in Kiobel.

Kpadeh v. Emmanuel

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Charles McArthur Emmanuel (also known as "Chuckie Taylor" or "Taylor Jr."), the son of former Liberian president Charles Taylor, was the commander of the infamously violent Anti-Terrorist Unit (ATU), commonly known in Liberia as the "Demon Forces".[53] In 2006, U.S. officials arrested Taylor upon entering the U.S. (via the Miami International Airport) and the Department of Justice later charged him based on torture he committed in Liberia.[54] He was convicted of multiple counts of torture and conspiracy to torture[55] and was sentenced to 97 years in prison.[56] The World Organization for Human Rights USA and the Florida International University College of Law filed a civil suit in the Southern District of Florida on behalf of five of Taylor's victims pursuant to the Alien Tort Statute and the Torture Victim Protection Act.[57] The plaintiffs won by default judgment as to liability on all counts, and in February 2010, following trial on damages at which Taylor appeared, the court found Taylor liable to the plaintiffs for damages of over $22 million.[58][59]

Presbyterian Church of Sudan v. Talisman Energy, Inc.

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On October 2, 2009, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in Presbyterian Church of Sudan v. Talisman Energy, Inc., held that "the mens rea standard for aiding and abetting liability in Alien Tort Statute actions is purpose rather than knowledge alone."[60] In this case—which involves allegations against a Canadian oil company concerning its purported assistance to the government in Sudan in the forced movement of civilians residing near oil facilities—the court concluded that "plaintiffs have not established Talisman's purposeful complicity in human rights abuses". In reaching that conclusion, the Second Circuit stated that "the standard for imposing accessorial liability under the Alien Tort Statute must be drawn from international law; and that under international law a claimant must show that the defendant provided substantial assistance with the purpose of facilitating the alleged offenses."

Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Company

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On August 11, 2009, the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit issued a decision in Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Company.[61] In this case, plaintiffs alleged that Coca-Cola bottlers in Colombia collaborated with Colombian paramilitary forces in "the systematic intimidation, kidnapping, detention, torture, and murder of Colombian trade unionists". However, the district court dismissed the complaint and the Eleventh Circuit upheld that ruling. In doing so, the Eleventh Circuit relied upon the Supreme Court's recent Ashcroft v. Iqbal decision[62] in addressing the adequacy of the complaint, which must have "facial plausibility" to survive dismissal, and noted that Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure demands "more than an unadorned, the-defendant-unlawfully-harmed-me accusation". The Eleventh Circuit then applied the Iqbal standard to plaintiffs' allegations against Coca-Cola and held that they were insufficient to survive dismissal.

Bowoto v. Chevron Corp.

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Nigerian villagers brought claims against Chevron Corporation regarding events that occurred on a Chevron offshore drilling platform in 1998, when Nigerian soldiers suppressed a protest against Chevron's environmental and business practices. The protesters, with the help of nonprofit organizations including the Center for Constitutional Rights, the Public Interest Lawyers Group, and EarthRights International, brought claims for wrongful death, torture, assault, battery, and negligence against Chevron, alleging that the company had paid the soldiers that landed on the platform and were therefore liable for the actions that they took. In December 2008, a jury found that Chevron was not liable.[63]

Wang Xiaoning v. Yahoo!

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In 2007, the World Organization for Human Rights USA filed a lawsuit against Yahoo! on behalf of Chinese dissidents Wang Xiaoning and Shi Tao (his mother Gao Qinsheng), claiming jurisdiction under the ATS.[64] According to the complaint, Wang and Shi Tao used Yahoo! accounts to share pro-democracy material, and a Chinese subsidiary of Yahoo! gave the Chinese government identifying information that allowed authorities to identify and arrest them.[65] The Complaint alleged that the plaintiffs were subjected to "torture, cruel, inhuman, or other degrading treatment or punishment, arbitrary arrest and prolonged detention, and forced labor".[66]

Yahoo! settled the case in November 2007 for an undisclosed amount of money, and it agreed to cover the plaintiff's legal costs as a part of the settlement. In a statement released after the settlement was made public, Yahoo! said that it would "provide 'financial, humanitarian and legal support to these families' and create a separate 'humanitarian relief fund' for other dissidents and their families".[67]

Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe

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A recent case concerning the ATS was John Doe I, et al. v. Nestle, which was heard by the Supreme Court on December 1, 2020, and decided June 17, 2021.[68] Consolidated with Cargill, Inc. v. Doe,[69] the case alleges that Nestlé and Cargill aided and abetted forced child labour in the Ivory Coast in connection with the harvesting of cocoa.[70] The applicability of the ATS was interpreted by each circuit individually, with the Ninth and Fourth Circuits in support of investigating Nestle's liability, while the Second Circuit maintained that the Statute did not apply to corporate liability.[68] In an 8–1 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the U.S. federal judiciary lacked jurisdiction over the case due to neither corporate defendant having sufficient connections to the U.S. beyond "mere corporate presence".[71]

The Nestle/Cargill ruling was assessed by international legal jurists as narrowing the scope of the ATS while failing to clarify whether or how corporate defendants may be liable under it.[2] While the Court rejected "general corporate activity", such as the making of operational decisions, as insufficient U.S.-based conduct to establish jurisdiction under the Statute, it did not specify what activities or ties would meet the requirements. However, the Court rejected the defendants' argument to narrow the applicability of the ATS to abuses that take place on U.S. soil, and also disagreed with the Trump administration's amicus curiae brief asserting that there should be no aiding and abetting cause of action under the Statute.[2]

Doe v. Cisco

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On July 3, 2023, the Ninth Circuit issued a decision in Doe v. Cisco.[72] In this case, Falun Gong practitioners alleged that they were victims of human rights abuses perpetrated by the Chinese Communist Party and enabled by the technological assistance of Cisco and two Cisco executives.[73]

The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court's dismissal of the plaintiffs' ATS claims against the Cisco executives. However, it reversed the dismissal of the plaintiffs' ATS claims against the corporate defendant, Cisco, and the dismissal of claims under the Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA) against the Cisco executives.[72]

The Ninth Circuit relied on the Supreme Court's decision in Nestlé to conclude that corporations can be held liable under the ATS. Citing the Supreme Court's ruling in Sosa, the court held that aiding and abetting liability is cognizable under the ATS. It ruled that "plaintiffs' allegations against Cisco were sufficient to meet the applicable aiding and abetting standard".[72] The case was remanded for further proceedings.[72][74] In September 2024, the Ninth Circuit denied Cisco's petition for rehearing and stated that the court had "faithfully applied the Sosa framework to the facts of this case".[75] Cisco filed a certiorari with the Supreme Court in January 2025.[76]

Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp.

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John Doe VII v. Exxon Mobil Corp. (09–7125) is a lawsuit filed in the United States by 11 Indonesian villagers against ExxonMobil Corporation alleging that the company is responsible for human rights violations in the oil-rich province of Aceh, Indonesia. The case has broad implications for multinational corporations doing business in other countries. Indonesian security forces committed torture, rape, and murder against the plaintiffs and their families while under contract with ExxonMobil to guard the Arun gas field during the late 1990s and early 2000s; plaintiffs claim that Exxon is responsible for these atrocities.[77]

ExxonMobil has tried to have the case dismissed nine times and dragged out litigation for over 20 years. In November 2021 plaintiffs' legal team filed a motion to set a trial date, and in July 2022, US District Judge Royce Lamberth denied ExxonMobil's motions to dismiss the case, clearing the way for the lawsuit to go to trial, although no trial date was set.[78]

On May 15, 2023, the plaintiffs reached a confidential settlement with ExxonMobil, a week before the scheduled jury trial.[79][80]

Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc.

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Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc. was a class-action lawsuit against Texaco Petroleum. It was filed in 1993 by American human rights lawyer Steven Donziger on behalf of indigenous collectives in the Ecuadorian Amazon. The lawsuit sought compensation for "alleged environmental and personal injuries arising out of Texaco's oil exploration and extraction operations in the Oriente region between 1964 and 1992".[81] Legal proceedings followed in courts in Ecuador and the United States for about a decade. The case was dismissed on May 30, 2001, on grounds of forum non conveniens (meaning that the case was outside the jurisdiction of US courts and should be heard in Ecuadorian or international courts).[82]

Following dismissal of Aguinda v. Texaco in the US, plaintiffs filed Maria Aguinda Salazar v, ChevronTexaco Corp in Ecuador in 2003, which in turn led to other progeny cases including Republic of Ecuador v. ChevronTexaco Corp and Moi Vicente Enomenga Mantohue v. Chevron Corporation and Texaco Petroleum Company.[82]

Bancoult v. McNamara

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Bancoult v. McNamara, 445 F.3d 427 (D.C. Cir. 2006), was a legal case in which Olivier Bancoult sued Robert McNamara, the former United States Secretary of Defense, challenging the removal of Chagosians from Diego Garcia when the United States of America built a military base in the British Indian Ocean Territory. The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that the case raised nonjusticiable political questions and dismissed the case.

Doe v. Chiquita Brands International

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See also: Chiquita#Payments to terrorist groups

Doe v. Chiquita Brands International is a class-action lawsuit brought in the United States District Court of New Jersey, filed on June 13, 2007. The suit was filed by Colombian families represented by EarthRights International (ERI), together with the Colombian Institute of International Law (CIIL), and Judith Brown Chomsky, against the Cincinnati-based producer and distributor of Chiquita Brands International. The suit alleges that Chiquita funded and armed known terrorist organizations (as designated by the United States Secretary of State) in Colombia.

The 144 plaintiffs allege that terrorists funded by Chiquita Brands killed 173 individuals of whom the plaintiffs were legal representatives. The killings took place over a lengthy period of time from 1975 to 2004 and most occurred in the 1990s and 2000s.

Chiquita Brands has admitted in federal court that a subsidiary company (which was subsequently sold) paid Colombian terrorists to protect employees at its most profitable banana-growing operation. As part of a deal with prosecutors, the company pleaded guilty to one count of doing business with a terrorist organization. In exchange, the company will pay a $25-million fine and court documents will not reveal the identities of the group of senior executives who approved the illegal protection payments.[citation needed]

On June 10, 2024, Chiquita Brands International was found liable by a jury in United States Federal Court of financing the far-right paramilitary death squad United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia in the Antioquia and Magdalena Departments of Colombia.[83]

Estate of Rodriquez v. Drummond Co.

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Estate of Rodriquez v. Drummond Co., 256 F. Supp. 2d 1250 (N.D. Ala. 2003), was a lawsuit filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama by relatives of dead workers that were employed by the Drummond Company.[84]

Sintraminergetica has sued Drummond Company for allegedly conspiring with paramilitary groups to exterminate the union. This suit was brought after years of claims of abuses ranging from forcing potential employees to undergo lie detector tests to reveal their political affiliation as a condition of employment, to the assassination of union leaders, their displacement from the mining zones, and accusations made against them of being guerilla supporters. On March 12, 2001, Valmore Locarno Rodriguez and Victor Hugo Orcasita Amaya, the president and vice president of the union local, were taken from a company bus en route from the mine to their homes. Locarno was assassinated with two shots in the head in front of his coworkers. Over the protests of the workers, Orcasita was taken away in a truck. The next day his body was found, with obvious signs of torture. On October 5 of the same year, under similar circumstances, Gustavo Soler, the union's new president, was taken from a bus, taken away in a pick-up, tortured, and killed. His body was found on October 7 by people from the area.

The court ruled that Sintraminergetica has standing to bring suit against Drummond and the Colombian managers of the company under the Alien Tort Statute. The crimes that claimed to be committed violated ILO pacts and agreements, and were also crimes against humanity and war crimes, according to U.S. and international law.

On June 21, 2007, the Birmingham News reported that the US district judge presiding over the case in Birmingham dismissed the wrongful death charges against Drummond. The company is still being tried for a war crimes claim filed under the U.S. Alien Tort Statute.

On July 26, 2007, jurors in the case found Drummond not liable for the deaths of the three union representative and rejected the claims by Sintraminergetica that the company aided in the deaths.[85]

Drummond Company claims it has brought many jobs to the country and a level of stability to the mostly impoverished small town (corregimiento) of La Loma, Cesar, which has suffered civil unrest and corruption scandals. The company established a village for the mine workers and their families to live. The Drummond family established a school in the town for the mine workers' children.

Abu Ghraib

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See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Alien Tort Statute, codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1350, grants United States district courts original jurisdiction over any civil action brought by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.[1] Enacted by the First Congress in 1789 as section 9 of the Judiciary Act, it originally served as a jurisdictional grant to federalize claims by foreign nationals involving breaches of customary international law, such as piracy, safe-conduct violations, or ambassadorial infringements, thereby mitigating risks of diplomatic disputes that could undermine the young republic's foreign relations.[2] Largely dormant for nearly two centuries, the statute experienced a revival in the 1980s through cases like Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, which enabled suits against foreign officials for human rights abuses abroad under the guise of universal jurisdiction, transforming it into a vehicle for transnational litigation against state actors and, later, corporations implicated in atrocities.[3] Subsequent Supreme Court rulings have imposed strict limits, emphasizing that the ATS confers no new causes of action but permits only a "narrow set" of claims analogous to the three offenses recognized under the law of nations at the time of enactment—offenses with definite content and acceptance as binding international norms—thus rejecting expansive judicial creation of liabilities for modern human rights violations without clear historical analogs.[4] In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004), the Court upheld the statute's validity as a purely jurisdictional provision while cautioning against its use to displace executive foreign policy prerogatives or impose unchecked liability, as exemplified by denying a claim for brief transnational abduction lacking roots in 18th-century international law.[5] Further restrictions in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013) introduced a presumption against extraterritorial application absent a substantial U.S. territorial nexus, curtailing suits over wholly foreign conduct, while Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC (2018) barred foreign corporations as defendants to avoid diplomatic friction.[2] These developments highlight ongoing controversies over the statute's role in balancing access to U.S. courts for victims of international wrongs against concerns of judicial overreach, separation-of-powers violations, and unintended incentives for forum-shopping that could entangle federal courts in global disputes better handled by political branches.[3]

Statutory Text and Original Purpose

Wording of the Statute

The Alien Tort Statute, enacted as part of Section 9 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, grants federal district courts original jurisdiction over specific civil claims by non-U.S. citizens. Its original text reads: "...and of all suits brought by an alien, for a tort only, in violation of the law of nations, or of a treaty of the United States."[6] This provision appears amid broader grants of jurisdiction to district courts, including admiralty and diversity cases, but stands distinct in addressing international law violations actionable by foreigners.[6] The phrase "suits brought by an alien" limits standing to non-citizens, excluding U.S. nationals from invoking the statute for such claims. "For a tort only" restricts remedies to civil wrongs akin to common-law torts, excluding contractual, statutory, or other non-tort causes of action. "In violation of the law of nations" incorporates then-understood customary international law, such as safe-conduct violations, piracy, or ambassadorial insults, as violations actionable under federal jurisdiction. The inclusion of "or of a treaty of the United States" extends coverage to breaches of ratified treaties, though few such claims materialized historically.[7] Codified without substantive change as 28 U.S.C. § 1350 in the 1948 revision of the Judicial Code, the modern wording states: "The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States."[8] This recodification preserved the jurisdictional grant but omitted archaic phrasing, aligning it with contemporary statutory style while maintaining the original scope. No amendments have altered the core text since enactment, underscoring its brevity and enduring form as a jurisdictional rather than substantive liability provision.[1]

Enactment in the Judiciary Act of 1789

The Alien Tort Statute was enacted as a provision within Section 9 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, which established the basic structure of the federal court system in the United States. Passed by the First Congress on September 24, 1789, and signed into law by President George Washington on the same day, the Act created district courts with original jurisdiction over specified civil matters, including those arising under admiralty, maritime law, and certain international obligations.[9] The ATS clause specifically empowered these district courts with "original cognizance... of all causes where an alien sues for a tort only in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States."[9] This jurisdictional grant was drafted by Oliver Ellsworth, a key figure in the Act's committee, as part of broader efforts to define federal judicial authority concurrent with state courts in limited areas.[10] The inclusion of the ATS reflected the young nation's commitment to upholding international norms to foster diplomatic stability, particularly in an era when violations by American citizens against foreigners could provoke foreign retaliation or undermine U.S. sovereignty. At the time, the "law of nations"—derived from writers like Vattel and Grotius—encompassed well-defined offenses such as piracy, interference with ambassadors' rights, and breaches of safe conducts, for which private remedies were anticipated rather than expansive human rights enforcement. Unlike more debated elements of the Judiciary Act, such as the Supreme Court's appellate powers, the ATS provision elicited no recorded floor debates in Congress, suggesting consensus on its narrow role in providing aliens access to federal courts for a discrete class of international torts cognizable under common law traditions.[11] This enactment ensured that the United States could internally address such claims, preempting potential "denials of justice" that might escalate into state-to-state conflicts under customary international law.[12] The statute's text emphasized "tort only," limiting its scope to civil actions for damages rather than criminal prosecutions or equitable relief, aligning with the district courts' non-jury original jurisdiction in non-admiralty cases.[7] By confining suits to those brought by aliens, the provision targeted interstate or international friction points, excluding domestic disputes and reflecting a pragmatic response to the Constitution's allocation of foreign affairs powers to the federal government under Article III.[13] This framework persisted without amendment until codified in the modern era as 28 U.S.C. § 1350, preserving the original wording's jurisdictional essence.[1]

Founders' Intent and Law of Nations Context

The Alien Tort Statute, codified as section 9 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 and signed into law by President George Washington on September 24, 1789, granted federal district courts original jurisdiction over civil actions by aliens for torts committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.[9] This provision passed without recorded debate in the First Congress, yet its placement amid clauses addressing admiralty, crimes on the high seas, and captures reflected the Founders' prioritization of federal control over matters risking international friction.[14] As a nascent republic vulnerable to European powers, the United States faced pressure to demonstrate adherence to international norms; state-level failures under the Articles of Confederation—such as obstructing British debt recovery or assaults on foreign diplomats—had already invited reprisals and underscored the need for uniform federal remedies to avert war.[15] James Madison, in Federalist No. 42, highlighted how decentralized handling of law of nations violations, including private injuries to foreigners, could disrupt national peace, informing the ATS as a mechanism to centralize jurisdiction and fulfill state obligations under customary international law.[14] The "law of nations" in 1789 denoted the body of customary rules binding civilized states, as codified by jurists like Emmerich de Vattel in The Law of Nations (1758), which required sovereigns to punish or compensate for their citizens' wrongs against foreigners to preclude justified retaliation.[15] Vattel's framework emphasized "perfect rights" violations—those demanding specific performance or damages—whereby a nation's omission of redress equated to its own offense, potentially authorizing enemy seizures.[14] Influenced by William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England (1769), actionable torts under the ATS were understood to encompass universal offenses enforceable in domestic courts, principally: infringement of ambassadors' privileges, violation of safe-conducts granted to aliens, and piracy as a crime against all humanity.[16] These aligned with Article III's judicial power over controversies between aliens and citizens, targeting intentional harms by U.S. persons that implicated national responsibility, rather than broad or emerging norms.[15] Early Attorney General opinions, such as William Bradford's 1795 analysis of U.S. citizens' assault on a French vessel off Sierra Leone, affirmed the ATS's role in providing civil redress where criminal prosecution failed, reinforcing its function in upholding international comity without expanding to alien-alien disputes or extraterritorial acts absent U.S. ties.[14] Scholarly interpretations concur that the Founders intended a narrow grant to mitigate diplomatic vulnerabilities, not a vehicle for judicial policymaking, though debates persist on whether it strictly confined torts to Blackstone's triad or extended to Vattel-derived duties for any egregious citizen-on-alien injury risking state liability.[17][16] This context positioned the ATS as a safeguard for the Union's external sovereignty, complementing criminal statutes like the 1790 Crimes Act for parallel enforcement of law of nations breaches.[14]

Early Applications and Dormancy

18th and 19th Century Cases

The Alien Tort Statute (ATS) was invoked sparingly in the 18th and 19th centuries, with only two reported cases during the 18th century and none of significant note in the 19th, underscoring its limited early role in addressing discrete violations of the law of nations, such as infringements on neutral rights or safe conducts during maritime conflicts.[2] These applications primarily arose in the context of international tensions following the American Revolution, where federal courts exercised jurisdiction to prevent diplomatic incidents but rarely awarded relief on the merits.[18] In Moxon v. The Brigantine Fanny (1793), a British subject filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Pennsylvania against captors who had seized a neutral vessel during wartime, claiming damages for a tortious violation of the law of nations.[19] The court dismissed the action, ruling that the capture did not qualify as a cognizable tort under international law, as it lacked the specificity of paradigmatic offenses like piracy or ambassadorial violations.[20] This early dismissal highlighted the ATS's jurisdictional boundaries, confined to torts with clear roots in 18th-century customary international law rather than general property disputes.[21] The subsequent case, Bolchos v. Darrell (1795), marked the first successful assertion of ATS jurisdiction in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina. A French captain sought recovery of a cargo of slaves captured alongside a Spanish prize vessel amid Anglo-Spanish hostilities against France, alleging the seizure violated neutral rights under the law of nations or U.S. treaties.[2] [22] The court affirmed jurisdiction under the ATS as an alternative to admiralty authority but denied relief on the merits, determining that the slaves—intended for sale in Spanish colonies under a French decree freeing slaves upon arrival in French ports—were lawful subjects of capture as enemy property.[2] [23] This outcome reflected contemporary understandings of prize law and limited the ATS to facilitating claims tied to wartime safe conducts without broadly expanding to human rights or property protections beyond established international norms.[24] The absence of reported 19th-century ATS litigation aligns with the statute's dormancy, as potential claims involving violations of safe conducts, ambassadorial immunities, or piracy were typically resolved through diplomacy, admiralty courts, or state jurisdiction, reducing the need for federal intervention.[2] [20] Scholarly analyses confirm that pre-20th-century uses remained confined to these narrow categories, with courts interpreting "torts...in violation of the law of nations" through a strict lens of Blackstone's enumerated offenses, avoiding expansive readings that might encroach on executive foreign affairs powers.[21]

Reasons for Long-Term Inactivity

Following a handful of cases in the late 18th and 19th centuries, primarily involving piracy, violations of safe conducts, and ambassadorial immunities, the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) entered a period of prolonged dormancy lasting nearly two centuries, from roughly the 1820s until its revival in Filártiga v. Peña-Irala in 1980.[25] During this time, successful ATS claims were exceedingly rare, with only two reported victories: Bolchos v. Darrel in 1795, concerning the recovery of enslaved cargo under French prize law, and Adra v. Clift in 1961, addressing forged passports in a child custody dispute violating international comity norms.[25] The U.S. Supreme Court never sustained a plaintiff victory under the statute in this era, contributing to its obscurity, often likened to a "legal Lohengrin" of indeterminate origins and purpose.[25] A primary factor in this inactivity was the statute's narrow original scope, which presupposed causes of action arising directly from well-established violations of the law of nations—such as piracy, infringement on ambassadors' rights, or breaches of safe passage for aliens—rather than creating new substantive rights.[26] These offenses, rooted in 18th-century customary international law, became infrequent as the United States transitioned from a vulnerable post-revolutionary state to a major power, diminishing the need for private suits to safeguard trade and diplomacy with foreign nations.[11] Early cases, like Moxon v. The Fanny in 1793, were often dismissed on jurisdictional or merits grounds, providing little precedent to encourage further litigation, while the absence of Supreme Court guidance reinforced judicial caution.[26] Additionally, U.S. courts and policymakers favored diplomatic channels over private adjudication for international torts, viewing judicial intervention as a potential encroachment on executive foreign affairs prerogatives and state-to-state relations.[25] This preference aligned with the ATS's jurisdictional character, which did not independently authorize remedies absent pre-existing international law norms enforceable by individuals—a limitation unaddressed by Congress through clarifying legislation.[26] The 1938 Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins decision further constrained potential ATS use by curtailing federal common lawmaking, eliminating judicial discretion to fashion causes of action for evolving norms without statutory basis.[26] Collectively, these elements—coupled with a nationalistic shift prioritizing domestic interests over alien claims—rendered the statute effectively moribund until post-World War II developments in human rights law prompted its rediscovery.[25][11]

Modern Judicial Revitalization

Filártiga v. Peña-Irala and Initial Expansion

The case of Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, 630 F.2d 876 (2d Cir. 1980), arose from the torture and death of Joelito Filártiga, a 17-year-old Paraguayan citizen, on March 29, 1976, in Asunción, Paraguay.[27] His father, Dr. Humberto Filártiga, and sister, Dolly Filártiga, both Paraguayan nationals residing in the United States, filed a wrongful death suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York against Americo Norberto Peña-Irala, a former Inspector General of Police in Asunción who was then present in the United States on an expired visa.[27] The plaintiffs alleged that Peña-Irala, acting under color of official authority during Paraguay's Stroessner dictatorship, had kidnapped and tortured Joelito to death in retaliation for his father's political opposition to the regime.[27] The district court dismissed the action, ruling that deliberate torture by a state official did not constitute a violation of the "law of nations" under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), 28 U.S.C. § 1350, and thus federal jurisdiction was lacking.[27] On appeal, the Second Circuit reversed in a unanimous decision authored by Judge Irving Kaufman on June 30, 1980.[27] The court held that the ATS not only grants federal district courts original jurisdiction over civil actions by aliens for torts committed in violation of the law of nations or a U.S. treaty but also implicitly creates a private right of action for such claims.[27] It further determined that official torture—defined as the deliberate infliction of extreme pain for extracting information, punishment, or intimidation, when perpetrated under color of law—constitutes a violation of the law of nations, as codified in universal norms including Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Convention Against Torture.[27] The decision emphasized that such acts contravene jus cogens principles of customary international law, binding on all states regardless of domestic ratification, and that U.S. courts could enforce these norms against individual perpetrators found within U.S. jurisdiction without requiring exhaustion of local remedies abroad.[27] Peña-Irala did not appear at trial, leading to a default judgment of approximately $10.4 million in damages for the plaintiffs.[28] Filártiga initiated the modern expansion of the ATS by establishing it as a vehicle for enforcing customary international law norms against human rights abuses committed extraterritorially by foreign state actors. Prior to this ruling, the statute had lain largely dormant since the 19th century, with courts treating it as jurisdictional only and requiring a separate cause of action.[24] The decision prompted an initial wave of litigation in the 1980s, including claims for summary execution, genocide, and slavery-like practices, as lower federal courts grappled with identifying "definite" and "universal" violations of international law actionable under the ATS. For instance, subsequent Second Circuit precedents like Iwanowa v. Ford Motor Co., 67 F. Supp. 2d 424 (D.N.J. 1999), extended the framework to forced labor during World War II, though not all early expansions succeeded due to evidentiary or jurisdictional hurdles.[29] This period marked a shift toward viewing the ATS as a tool for accountability in transnational torts, though expansions were cabined to state-sponsored acts akin to those in Filártiga, excluding private conduct or non-universal norms.[27]

Pre-Supreme Court Developments in Lower Courts

In the years following Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, lower federal courts interpreted the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) as conferring both jurisdiction and a cause of action for aliens alleging torts in violation of specific, universal norms of the law of nations, such as official torture and extrajudicial killing.[25] This view contrasted with earlier dormancy, treating the ATS as a vehicle to incorporate evolving customary international law without requiring a separate statutory remedy.[30] However, interpretations varied, particularly regarding whether the ATS demanded state action and the viability of claims against non-state actors. The D.C. Circuit's decision in Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic (1984) highlighted early divisions, dismissing claims arising from a terrorist attack on Israeli civilians while producing three separate opinions.[30] Judge Bork viewed the ATS as strictly jurisdictional, denying any implied cause of action absent explicit incorporation into domestic law; Judge Robb similarly rejected private enforcement for non-state actors like the Palestine Liberation Organization; and Judge Edwards concurred in dismissal for lack of state action and insufficiently defined international norms but affirmed that the ATS could supply a cause of action for clear violations by officials.[30] This fragmentation influenced subsequent caution but did not halt expansion, as other circuits largely adopted Filártiga's approach, permitting suits for conduct abroad with a U.S. nexus, such as defendant presence or effects felt domestically.[25] By the mid-1990s, courts upheld ATS claims against individual perpetrators for core human rights abuses. In Hilao v. Estate of Marcos (9th Cir. 1996), the court affirmed a $1.966 billion class-action judgment against the estate of former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos for systematic torture, summary executions, and disappearances committed by military forces under his command, applying the ATS alongside the Torture Victim Protection Act and emphasizing the universality of prohibitions against such acts. Similarly, Kadic v. Karadžić (2d Cir. 1995) recognized jurisdiction over claims of genocide, rape, and other atrocities in Bosnia by Radovan Karadžić, a non-state actor leading self-proclaimed Republika Srpska forces; the court held that certain violations—like genocide and war crimes—do not require state action under international law, though others (e.g., torture) generally do unless committed under color of authority. Lower courts also began extending ATS liability to corporations aiding state violations, marking a shift toward accountability for private entities in extraterritorial contexts. In Doe v. Unocal Corp. (C.D. Cal. 1997, affirmed in part by 9th Cir. panels pre-2004), plaintiffs alleging forced labor, murder, and rape by Burmese military forces securing Unocal's Yadana pipeline project survived dismissal; the district court found ATS jurisdiction viable for U.S. corporations aiding and abetting international law violations, drawing on secondary liability theories from customary law.[31] This ruling, upheld on interlocutory appeals, reflected growing acceptance of corporate complicity claims, though exhaustion of local remedies and forum non conveniens defenses often complicated proceedings.[25] No definitive circuit splits emerged on core elements like cause of action or extraterritorial reach pre-Sosa, but debates over private actor liability and aiding/abetting standards foreshadowed Supreme Court scrutiny, with successes rare amid evidentiary and sovereign immunity hurdles.[25]

Supreme Court Limitations and Narrowing

Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain: Defining Actionable Norms

In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692 (2004), the U.S. Supreme Court addressed the scope of causes of action available under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), holding that federal courts may recognize private claims only for a narrow category of international law violations with the status of clearly defined, universally accepted norms comparable to those recognized in 1789, such as piracy, violations of safe conducts, and offenses against ambassadors.[32] The case arose from the February 2, 1990, abduction of Mexican physician Humberto Alvarez-Machain from Guadalajara, Mexico, by petitioner Jose Francisco Sosa and accomplices, who were enlisted by U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents to deliver him to the United States for trial on charges related to the 1985 kidnapping, torture, and murder of DEA Special Agent Enrique Camarena.[32] Alvarez was detained for less than one day in Mexico before being flown to El Paso, Texas; he was indicted, held in federal custody for over two years, tried, and acquitted on April 27, 1992.[33] Following his acquittal, Alvarez filed suit in 1993 against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and against Sosa under the ATS, alleging that the abduction constituted an arbitrary arrest in violation of the law of nations.[32] The U.S. District Court for the Central District of California dismissed both claims, ruling that the FTCA barred recovery due to the discretionary function exception and that the ATS claim failed to allege a violation of a specific international norm.[34] The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the FTCA dismissal but reversed on the ATS claim, holding that a rule prohibiting "prolonged arbitrary detention" by one country on another's territory violated customary international law, even for a detention of under 24 hours.[32] In a decision issued on June 29, 2004, Justice David Souter's majority opinion unanimously upheld the FTCA dismissal under the discretionary function exception, which immunizes government decisions involving policy judgment, such as the DEA's choice to authorize the abduction amid stalled extradition efforts with Mexico.[32] On the ATS, the Court interpreted the statute as a jurisdictional grant rather than a blanket creation of new causes of action, affirming that it incorporates judge-made law allowing suits for violations of the "law of nations" but cautioning against expansive judicial recognition of claims absent clear congressional intent.[32] Drawing an analogy to the federal common law's limits post-Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), the opinion emphasized separation-of-powers concerns, stating that courts should exercise "great caution" in implying causes of action under the ATS to avoid interfering with executive foreign affairs authority or creating obligations beyond those intended by the First Congress.[32] The Court defined actionable norms under the ATS as those with "definite content and acceptance among civilized nations" akin to the three paradigmatic 18th-century offenses—piracy, ambassadorial infringements, and safe-conduct violations—that were "specific" enough for private redress and universally obligatory.[32] Alvarez's claim failed because no specific, universal rule of international law prohibits one sovereign's agents from abducting a person on foreign soil without that nation's consent; while territorial sovereignty and extradition treaties protect against invasions of sovereignty, Alvarez invoked no treaty violation, and customary law does not elevate brief, one-day detentions to the level of a discrete, actionable tort like those in 1789.[32] Justice Breyer concurred in the judgment, advocating an even more restrictive approach by questioning whether the ATS authorizes any new causes of action beyond its original understanding, though acknowledging limited modern analogs like genocide or slavery might qualify if backed by treaties or near-universal consensus.[32] This ruling curtailed the ATS's post-Filártiga expansion in lower courts, requiring plaintiffs to demonstrate not just a general norm against arbitrary detention but one with the precision and acceptance necessary for private enforcement, thereby prioritizing historical limits and judicial restraint over evolving human rights claims lacking firm international grounding.[32]

Kiobel: Presumption Against Extraterritoriality

In Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., decided on April 17, 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court addressed whether the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) permits federal courts to entertain suits alleging violations of the law of nations occurring entirely within a foreign sovereign's territory.[35] Petitioners, Nigerian nationals residing in the United States, filed a class-action complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in 2002 against Royal Dutch Petroleum Company, Shell Transport and Trading Company, and Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria, alleging that the companies aided and abetted the Nigerian government in the 1990s to suppress protests against oil exploration in the Ogoni region of Nigeria.[36] The suit claimed that respondents provided food, transportation, and compensation to Nigerian forces, which then razed villages, executed individuals, and committed rapes, beatings, and arrests, in violation of international norms against summary execution, torture, arbitrary arrest, and crimes against humanity.[35] The district court denied motions to dismiss, allowing aiding-and-abetting claims to proceed, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed in 2010, holding that the law of nations does not recognize corporate liability under the ATS.[37] The Supreme Court granted certiorari initially to resolve corporate liability but, after reargument, vacated the Second Circuit's judgment and remanded in light of Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004), prompting the appeals court to reaffirm dismissal on extraterritoriality grounds in 2011.[35] The Supreme Court then took up the extraterritoriality issue, unanimously affirming dismissal but through fragmented opinions emphasizing a presumption against extraterritorial application of U.S. law.[36] Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for a five-justice majority (joined by Justices Scalia, Thomas, Kennedy, and Alito), held that the presumption against extraterritoriality—rooted in the need to respect congressional intent, avoid judicial overreach into foreign policy, and prevent conflicts with international comity—applies with full force to the ATS.[35] The majority reasoned that nothing in the ATS's text, history, or purpose rebuts this canon, as the statute provides jurisdiction over a narrow set of international-law violations without creating new causes of action or signaling intent to regulate foreign conduct.[35] Roberts noted that applying the ATS to "foreign-cubed" cases (involving foreign plaintiffs, foreign defendants, and foreign conduct) risks unwarranted interference in other nations' sovereignty, especially given corporations' global presence; mere U.S. listing on stock exchanges or investor nationality does not suffice to overcome the presumption.[35] The opinion acknowledged a potential exception where claims "touch and concern the territory of the United States... with sufficient force to displace the presumption," but found no such connection in this case, where all relevant conduct occurred in Nigeria.[35] Justice Anthony Kennedy's brief concurrence reinforced the majority's caution against broad ATS extraterritoriality, warning that such suits could disrupt U.S. foreign relations or invite reciprocal foreign litigation against American actors, though he suggested claims might proceed if they implicate U.S. territory or aid provided from within it.[36] Justice Stephen Breyer, in a concurrence joined by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan, agreed the presumption barred this suit but advocated a narrower approach: ATS claims should be viable only where the defendant's domestic U.S. conduct has a substantial connection to the international-law violation, such as purposeful aid from American soil, to avoid purely foreign disputes while preserving the statute's role in enforcing universal norms.[35] This decision curtailed post-Filártiga expansions of the ATS, dismissing many pending corporate liability suits involving overseas human rights abuses and shifting focus to claims with meaningful U.S. nexus.[37]

Jesner and Nestlé: Corporate Liability Restrictions

In Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, decided on April 24, 2018, the Supreme Court addressed whether foreign corporations could be held liable under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) for alleged violations of the law of nations, stemming from claims that the defendant, a Jordanian bank, knowingly facilitated financial transactions supporting terrorist attacks in Israel between 1995 and 2005.[38] The Court, in a 5-4 decision authored by Justice Kennedy, held that the ATS does not permit suits against foreign corporations, reasoning that extending liability to such entities would intrude on the political branches' authority over foreign affairs and risk international friction, as federal courts lack institutional competence to determine which foreign corporations warrant accountability.[38] [39] This categorical bar on foreign corporate defendants under the ATS effectively closed a significant avenue for human rights litigation previously pursued in lower courts, where corporate liability had been recognized since Filártiga v. Peña-Irala (1980), though the decision left open liability for domestic corporations and individual foreign actors.[38] [40] The Jesner ruling emphasized separation-of-powers concerns, noting that Congress, not the judiciary, should decide whether to impose liability on foreign entities, particularly given the ATS's origins in addressing privateering and safe-conduct violations rather than modern corporate conduct.[38] Dissenting justices, led by Justice Sotomayor, argued that the majority's approach ignored historical precedents allowing corporate suits under international law and undermined the ATS's role in providing redress for grave violations, but the holding prioritized caution against judicial policymaking in sensitive diplomatic contexts.[38] By foreclosing foreign corporate liability, Jesner restricted the ATS's scope, shifting potential claims toward domestic actors or alternative statutes like the Torture Victim Protection Act, while underscoring the Court's view that expansive ATS interpretations could provoke foreign retaliation against U.S. interests abroad.[39] [38] Subsequently, in Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe, decided on June 17, 2021, the Supreme Court considered ATS claims against U.S.-based corporations accused of aiding and abetting child slavery in Ivory Coast cocoa farms through routine business practices like providing technical assistance and purchasing cocoa beans, with decisions made by employees during U.S. visits.[41] In an 8-1 per curiam opinion, the Court vacated the Ninth Circuit's revival of the suit, holding that plaintiffs failed to state a claim because they alleged only general corporate policies and individual employee actions rather than conduct directly attributable to the corporations themselves as entities.[41] This decision reinforced post-Kiobel limits on extraterritoriality by requiring plausible allegations of domestic conduct by the corporation—beyond mere oversight of overseas supply chains—to invoke ATS jurisdiction, effectively raising the pleading bar for aiding-and-abetting theories of liability.[41] [42] The Nestlé ruling clarified that aiding and abetting under the ATS demands the defendant's own affirmative acts with knowledge of harm, not just passive participation via subsidiary operations or employee decisions, aligning with the Court's prior narrowing in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004) by demanding a strong evidentiary basis for novel international norms.[41] Justice Sotomayor's dissent contended that the majority improperly resolved factual disputes at the pleadings stage and undervalued international law's recognition of corporate aiding-and-abetting liability, but the decision prioritized dismissing claims rooted in attenuated U.S. touches to avoid overbroad federal court involvement in global commerce.[41] Together, Jesner and Nestlé substantially curtailed corporate exposure under the ATS: the former by exempting foreign firms outright, the latter by demanding entity-specific domestic actions for U.S. firms, thereby limiting the statute's utility for transnational human rights enforcement and prompting reliance on legislative reforms or foreign fora.[41] [38]

Scope of Liability and Key Doctrinal Elements

Defining Violations of the Law of Nations

The Alien Tort Statute (ATS), codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1350, confers original jurisdiction on federal district courts for civil actions brought by aliens alleging torts committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.[1] At enactment in 1789, the law of nations—understood as customary international law—encompassed a narrow set of offenses with clear, universal consensus among nations, primarily violations of safe conducts granted to aliens, infringements on the rights of ambassadors, and piracy on the high seas, as articulated by William Blackstone and reflected in Founding-era commentary.[15] These paradigms were chosen for their specificity, obligatoriness, and minimal risk of diplomatic friction, enabling U.S. courts to address harms that sovereigns had historically permitted private redress without encroaching on executive foreign affairs powers.[4] In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004), the Supreme Court clarified that while the ATS supplies jurisdiction, a viable cause of action requires the alleged violation to rest on a norm of international character "accepted by the civilized world" and "defined with specificity comparable to" the 18th-century offenses.[5] The Court emphasized judicial caution, instructing lower courts to presume no affirmative intent by Congress to authorize private actions absent such a norm, to avoid unintended expansions that could interfere with U.S. foreign policy or invite forum-shopping by litigants seeking to impose liability for conduct lacking universal prohibition.[4] Claims failing this threshold, such as brief arbitrary detention abroad without further mistreatment, do not qualify, as they lack the historical precision and consensus of core violations like piracy, which Blackstone described as offenses against the universal law of society or humanity.[5] Post-Sosa, courts have recognized certain modern equivalents meeting the specificity test, including official torture (as in Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, 1980, where prolonged, state-inflicted pain for extracting information was deemed akin to historical barbarities universally condemned), extrajudicial killing, genocide, and slave trading, provided they involve conduct with the same obligatory, non-discretionary character as the original paradigms.[4] Norms must derive from sources like treaties or customary law with broad state practice and opinio juris, not aspirational declarations or evolving human rights rhetoric lacking binding force in 1789 or equivalent definiteness today; for instance, vague prohibitions on "arbitrary" actions or environmental harms have been rejected for insufficient universality and precision.[5] This framework prioritizes empirical consensus over judicial innovation, ensuring ATS claims align with the statute's original function of providing limited redress for egregious, consensus-driven breaches rather than serving as a general vehicle for international litigation.[15]

Requirements for Corporate and State Actor Involvement

The Alien Tort Statute (ATS), codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1350, permits suits by non-U.S. citizens only for torts violating the law of nations, with many such violations—such as torture, extrajudicial killing, or genocide—requiring state action or conduct under color of state authority as an element of the offense under customary international law.[3][2] In Filártiga v. Peña-Irala (1980), the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that torture committed by Paraguayan officials under color of law constituted a violation of the law of nations, distinguishing it from private violence and grounding liability in the state-sanctioned nature of the act.[3] This state action requirement derives from the specificity of international norms actionable under the ATS, as clarified in Sosa v. Álvarez-Machain (2004), where the Supreme Court limited claims to a "narrow set" of universal violations with "definite content" akin to 18th-century paradigms like piracy (which permits private actor liability) but excluding indefinite or purely private harms.[43] Foreign states themselves enjoy immunity under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), precluding direct ATS suits against them, though individual officials may be sued in their personal capacity for acts like official torture if not shielded by immunity doctrines.[2] Private actors, including corporations, face stringent barriers to primary liability under the ATS, as most recognized violations presuppose state involvement; exceptions apply to universal jurisdiction offenses like piracy or slave trading, where no state action is needed.[44] Corporations cannot be held directly liable for state-dependent torts absent evidence of acting under color of law, such as through joint participation with officials, but secondary liability for aiding and abetting state perpetrators is possible if the corporation provided purposeful assistance that was a substantial factor in the violation, with knowledge of the circumstances.[45][46] The Second Circuit in Khulumani v. Barclay National Bank Ltd. (2007 en banc) adopted this standard for aiding and abetting under international law, requiring awareness that the aid facilitated the primary tort, a test applied in subsequent corporate cases.[47] Corporate liability is further constrained by Supreme Court rulings: Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC (2018) categorically barred ATS suits against foreign corporations, citing risks of diplomatic friction and judicial overreach in adjudicating foreign conduct.[48] For domestic (U.S.) corporations, Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021) did not resolve immunity but imposed a "domestic touch" requirement under Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013), mandating that the claim "touch and concern" U.S. territory with sufficient force to displace the presumption against extraterritoriality; mere generic corporate purchases abroad or passive investment fail this test.[49][43] Aiding claims against U.S. corporations thus demand evidence of purposeful domestic decisions aiding the violation, not attenuated supply-chain links, as generic commercial activity alone does not suffice.[50] Lower courts, such as the Ninth Circuit in recent rulings, have permitted some U.S. corporate aiding claims to proceed where plaintiffs allege direct, knowing support for state abuses, but dismissals remain common absent concrete ties.[51]

Domestic Touch and Extraterritorial Limits

The Supreme Court in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013) established a presumption against the extraterritorial application of the Alien Tort Statute, holding that it does not extend to claims arising from conduct occurring entirely abroad unless those claims "touch and concern the territory of the United States ... with sufficient force to displace the default rule." This limitation reflects concerns over judicial interference in foreign sovereign affairs and the need for a meaningful U.S. connection to justify federal jurisdiction over international torts. The Kiobel majority emphasized that foreign corporations' routine contacts with the United States, such as listing shares on U.S. exchanges or maintaining offices for business solicitation, do not overcome the presumption. Lower courts have interpreted the "touch and concern" requirement to demand allegations of substantial domestic conduct integral to the violation, rather than peripheral or general corporate activity.[52] For example, in the Second Circuit's en banc decision remanding Kiobel, claims against corporations for aiding Nigerian officials in human rights abuses were dismissed because all operative conduct—decision-making, aid provision, and harms—occurred in Nigeria, despite the defendants' U.S. commercial presence. Similarly, the Eleventh Circuit in Mamani v. Berzain (2018) rejected Bolivian officials' liability for protest-related killings, finding no sufficient U.S. nexus where the events and decisions were confined to Bolivia. Even against U.S.-based defendants, the domestic touch must link specifically to the tortious acts, not merely the defendant's nationality or headquarters. In Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021), the Supreme Court, while dismissing on aiding-and-abetting grounds, signaled through concurrences that generalized U.S. purchasing or sourcing decisions do not constitute a strong enough nexus for child labor claims abroad, as they resemble ordinary business operations rather than direct contributions to the norm violation. Courts have upheld claims, however, where U.S. executives allegedly directed or facilitated the overseas torts from American soil, as in the Ninth Circuit's 2024 revival of Doe I v. Cisco Systems, Inc., involving U.S.-based decisions to supply surveillance technology used for persecution in China. This framework has narrowed ATS viability for forum-shopping plaintiffs, requiring plaintiffs to plead—and often prove at summary judgment—concrete U.S.-sited elements like strategic aid, financing, or oversight tied causally to the foreign harm. The "sufficient force" qualifier remains fact-specific and unpredictable, with some circuits demanding early-stage evidentiary showings beyond the complaint.[53] Critics from human rights advocates argue it unduly restricts accountability for U.S.-linked complicity, while defenders view it as preserving separation of powers by avoiding encroachments on executive foreign policy prerogatives.[54]

Prominent Lower Court Cases

Energy Sector Litigation (e.g., Unocal, Chevron, Rio Tinto)

In Doe v. Unocal Corp., filed in December 1996 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, Myanmar villagers alleged that Unocal Corporation, along with Total S.A. and the Myanmar military, committed or aided forced labor, murder, rape, and village destruction during the construction of the Yadana natural gas pipeline from 1991 to 1995.[31][55] Plaintiffs claimed Unocal knowingly benefited from the military's abuses by contracting them for security and labor, providing equipment and payments that facilitated violations of the law of nations.[56] The district court dismissed direct liability claims against Unocal in 2000 but allowed aiding-and-abetting theories to proceed; on appeal, the Ninth Circuit held in September 2002 that corporations could face ATS liability for knowingly associating with abusive state actors, reversing summary judgment and remanding for trial.[57] The case settled in March 2005 without admission of liability, with Unocal contributing undisclosed funds for humanitarian projects in Myanmar and direct compensation to plaintiffs, marking an early instance of ATS-driven corporate accountability in energy infrastructure.[58][59] Bowoto v. Chevron Corporation, initiated in 1999 in the same district, targeted Chevron's Nigerian subsidiary for alleged complicity in extrajudicial killings, torture, and arbitrary arrests during a 1998 military crackdown on protests at the Parabe offshore oil platform.[60] Nigerian plaintiffs asserted under the ATS that Chevron aided violations by transporting troops via company vessels and helicopters, paying the military, and failing to intervene, linking these actions to suppression of environmental activism in the Niger Delta.[61] The district court denied summary judgment on key ATS claims in 2006, permitting trial on theories of direct participation and aiding and abetting.[62] After a month-long trial, a jury unanimously ruled on December 1, 2008, that Chevron was not liable for the alleged torts, a verdict affirmed by the Ninth Circuit in September 2010, which found sufficient evidence of state action but upheld the factual determination against corporate responsibility.[63][64] Sarei v. Rio Tinto plc, commenced in November 2000 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, involved Bougainville Island residents suing Rio Tinto over its Panguna copper-gold mine operations from 1969 to 1989, alleging environmental devastation, racial discrimination, health harms from pollution, and incitement of a decade-long civil war through support for Papua New Guinea forces.[65] Plaintiffs invoked the ATS for claims including genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and violations of international environmental law, asserting Rio Tinto's aid to security forces prolonged conflict displacing over 100,000 people and causing thousands of deaths.[66] The district court dismissed in 2002 on political question grounds, but the Ninth Circuit vacated in 2007 and, en banc in 2011, reinstated most claims, rejecting exhaustion requirements and forum non conveniens while narrowing some on specificity under Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain.[67] Following the Supreme Court's 2013 Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum decision imposing a presumption against ATS extraterritoriality, the Ninth Circuit affirmed dismissal of remaining claims in June 2013, and the U.S. Supreme Court vacated and remanded in 2014 without reviving the suit, effectively ending the litigation in Rio Tinto's favor.[68][69] These cases exemplify ATS challenges to energy and extractive firms for overseas security arrangements and environmental practices, often hinging on aiding-and-abetting liability amid host-state instability, though outcomes varied due to evidentiary burdens, settlements, and evolving doctrinal limits.[54] Pre-Sosa rulings expanded corporate exposure, but later scrutiny emphasized narrow, universal norms and domestic ties.[70]

Technology and Other Corporate Cases (e.g., Yahoo, Cisco, Nestlé Remands)

In cases involving technology companies under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), plaintiffs have primarily alleged that U.S. firms aided foreign governments in suppressing dissidents through data disclosure or customized surveillance tools, invoking claims of aiding and abetting torture, extrajudicial killing, and arbitrary detention. These suits test the boundaries of corporate liability for overseas conduct with purported domestic ties, such as product design or executive decisions in the United States.[71] Outcomes have varied, with early settlements in some instances and recent appellate reversals allowing others to advance past dismissal motions, though Supreme Court precedents like Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021) have imposed stringent requirements for pleading domestic activity to overcome extraterritoriality presumptions.[41] The Wang Xiaoning v. Yahoo! Inc. litigation, filed on April 18, 2007, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, centered on Yahoo's disclosure of email account information to Chinese authorities in 2004 and 2005, which plaintiffs alleged facilitated the imprisonment, torture, and enforced disappearance of pro-democracy advocates Shi Tao and Wang Xiaoning. Relatives of the victims sought damages under the ATS for aiding and abetting violations of the law of nations, including prolonged incommunicado detention and summary execution attempts. The district court partially sustained the ATS claims in 2009, rejecting Yahoo's arguments against secondary liability, but the case concluded via settlement in November 2011, with Yahoo agreeing to contribute $17 million to the Tang Prize Foundation for a humanitarian relief fund aiding Chinese dissidents and their families, without admission of liability.[72][73] This resolution highlighted early ATS use against tech firms for compliance with foreign censorship regimes but avoided a precedential ruling on aiding-and-abetting standards.[74] More enduring controversy arose in Doe I v. Cisco Systems, Inc., commenced in November 2011 in the same district court, where anonymous Falun Gong practitioners accused Cisco of knowingly customizing routers, switches, and source code for China's Golden Shield Project—a nationwide surveillance network—thereby aiding the government's alleged torture, arbitrary detention, and extrajudicial killings of adherents from 2001 onward. Plaintiffs claimed Cisco's U.S.-based engineers and executives provided training and modifications enabling real-time monitoring and content filtering, satisfying ATS requirements for aiding and abetting under international law norms akin to those recognized in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004). The district court dismissed in 2014, citing insufficient domestic conduct post-Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013), but the Ninth Circuit reversed in part on July 7, 2023, holding that factual disputes over Cisco's purposeful U.S. design contributions precluded dismissal of corporate ATS aiding-and-abetting claims while affirming dismissal of Torture Victim Protection Act counts against executives.[75] The panel emphasized that allegations of "substantial assistance" with knowledge of harm distinguished the case from general corporate oversight, denying Cisco's motion for rehearing en banc on September 3, 2024; Cisco petitioned the Supreme Court for certiorari in February 2025, arguing the decision expands judicially implied secondary liability beyond historical ATS scope.[76][51] As of October 2025, the petition remains pending, underscoring ongoing circuit-level viability for tech-related ATS suits alleging specific U.S. operational involvement.[77] Nestlé remands exemplify ATS application to non-technology corporations post-Supreme Court narrowing, particularly in supply-chain complicity claims. In Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021), the Court unanimously held on June 17 that U.S. corporations cannot face ATS liability for aiding foreign child slavery absent allegations of more than high-level, general-purpose decision-making in the United States—such as routine board approvals for profitable overseas operations—which failed to rebut the Kiobel presumption against extraterritoriality.[41] Remanded to the Ninth Circuit, the plaintiffs' claims alleging Nestlé and Cargill's indirect support for Ivorian cocoa farm abuses through purchasing practices were dismissed in February 2022 for lacking pleaded domestic acts directly aiding specific violations, aligning with the Court's focus on claim "focus" rather than isolated U.S. headquarters activity.[78] Similar remands in companion food-sector cases, like those against Archer Daniels Midland, yielded dismissals by mid-2022, reinforcing that ATS corporate suits require evidence of U.S.-sourced conduct constituting the "substantial assistance" element of aiding and abetting, not mere oversight or market incentives. These outcomes have constrained "other corporate" ATS filings, shifting emphasis to cases with verifiable domestic technological or operational fingerprints, as in Cisco.[79]

Controversies and Criticisms

Allegations of Judicial Overreach and Forum Shopping

Critics, including legal scholars and business organizations, have argued that federal courts' interpretations of the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) constitute judicial overreach by transforming a jurisdictional grant into a broad vehicle for private causes of action against corporations for alleged human rights violations occurring abroad, exceeding the statute's original 1789 intent to address limited international torts like piracy and ambassadorial assaults.[80] In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (542 U.S. 692, 2004), the Supreme Court cautioned that ATS claims should be recognized only for a "narrow set" of international norms with "definite content and acceptance among civilized nations" akin to those at ratification, yet lower courts subsequently permitted expansive corporate liability theories, such as aiding and abetting foreign governments, until curtailed by later rulings like Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC (584 U.S. 241, 2018).[81] This expansion, beginning prominently with Filártiga v. Peña-Irala (630 F.2d 876, 2d Cir. 1980), has been faulted for encroaching on legislative and executive prerogatives in foreign affairs, as judges effectively legislate new liabilities without congressional authorization.[80] Allegations of forum shopping center on foreign plaintiffs' strategic filing of ATS suits in U.S. courts—often in plaintiff-friendly circuits like the Ninth or Second—to pursue remedies unavailable or unenforceable in their home countries, thereby bypassing local judicial systems and exhausting remedies norms embedded in customary international law.[82] Unlike the Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA), which explicitly requires exhaustion of local remedies, the ATS lacks such a mandate, enabling "litigation tourism" where plaintiffs target U.S.-based multinational corporations for extraterritorial acts, as seen in cases alleging complicity in overseas abuses without substantial U.S. connections.[82] Business coalitions, such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal Reform, have highlighted this as an abuse that exposes companies to protracted, costly discovery and settlement pressures for "specious liability" tied to foreign regimes' conduct, distorting investment decisions and favoring U.S. venues over domestic fora.[83] These practices have drawn bipartisan concern over comity and sovereignty, with the U.S. Department of Justice arguing in amicus briefs that unchecked ATS litigation risks "judicial imperialism" by adjudicating disputes better resolved locally, potentially hindering reconciliation processes like South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission.[82] Proponents of reform contend that without exhaustion requirements or clearer domestic nexus tests—as reinforced in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (569 U.S. 10, 2013) via the presumption against extraterritoriality—ATS suits incentivize strategic venue selection, undermining the statute's role in fostering international stability rather than unilateral U.S. intervention.[80] Despite Supreme Court narrowing, ongoing lower court applications perpetuate these criticisms, with fewer than 20% of ATS cases yielding plaintiff victories but imposing significant defensive burdens.[84]

Impacts on U.S. Foreign Policy and Economic Interests

The Alien Tort Statute (ATS) has drawn criticism for enabling private litigants to pursue extraterritorial claims that encroach on the executive branch's prerogative in conducting foreign policy, potentially complicating diplomatic relations and national security objectives. In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004), the Supreme Court acknowledged that ATS suits risk "intrud[ing] on the field of foreign affairs," which is primarily reserved for the political branches, as evidenced by historical executive concerns over judicial interference in international disputes. Similarly, in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013), the Court emphasized that claims alleging conduct occurring abroad "would reach the high seas of so-called extraterritoriality," raising risks of diplomatic friction with sovereign nations whose internal actions are implicated, such as in cases involving resource extraction in unstable regions like Nigeria or Myanmar. Amicus briefs from the U.S. Department of State in multiple ATS cases, including Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC (2018), have warned that allowing suits against foreign entities could provoke retaliatory measures abroad, undermining alliances and trade agreements, as seen in litigation targeting European banks for facilitating transactions in sanctioned contexts. Such litigation has also strained U.S. economic interests by imposing substantial compliance burdens on American corporations operating overseas, deterring investment in emerging markets and eroding competitiveness against foreign rivals exempt from similar liabilities. A study analyzing stock market reactions to ATS filings from 1993 to 2013 found that announcements of suits against U.S. firms led to statistically significant declines in market capitalization, averaging 0.5-1% per event, particularly in extractive industries where claims often allege complicity in local abuses.[85] In the Unocal case (Doe v. Unocal Corp., settled 2005), allegations of aiding Myanmar's military in a pipeline project not only incurred millions in defense costs but also prompted U.S. firms to reassess high-risk ventures, contributing to delayed energy infrastructure development in Southeast Asia at a time of growing U.S. dependence on non-Middle Eastern sources.[86] Critics, including business associations, argue this creates an uneven playing field, as foreign competitors face no equivalent exposure, potentially shifting billions in global investment away from U.S. entities; for instance, post-Jesner restrictions on foreign corporate liability preserved some deterrence against non-U.S. actors but left domestic firms disproportionately vulnerable in remanded cases like Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021).[2] These dynamics have prompted congressional scrutiny, with reports highlighting how ATS forum-shopping by plaintiffs—often represented by advocacy groups—exacerbates foreign policy misalignments, such as in Wiwa v. Royal Dutch Petroleum (2009 settlement), where suits against oil majors in Nigeria conflicted with U.S. efforts to stabilize African energy supplies amid geopolitical competition with China. Economically, the cumulative effect includes heightened insurance premiums and due diligence costs, estimated in the tens of millions annually for multinational compliance, which may discourage U.S. participation in development projects vital for export markets and supply chain resilience.[50] Proponents of reform contend that without clearer limits, ATS continues to impose externalities on U.S. taxpayers through distorted foreign aid and security expenditures necessitated by litigation-induced instability.[87]

Debates Over Originalism Versus Human Rights Expansionism

The debate over the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) centers on whether its interpretation should adhere strictly to the original public meaning at enactment in 1789 or evolve to encompass contemporary human rights violations, particularly those involving corporations in extraterritorial contexts. Originalist scholars contend that the ATS, as part of the First Judiciary Act, provided federal jurisdiction solely for a narrow class of three torts recognized under the law of nations at the founding: violations of safe conducts, infringements on ambassadors' rights, and piracy.[88] This view holds that the statute did not create new causes of action but presupposed preexisting remedies under international or general common law, limited to claims by aliens against actors—potentially including private individuals—who committed these specific offenses, often to prevent diplomatic incidents with foreign powers.[21] Justice Antonin Scalia, in his partial dissent in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain (2004), emphasized that post-Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins (1938), federal courts lack authority to fashion federal common law causes of action absent clear congressional intent, rendering the ATS effectively dormant for recognizing novel international norms beyond the founding-era trio.[89] Proponents of a more expansive approach, often aligned with human rights advocacy, argue that the ATS incorporates the "law of nations" as a dynamic body of customary international law, allowing federal courts to recognize causes of action for modern violations that mirror the specificity, universality, and obligatoriness of the original three offenses.[5] The Supreme Court's majority opinion in Sosa, authored by Justice David Souter, endorsed this framework by permitting a claim for arbitrary detention to proceed under cautious judicial discretion, while warning against "extravagant" extrapolations that could intrude on executive foreign affairs powers.[5] This has facilitated suits alleging corporate complicity in abuses like torture or genocide abroad, as seen in early cases like Filártiga v. Peña-Irala (1980), though subsequent rulings such as Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013) imposed a presumption against extraterritoriality and Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC (2018) barred foreign corporate liability.[2] Expansionists, including some international law scholars, maintain that such adaptability fills gaps in global accountability where foreign courts or states fail to act, citing empirical instances of multinational firms allegedly aiding state-sponsored atrocities without domestic recourse.[90] Critics of expansionism, including originalist commentators, highlight how the post-1980 revival—sparked by Filártiga—deviated from two centuries of near-inactivity, reflecting judicial activism influenced by mid-20th-century human rights developments rather than textual fidelity.[91] They argue that broadening the ATS to corporate aiding-and-abetting claims, as attempted in cases like Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021), risks forum shopping by foreign plaintiffs and undermines U.S. economic interests by deterring investment in developing regions, with over 200 ATS filings since 1980 yielding few recoveries but imposing litigation costs exceeding millions.[92] Justice Neil Gorsuch, in Jesner, questioned whether the ATS originally extended to non-sovereign actors like corporations, noting scant founding-era evidence for such liability and warning of separation-of-powers violations as unelected judges encroach on diplomatic prerogatives.[93] Empirical analysis of ATS outcomes shows a pattern of protracted litigation with minimal plaintiff success rates under 10% post-Sosa, suggesting the expansion burdens defendants disproportionately without advancing verifiable justice, as many claims hinge on attenuated causation chains rather than direct founding-era analogs.[50] While human rights organizations decry narrowing as impunity-enabling, originalists counter that true accountability resides in legislative or executive channels, not judicial improvisation, preserving the ATS as a modest jurisdictional grant rather than a perpetual engine for transnational litigation.[94]

Recent Developments and Future Prospects

Post-2021 Circuit Court Rulings and Ongoing Litigation

In Doe I v. Cisco Systems, Inc., decided by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on July 7, 2023, plaintiffs—Chinese adherents of Falun Gong—alleged that Cisco aided and abetted violations of international law, including torture and prolonged arbitrary detention, by providing technology and assistance for China's "Golden Shield" internet surveillance system used to persecute the group.[75] The court reversed the district court's dismissal, holding that aiding and abetting such violations constitutes a specific, universal, and obligatory norm of international law actionable under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), consistent with the Supreme Court's framework in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain.[75] It further determined that Cisco's alleged U.S.-based conduct—such as managerial decisions in California to customize and support the technology with knowledge of its intended use—satisfied the domestic activity requirement from Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe, distinguishing mere general corporate presence abroad from purposeful assistance originating domestically.[75] The Ninth Circuit denied Cisco's petition for rehearing en banc on September 3, 2024, affirming the panel's decision and upholding a related Torture Victim Protection Act claim.[95] This ruling represents a notable post-Nestlé interpretation by a circuit court, potentially broadening ATS exposure for U.S. corporations involved in foreign human rights abuses through domestic decision-making, though it has drawn criticism for risking overextension of federal jurisdiction into foreign affairs.[51] No other circuit courts issued major ATS decisions between 2021 and mid-2025 that significantly altered prior precedents, with most activity confined to district-level proceedings or remands applying Nestlé and Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC.[76] Ongoing litigation includes Al Shimari v. CACI Premier Technology, Inc. in the Eastern District of Virginia, where Iraqi detainees alleged torture and cruel treatment at Abu Ghraib prison facilitated by the U.S. contractor's employees under an ATS claim.[96] Building on Fourth Circuit reversals of earlier dismissals (pre-2021), the district court denied CACI's 2023 motion to dismiss, finding sufficient U.S.-based conduct in contracting, training, and supervision to overcome extraterritoriality bars.[97] On November 20, 2024, a jury returned a verdict holding CACI liable for conspiracy to commit torture and covering up abuses, awarding $42 million in damages, marking a rare ATS trial outcome against a domestic corporation.[98] Other active cases involve remands or new filings testing ATS boundaries, such as claims against technology firms for enabling foreign censorship or against energy companies for overseas security abuses, but these remain at district courts without recent circuit-level advancements as of October 2025.[99] The Cisco decision's potential for Supreme Court review underscores unresolved tensions in applying ATS to corporate aiding-and-abetting with a U.S. nexus.[51]

Legislative Proposals and Potential Reforms

In response to judicial narrowing of the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) by the Supreme Court, particularly in decisions limiting corporate liability and extraterritorial reach, Congress has introduced bills aimed at clarifying or reforming its scope, though none have been enacted.[2] The Alien Tort Statute Reform Act (S. 1874), introduced in the 109th Congress on October 17, 2005, sought to amend 28 U.S.C. § 1350 by specifying jurisdiction for alien tort claims, including enumeration of six particular violations of the law of nations—such as genocide, slavery, and extrajudicial killing—while imposing requirements like exhaustion of local remedies and limitations on aiding-and-abetting liability.[100] [25] This proposal, driven by concerns over expansive judicial interpretations enabling broad corporate accountability for overseas conduct, was withdrawn without further action.[101] More recently, the Alien Tort Statute Clarification Act (S. 4155), introduced by Senators Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Sherrod Brown (D-OH) on May 5, 2022, in the 117th Congress, proposed amending the ATS to explicitly authorize extraterritorial jurisdiction over claims for torts violating the law of nations or U.S. treaties, provided the defendant is subject to personal jurisdiction in a U.S. court.[102] [103] The bill responded to the Supreme Court's presumption against extraterritoriality in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (2013) and aimed to facilitate remedies for human rights abuses committed abroad by U.S.-based entities or individuals, including provisions for aiding and abetting liability and exceptions to foreign sovereign immunity.[104] It stalled in committee and did not advance to a vote.[105] Potential reforms continue to be debated in policy circles, with some advocating congressional codification of ATS limits to align with Supreme Court precedents like Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe (2021), which restricted domestic aiding-and-abetting claims for foreign conduct, thereby reducing risks of forum shopping and interference with U.S. foreign relations.[2] Others, including human rights advocates, push for expansions to restore broader access to U.S. courts for international law violations, arguing that judicial caution has undermined the statute's original deterrent purpose against state and non-state actors.[103] Absent legislative action, ATS application remains shaped by evolving circuit court interpretations, with no bills introduced in the 118th Congress (2023–2025) as of October 2025.

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