In a series of decisions the Court has restricted the rights of individuals to sue corporations and restricted the ability of the federal government to regulate their economic activities. In a case with significant impact on all class action suits against corporations, Comcast v. Behrend, the Court denied consumers the opportunity to sue against alleged monopolistic practices. The Court, based on its new precedent wiped out an appeals court ruling in favor of consumers who bought smelly Whirlpool front-load washing machines. Legal observers say the Behrend decision is as destructive of the class action mechanism as the 2011 decision in the Wall-Mart gender discrimination case. Workers faced with discriminatory employers or on the job harassment will also face more difficulties bringing lawsuits because of conservative majority decisions handed down this term.
The Court closed the door on a 200 year old law, the Alien Tort Statute, that permitted aliens to seek redress of human rights violations committed abroad against "the laws of nations" in US courts. Nigerian plaintiffs sought to hold Royal Dutch Shell responsible for aiding and abetting torture, arbitrary killings and indefinite detention. Roberts' decison in this case effectively limits the statute's application to modern piracy or "a handful of heinous actions" by restoring the presumption of extraterritoriality especially as applied to the activities of international corporations, American or otherwise.
AP: Justice Alito |