Legal Sidebari 
 
Congressional Court Watcher: Recent 
Appellate Decisions of Interest to Lawmakers 
(October 2, 2023–October 9, 2023) 
October 10, 2023 
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 orders and decisions of t
he Supreme Court and precedential decisions of 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 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 m
ay click here to subscribe to 
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Decisions of the Supreme Court 
The Supreme Court’s new term began last week. The Court did not issue any opinions or agree to review 
any new cases. However, Justice Samuel Alito, acting in his
 Circuit Justice capacity, issued an 
administrative stay to give the Court time to consider the federal government’s emergency application to 
vacate a district court’s injunction blocking enforcement, against two challengers, of a Bureau of Alcohol, 
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) rule addressing “ghost guns.” As discussed in 
a prior 
Congressional Court Watcher, the Supreme Court already stayed the same district court’s vacatur of the 
ATF rule, allowing the rule to go into effect while litigation challenging it proceeds
 (Garland v. 
Blackhawk Mfg. Grp., Inc.). 
Decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals 
Topic headings marked with an asterisk (*) indicate cases in which the appellate court’s controlling 
opinion recognizes a split among the federal appellate courts on a key legal issue resolved in the opinion, 
contributing to a non-uniform application of the law among the circuits. 
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https://crsreports.congress.gov 
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CRS Legal Sidebar 
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•  
Consumer Protection: The Third Circuit held that the
 Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) 
does not permit furnishers of consumer credit information to decline to investigate 
disputes they deem frivolous when they receive notice from
 a consumer reporting agency 
that a consumer has disputed the accuracy or completeness of the information. The court 
explained that while the FCRA permits consumer reporting agencies and furnishers of 
credit information to decline to investigate such disputes when they receive notice of the 
dispute directly from the consumer, the statute does not afford such discretion when a 
furnisher receives notice from a consumer reporting agency 
(Ingram v. Experian Info. 
Sols., Inc.).  
•  
Criminal Law & Procedure: The Tenth Circuit rejected a faci
al overbreadth challenge 
to a provision in
 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a) that makes it a crime to “persuade” a minor “to 
engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of 
such conduct.” The panel majority interpreted the provision narrowly to cover the 
physical or psychological pressuring of minors to overcome their resistance to a 
requested depiction of sexual conduct, when that depiction constitutes child pornography 
unprotected by the First Amendment. In light of this construction, the panel was not 
persuaded by the defendant’s argument that the statute criminalized a substantial amount 
of protected speech 
(United States v. Streett). 
•  
Election Law: A divided Sixth Circuit rejected a First Amendment challenge to a 
Tennessee law that makes it a crime for anyone other than an election official to distribute 
the state’s absentee voter application form. The majority held that the law bars conduct, 
not speech. The majority further held that, even if the prohibition covered some forms of 
expressive conduct, strict scrutiny would not apply because the ban (1) applied to all 
persons neutrally regardless of the message they wished to convey and (2) did not limit 
the ability to engage in actual speech. The majority held that the state’s interest in 
preventing voter confusion was enough to satisfy the applicable level of constitutional 
scrutiny. The majority also rejected plaintiffs’ freedom of association arguments and 
found that t
he Anderson-Burdick balancing test—which directs that the burdens on 
electoral participation imposed by state action be balanced against the asserted benefits of 
that action—did not apply in this context 
(Lichtenstein v. Hargett). 
•  
*International Law: A divided First Circuit, sitting en banc, affirmed two foreign 
nationals’ convictions—obtained through unconditional plea agreements—under the 
Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (MDLEA) for trafficking drugs on the high seas 
using a stateless vessel. A three-judge panel of the First Circuit h
ad previously held that 
the MDLEA’s application t
o “vessels without nationality” exceeded Congress’s 
constitutional authority because the provision covered some foreign vessels not 
considered stateless under international law. The en banc court vacated the panel’s 
decision and affirmed the defendants’ convictions on narrower, non-constitutional, 
record-based grounds. In reaching its holding, the en banc court rejected the defendants’ 
argument that the MDLEA’s stated application to vessel
s “subject to the jurisdiction of 
the United States” limits the subject-matter jurisdiction of federal courts under Article III 
of the Constitution. The court held instead that this language limits only the substantive 
reach of the MDLEA. In so holding, the First Circuit deepened a split among the federal 
courts of appeals on this interpretive question 
(United States v. Dávila-Reyes). 
•  
Labor & Employment: The Seventh Circuit held that an employee’s unrecorded 
overtime work on incidental activities was not compensable under t
he Fair Labor 
Standards Act (FLSA) because his employer’s custom or practice of counting such work 
for overtime required that it be properly recorded. While the FLSA provides that 
activities integral to an employee’s job count toward overtime pay, an employer need 
  
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only count activities incidental to core job responsibilities if it has a
 custom or practice of 
doing so. Because the defendant employer’s custom or practice was to remunerate 
employees only for properly recorded work on incidental activities, the court held the 
employer was not required to compensate the plaintiff employee for unrecorded work, 
even if the employer had constructive knowledge of that work 
(Meadows v. NCR Corp.). 
•  
Public Health: The Ninth Circuit allowed a civil suit against California prison officials 
where the death of a prison inmate from COVID-19 in the early days of the pandemic 
was alleged to have resulted from the transfer of inmates from another facility 
experiencing a COVID-19 outbreak. Among other things, the panel reversed the lower 
court’s order dismissing the suit pursuant to t
he Public Readiness and Emergency 
Preparedness Act (PREP Act). That statute grants covered persons immunity from claims 
“relating to” the administration or use of covered countermeasures (such as diagnostics) 
in response to a declared public health emergency. The panel agreed with the lower court 
that the PREP Act conferred upon prison officials immunity from suit for injuries 
resulting from the administration of COVID-19 tests, including any transfer decisions 
informed by test results. Here, however, the court held that the PREP Act did not facially 
apply because the plaintiff’s allegation was that the pre-transfer COVID testing was so 
outdated as to be unrelated to the transfer decision
 (Hampton v. California). 
•  
Speech: On a panel rehearing of a
 September decision, the Fifth Circuit partially affirmed 
and modified a district court’s preliminary injunction that prohibited several federal 
agencies and executive branch officials from taking certain actions to influence social 
media companies’ content moderation decisions. The court held that some of the 
originally enjoined federal defendants, including the Executive Office of the President of 
the United States, the Surgeon General’s office, the Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure 
Security Agency, likely violated the plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights by “coercing” or 
“significantly encouraging” social media companies to censor certain social media 
content. Concluding that the district court’s preliminary injunction was too broad and 
vague, however, the court modified the injunction by excluding certain government 
defendants and narrowing the restrictions imposed on the covered defendants’ 
interactions with social media companies. 
(Missouri v. Biden). 
•  
Torts: In a per curiam opinion, the Sixth Circuit held that the United States was entitled 
to sovereign immunity under t
he Federal Power Act (FPA) in a tort suit alleging that the 
government negligently licensed a dam to an operator whose conduct resulted in the dam 
collapsing and destroying the plaintiffs’ home. The plaintiffs had sued the United States 
under t
he Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which waives the United States’ sovereign 
immunity from many types of tort suits. The FPA, however, contains a separate immunity 
provisi
on, 16 U.S.C. § 803(c), which explicitly asserts the government’s immunity from 
damages resulting from the “construction, maintenance, or operation” of certain 
hydroelectric-power works. The court first determined that the FPA’s more specific 
assertion of immunity prevails over the FTCA’s general waiver of immunity. The court 
then joined the Ninth Circuit in interpreting Section 803(c)’s immunity clause as applying 
to dams licensed under the FPA, even where the dam was originally constructed without a 
federal license (as was the collapsed dam at issue) 
(Allen v. United States). 
 
  
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Author Information 
 Michael John Garcia 
  Bryan L. Adkins 
Deputy Assistant Director/ALD 
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
 
  
Congressional Research Service 
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