Doe v. Unocal 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. 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 Once the settlement was finalized in March 2005, the appeal was withdrawn and the district court opinion from 2000 was also vacated.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."
Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC 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". 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, , 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. 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. On April 24, 2018, the Supreme Court ruled that foreign corporations may not be sued under the Alien Tort Statute. 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". 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."
Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum 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. 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", 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, The arguments received considerable attention in the legal community. 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." 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.
Sarei v. Rio Tinto 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. 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 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". 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. He was convicted of multiple counts of torture and conspiracy to torture and was sentenced to 97 years in prison. 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. 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.
Presbyterian Church of Sudan v. Talisman Energy, Inc. 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." 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 On August 11, 2009, the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit issued a decision in
Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Company. 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 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. 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.
Wang Xiaoning v. Yahoo! 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. 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. 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". 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".
Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe 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. Consolidated with
Cargill, Inc. v. Doe, the case alleges that Nestlé and Cargill aided and abetted forced child labour in the
Ivory Coast in connection with the harvesting of cocoa. 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. 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. 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. 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. 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". Cisco filed a
certiorari petition with the Supreme Court in January 2025.
Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp. Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc. Bancoult v. McNamara Doe v. Chiquita Brands International Estate of Rodriquez v. Drummond Co. Abu Ghraib ==See also==