Global Times

Lockdown disputes

COVID-19 lawsuits spreading like a virus through US courts

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While apps for video-conferenci­ng and online courses have flourished during the COVID-19 pandemic, so have something rather more contentiou­s: lawsuits.

More than 1,300 complaints linked to the coronaviru­s have already been filed in US courts, according to a daily tally kept by the law firm of Hunton Andrews Kurth.

“COVID has divided America and it has vast political implicatio­ns,” Lawrence Gostin, a professor of public health law at Georgetown University, told AFP. “There is a conflict between public health and freedom – all kinds of freedoms, like the right to work, to liberty, to protest, to buy a firearm...”

And since the United States is a “highly litigious society,” he added, these conflicts often end up in court.

A first wave of lawsuits has come from prisons and immigratio­n centers, said Torston Kracht, a litigation partner with Hunton Andrews Kurth: Prisoners have demanded to be paroled early, arguing that sanitary conditions in their facilities are poor and in some cases are aggravatin­g detainees’ existing health problems.

Some prisoners, including former Donald Trump campaign director Paul Manafort and former Trump attorney Michael Cohen, have won early release.

Others have found themselves caught up in epic legal battles: The US government has just asked the Supreme Court to block the early release of 800 inmates from the Elkton Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in eastern Ohio.

A federal judge in Cleveland had ordered the men liberated after nine of those infected died.

Meantime, several employees’ groups have sued their employers to demand better protection against the virus.

Thus, a union representi­ng New York nurses filed suit to demand more masks, gloves and other protective equipment.

‘Force majeure’

And in cases where protective measures were too little or too late, victims’ relatives have filed suits charging negligence. Employers, including the big-box Walmart stores and the JBS meat-processing company, have been targeted, as have some nursing homes.

These complaints, however, have prompted legislativ­e pushback: Several states have moved to introduce laws to protect healthcare providers from suits, and Republican­s in the US Congress want to provide similar protection for companies.

“The COVID-19 pandemic will definitely have an effect on legal relationsh­ips in the future,” Kracht said.

Beyond legislativ­e changes, he said, “I think in the future you will see that newly negotiated force majeure clauses will directly deal with the issue of pandemic.”

A second big category of lawsuits deals with efforts to seek compensati­on for financial losses.

Ticket buyers who saw events canceled have filed a class-action suit against the online reservatio­n site Ticketmast­er, while others are seeking compensati­on for lost hotel or airline reservatio­ns, or even for membership­s in gyms that have been closed for months.

Since early May, demands from students seeking to recover tuition expenses and fees have surged.

And business and shop owners, forced to remain closed, have sued various government­al entities to challenge confinemen­t orders.

Court fights for years

Politician­s have jumped into the thorny debate: Several Republican officials, mirroring President Donald Trump’s aggressive push for a rapid reopening of the country, have contested lockdown orders issued by the Democratic governors of their states.

Up to now, the courts’ responses have been mixed. The Wisconsin Supreme Court declared that state’s lockdown extension order illegal, even as judges in neighborin­g Michigan confirmed the legality of similar measures ordered by the governor there.

Judges have also split over some of the most divisive issues in the country: The right of churches to again hold religious services – Trump wants governors to deem these services “essential” – and of specialize­d clinics to provide abortions.

As the country gradually reopens, some of these suits will be rendered moot.

But the courts surely have not heard the last of the coronaviru­s.

“We will continue to see COVID-19 related complaints being filed, certainly for the duration of the pandemic designatio­n, and probably for some time thereafter,” said Kracht.

That will be especially true in the commercial sector, he added, noting that “businesses have not been able to identify their real claims yet.”

Kracht said he expects to see virus-related issues “being litigated in the courts for many years to come.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? A small group of activists from BAMN (Coalition to Defend Affirmativ­e Action, Integratio­n & Immigrant Rights, and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary) protest outside the US Supreme Court in Washington DC on March 2.
Photo: AFP A small group of activists from BAMN (Coalition to Defend Affirmativ­e Action, Integratio­n & Immigrant Rights, and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary) protest outside the US Supreme Court in Washington DC on March 2.

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