PogoWasRight.org

Menu
  • About
  • Privacy
Menu

The Supreme Court Limits Lawsuits By Those Wrongly Flagged As Terrorists

Posted on June 26, 2021 by pogowasright.org

Nina Totenberg reports:

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday sided with the TransUnion credit reporting company, ruling that thousands of consumers whose names were improperly flagged as potential terrorists cannot sue the company for damages.

By a 5-to-4 vote, the court ruled that Congress does not have the power under the Constitution to establish statutory rights and the power to enforce those rights with private lawsuits.

At issue in the case was the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which regulates how consumer credit agencies report and disseminate personal information. Specifically, the case centered on the actions of TransUnion, one of the “big three” credit reporting companies in the nation. It compiles information on consumers and sells that information to businesses that want to ascertain creditworthiness. Beginning in 2002, TransUnion placed an alert on those individuals whose first and last names matched the names on the Treasury Department’s list of terrorists, drug traffickers, or other serious criminals. The alert told businesses that bought the credit reports that the individuals were a “potential match” for those flagged on the Treasury Department list.

Read more on NPR.  The case is TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 20-297.  The ruling can be found here.

There is a lot of commentary out there already on this opinion and the strong dissents, such as this gem by Justice Clarence Thomas:

“Ultimately, the majority seems to pose to the reader a single rhetorical question: Who could possibly think that a person is harmed when he requests and is sent an incomplete credit report, or is sent a suspicious notice informing him that he may be a designated drug trafficker or terrorist, or is not sent anything informing him of how to remove this inaccurate red flag? The answer is, of course, legion: Congress, the president, the jury, the District Court, the Ninth Circuit, and four members of this court.”

Elsewhere you can find an “I told you so!” post by  Eric Troutman of Squire Patton Boggs: SPOKEO ON STEROIDS: It Happened–Supreme Court Holds Unnamed Class Members Must Have Standing to Recover Damages at Trial and Class Actions as We Know them Are Dead (Again)

Category: BreachesBusinessCourtFeatured News

Post navigation

← California Privacy Protection Agency Holds First Meeting, Preparing for Upcoming Rulemaking
Europe’s Data Law Is Broken, Departing Privacy Chief Warns →

Now more than ever

Search

Contact Me

Email: info@pogowasright.org

Mastodon: Infosec.Exchange/@PogoWasRight

Signal: +1 516-776-7756

Categories

Recent Posts

  • License Plate Reader Company Flock Is Building a Massive People Lookup Tool, Leak Shows
  • FTC dismisses privacy concerns in Google breakup
  • ARC sells airline ticket records to ICE and others
  • Clothing Retailer, Todd Snyder, Inc., Settles CPPA Allegations Regarding California Consumer Privacy Act Violations
  • US Customs and Border Protection Plans to Photograph Everyone Exiting the US by Car
  • Google agrees to pay Texas $1.4 billion data privacy settlement
  • The App Store Freedom Act Compromises User Privacy To Punish Big Tech

RSS Recent Posts on DataBreaches.net

  • Turkish Group Hacks Zero-Day Flaw to Spy on Kurdish Forces
  • Cyberattacks on Long Island Schools Highlight Growing Threat
  • Dior faces scrutiny, fine in Korea for insufficient data breach reporting; data of wealthy clients in China, South Korea stolen
  • Administrator Of Online Criminal Marketplace Extradited From Kosovo To The United States
  • Twilio denies breach following leak of alleged Steam 2FA codes
©2025 PogoWasRight.org. All rights reserved.
Menu
  • About
  • Privacy