The Pak Banker

Expect more headlines from the US SC this year

- Elizabeth Slattery

After an action-packed start to the term, the Supreme Court returns to the bench next week for the first winter oral argument sitting. And while the term was frontloade­d with headline-grabbing cases, the court has a few high-profile cases coming up - and even more waiting in the wings.

In February, the justices will hear two cases involving whether tech companies can be held responsibl­e for content posted by their users.

In Gonzalez v. Google and Twitter v. Taamneh, the families of victims of ISIS terrorist attacks sued Google, Twitter and Facebook for allowing ISIS to use these platforms to post videos, recruit members, and generally spread their message.

The cases turn on whether bigtech companies are editoriali­zing when they create platforms that use algorithms to promote and recommend third-party content.

Federal law allows U.S. nationals or their survivors to seek damages for injuries caused "by reason of an act of internatio­nal terrorism" against anyone who "aids and abets, by knowingly providing substantia­l assistance" to the acts of terrorism.

The families argue that, because the tech companies did not remove ISIS's content, they are liable for murders that occurred during ISIS attacks in Paris, Istanbul and San Bernardino, Calif.

The tech companies maintain that Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act immunizes them from liability for content created by third parties. The lower court issued a mixed result, and the Supreme Court has been asked to consider whether Section 230 immunizes the tech companies. The outcome likely will renew debates about regulating big tech, which has been a hot topic on Capitol Hill - a fact that may weigh on the justices' minds.

There are more cases making their way to the court challengin­g state laws that seek to regulate social media companies, so there's a good chance this won't be the last the justices hear about reining in big tech.

Also in February, the Supreme Court will hear two cases challengin­g President Biden's student loan forgivenes­s plan.

Last August, the Biden administra­tion announced a plan to forgive $20,000 in federally held student loans for an estimated 40 million borrowers. The administra­tion relied on the HEROES Act, which was passed during the Iraq War to temporaril­y relieve servicemem­bers and their families of certain student loan obligation­s. The Education Department did not engage in the usual rulemaking process - which includes public notice and comment - before rolling out the plan.

Several groups (including my employer, Pacific Legal Foundation) challenged the plan before it went into effect. Two cases have reached the Supreme Court. In Biden v. Nebraska, several states argue that the half-trilliondo­llar plan will harm a state-run loan servicer. In Department of Education v. Brown, two borrowers claim they were harmed by not being able to comment on the proposed plan before it was finalized. The Biden administra­tion maintains that none of these parties has standing to sue because they haven't suffered any concrete injury. Identifyin­g parties harmed by the plan has been difficult because the administra­tion continuall­y "revised" it on the fly to shut down lawsuits.

Petitions filed by Pacific Legal Foundation - Fair v. Continenta­l Resources, Tyler v. Hennepin County, Minnesota, and Nieveen v. TAX 106 - ask the Supreme Court to rule on the constituti­onality of a practice called "home equity theft." This is when municipal government­s seize people's property when they fall behind on their taxes, sell it, and then keep all the money from the sale - including any excess beyond the taxes owed. In one case, a Michigan man underpaid his property taxes by $8.41 and the county sold his home and kept the full $24,500.

The petitions argue this practice violates the Fifth Amendment's prohibitio­n on government taking private property without just compensati­on and the Eighth Amendment's bar on excessive fines. The states that engage in this practice assert that people are given sufficient notice to protect their property interests. There is a deepening split between several federal courts and state supreme courts on the constituti­onality of the practice of taking property in this manner and keeping more than what is owed.

"This is when municipal government­s seize people's property when they fall behind on their taxes, sell it, and then keep all the money from the sale including any excess beyond the taxes owed. In one case, a Michigan man underpaid his property taxes by $8.41 and the county sold his home and kept the full $24,500.”

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