Legal Sidebari 
 
Congressional Court Watcher: Recent 
Appellate Decisions of Interest to Lawmakers 
(Sept. 20–26, 2021) 
September 27, 2021 
The federal courts issue hundreds of decisions every week in cases involving diverse legal disputes. This 
Sidebar series selects decisions from the past week that may be of particular interest to federal lawmakers, 
focusing on precedential decisions of t
he Supreme Court and the courts of appeals for t
he thirteen federal 
circuits. Selected cases typically involve the interpretation or validity of federal statutes and regulations, 
or constitutional issues relevant to Congress’s lawmaking and oversight functions.  
Some of the cases identified in this Sidebar, or the legal questions they address, are examined in other 
CRS general distribution products. Members of Congress and congressional staff may email the author to 
receive regular notifications of new products published by CRS attorneys. 
Decisions of the Supreme Court 
No Supreme Court opinions or grants of certiorari were issued this week. 
Decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals 
  
Communications: Section 230 of the Communications Act generally shields online 
service providers from civil liability for hosting others’ content, subject to exceptions 
including suits under intellectual property laws. Splitting with another circuit, a divided 
Third Circuit panel held that this carve-out applied to both federal and state intellectual 
property claims, and further ruled that the exception covered plaintiff’s state law claim 
against a defendant social media company alleging it violated her right of publicity
 (Hepp 
v. Facebook). 
  
Criminal Law & Procedure: A divided Third Circuit panel joined other circuits in 
recognizing a Hobbs Act robbery conviction does not qualify as a “crime of violence” for 
purposes of the career offender provision of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines because that 
term covers a narrower swathe of conduct than does a Hobbs Act robbery offense 
(United 
States v. Scott). 
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Environmental Law: The Ninth Circuit held that a citizen suit under the Clean Water 
Act may be premised on a defendant’s ongoing or reasonably expected violations of 
monitoring and reporting requirements, even if no proof is offered of an ongoing 
discharge of pollutants into the waters of the United States 
(Inland Empire Waterkeeper v. 
Corona Clay Co.). 
  
Fair Credit Report Act (FCRA): FCRA regulates consumer reporting agencies’ use of 
consumer reports. Adding to a circuit split, a divided D.C. Circuit held that FCRA’s 
authorization of damage suits against any “person” waived the federal government’s 
sovereign immunity, because the court read the statute’s definition of “person” to cover 
the federal government. However, the court ruled that defendant Federal Motor Carrier 
Safety Administration did not act as a “consumer reporting agency” under FCRA when it 
distributed safety records of commercial truck drivers to prospective employers, and the 
court therefore dismissed the suit against it
 (Mowrer v. Department of Transportation). 
  
Firearms: Earlier this year, a divided Fourth Circuit panel ruled in favor of plaintiff’s 
Second Amendment challenge to federal laws and regulations that barred her from 
purchasing a handgun because she was under 21. When plaintiff turned 21 shortly 
thereafter, the court remanded the case to be dismissed as moot and vacated the earlier 
opinion, resulting in it losing precedential value under circuit casel
aw (Hirschfield v. 
Bureau of Alcohol, Firearms, Tobacco & Explosives). 
  
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): The Open FOIA Act of 2009 provides that later 
laws may only exempt agencies from FOIA disclosure requirements if they “specifically 
cited” to FOIA. In an amended opinion, a divided Ninth Circuit panel held that post-2009 
appropriations riders limiting the covered agency’s disclosure of firearms-related 
information (“Tiahrt Riders”) did not relieve that agency of FOIA disclosure 
requirements because the post-2009 riders did not specifically cite to FOIA. (The 
majority believed the government waived arguments that the 2009 law impermissibly 
constrained how a future Congress can create FOIA exemptions.) The post-2009 Tiahrt 
Riders did, however, repeal by implication earlier riders that were not subject to the Open 
FOIA Act’s citation requirement and may have otherwise barred disclosure 
(Center for 
Investigative Reporting v. Department of Justice). 
  
Immigration: The Eighth Circuit held that an asylum seeker’s claim was properly denied 
because, among other things, her claim was premised on being part of a family that was 
unaffiliated with gangs and refused to provide support to gang activity, a class that lacked 
sufficient particularity and social distinction to be considered a “particular social group” 
under the asylum statute 
(Tino v. Garland). 
  
Labor & Employment: In a suit for unlawful retaliation under the Federal Railroad 
Safety Act, the Second Circuit construed the statute’s protection of an employee’s 
“reporting, in good faith, a hazardous safety or security condition” to require that an 
employee 
subjectively believe the reported matter represents a hazardous safety or 
security condition, and ruled that the reported condition need not be a physical condition 
(Ziparo v. CSX Transportation, Inc.). 
  
Labor & Employment: The Seventh Circuit held that the Labor Management Relations 
Act preempted a class action suit brought under state law by unionized employees 
challenging their employer’s collection of biometric information from them, because the 
federal law recognized certified unions as the exclusive representative of employees in 
collective working condition disputes with management
 (Fernandez v. Kerry). 
  
Presidential Pardons: The Tenth Circuit held that a petitioner’s acceptance of a 
presidential pardon of his military court-martial convictions did not constitute a legal
  
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  confession of guilt or a waiver of his habeas right to challenge the legality of the 
convictions 
(Lorance v. Commandant). 
  
Securities: Section 11 of the Securities Act imposes civil liability for false or misleading 
statements in registration documents and provides that persons who acquire “such 
security” have standing to sue for violations. A divided Ninth Circuit panel held that 
because the defendant had to file a registration statement to sell shares through a direct 
listing that made registered and unregistered shares available to the public, the plaintiff 
had standing to bring suit under Section 11 even though he could not identify whether the 
shares purchased through the listing were registered 
(Pirani v. Slack Technologies, Inc.).  
 
Author Information 
 Michael John Garcia 
   
Section Research Manager  
 
 
 
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