Houston Chronicle

Justices express doubts on strategy used in rights case

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appears ready to rule out lawsuits in U.S. courts against businesses by foreign victims of human rights abuses and extremist attacks.

A case argued Wednesday pitted Israeli victims of attacks in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza in the 1990s and 2000s against Jordanbase­d Arab Bank. The victims claim that the bank helped finance the attacks.

The issue is whether the foreigners can use an 18thcentur­y law to hold the bank accountabl­e for its role.

The court already has limited the ability of foreign victims to sue under the 1789 Alien Tort Statute.

It appeared from the argument that the five conservati­ve justices could find that corporatio­ns cannot be sued at all under that law. Such an outcome would be another blow to a more than 30-year-old strategy by human rights lawyers to use civil suits to pursue individual­s who may be responsibl­e for torture and other atrocities, as well as companies with operations in countries with poor records in the area of human rights.

“My understand­ing is that this sort of relief is fairly unique,” Chief Jus- tice John Roberts said of the efforts to hold businesses liable under the law. Roberts did not seem to be moved by lawyer Jeffrey Fisher’s efforts to persuade him otherwise.

Justice Anthony Kennedy suggested that allowing corporatio­ns to be sued under the law might be unfair.

 ?? Associated Press file ?? Chief Justice John Roberts did not seem to be persuaded.
Associated Press file Chief Justice John Roberts did not seem to be persuaded.

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