Legal Sidebar 
 
Congressional Court Watcher: Recent 
Appellate Decisions of Interest to Lawmakers 
(June 10–June 16, 2024) 
June 17, 2024 
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 the
 Supreme Court and precedential decisions of the courts of appeals 
for the
 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 may
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the CRS Legal Update and receive regular notifications of new products and upcoming seminars by CRS 
attorneys. 
Decisions of the Supreme Court 
Last week, the Supreme Court issued six decisions in cases for which it heard arguments: 
•  
Abortion: In a 9-0 decision, the Court held that the plaintiff medical associations and 
physicians who do not prescribe or use mifepristone, a medication abortion drug, did not 
satisfy constitutional standing requirements needed to challenge Food and Drug 
Administration (FDA) actions in 2016 and 2021 that relaxed restrictions on the marketing 
and dispensing of mifepristone 
(FDA v. All. for Hippocratic Med.; Danco Labs., L.L.C. v. 
All. for Hippocratic Med.). 
•  
Bankruptcy: The Court issued a decision addressing the appropriate remedy for 
individuals affected by its 2022 ruling i
n Siegel v. Fitzgerald. In 
Siegel, the Court had 
held that th
e Bankruptcy Judgeship Act of 2017 violated the uniformity requirement of 
the Constitution’
s Bankruptcy Clause by requiring higher disbursement fees to be 
imposed under certain circumstances on certain debtors in Trustee districts than for 
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CRS Legal Sidebar 
 
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equivalent debtors in Bankruptcy Administrator districts. Here, the Court held 6-3 that the 
appropriate remedy for this disparity is the prospective application of uniform fees in all 
districts, not the retroactive raising of fees for those who paid lower fees or 
reimbursements for those who paid higher fees under the 2017 statu
te (United States 
Trustee v. John Q. Hammons Fall 2006, LLC). 
•  
Firearms: The Court ruled 6-3 that a nonmechanical bump stock is not a machinegun 
under
 26 U.S.C. § 5845(b). In a 2018
 final rule, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, 
Firearms, and Explosives classified bump stocks, which are accessories that attach to 
semiautomatic weapons to increase the rate of fire, as machineguns for purposes of the 
National Firearms Act and the federal statutory ban on the possession or transfer of new 
machineguns. Accordingly, the Court affirmed the decision of the Fifth Circuit, reversing 
the district court’s judgment and remanding with instructions to enter judgment for the 
plaintiff-respondent and to decide whether to vacate the rule or impose a more limited 
remedy 
(Garland v. Cargill). 
•  
Immigration: In consolidated cases, the Court decided 5-4 that an alien ordered removed 
in absentia could not seek rescission of that order when the initial notice to appear at a 
removal proceeding was defective but the alien later received adequate notice of the 
impending proceedings u
nder 8 U.S.C. § 1229(a)(2) and nonetheless failed to appear 
(Campos-Chaves v. Garland; Garland v. Singh). 
•  
Intellectual Property: In a fractured opinion, the Court held th
at Section 2(c) of the 
Lanham Act, which bars the registration of a trademark that includes the name of a living 
person without his or her written consent, is a viewpoint-neutral, content-based restriction 
that does not violate the First Amendment. The Court concluded that the U.S. Patent and 
Trademark Office did not violate the free speech rights of an applicant by refusing 
trademark registration based on the Lanham Act’s names clause of a trademark that 
included former President Donald Trump’s name for use on clothing 
(Vidal v. Elster). 
•  
Labor & Employment: In an opinion joined by eight Justices, the Court held that when 
a reviewing court considers a request for preliminary injunctive relief und
er Section 
10(j) of the National Labor Relations Act, the court must employ the traditional four-part 
test for evaluating the propriety of injunctive relief, rather than a two-part test rooted in 
Sixth Circuit precedent that was used by the district court and that merely asks whether 
there is reasonable cause to believe unfair labor practices occurred and whether injunctive 
relief is “just and proper.” Justice Jackson concurred in the judgment but wrote separately 
to convey a concern that the decision ignored Congress’s direction in the NLRA giving 
courts discretion when presiding over labor disputes 
(Starbucks Corp. v. McKinney). 
The Court also granted certiorari to consider the following cases for next term: 
•  
Medicaid & Medicare: The Court agreed to hear a case of statutory interpretation that 
could affect the amount of additional Medicare payments that hospitals serving a high 
percentage of low-income patients may receive. The question before the Court is whether 
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services correctly interpreted the phrase “entitled 
to [supplementary security income (SSI)] benefits” in th
e payment formula to refer to 
only those patients who actually received health benefits during their hospital stay. This 
case follo
ws Becerra v. Empire Health Foundation, in which the Court concluded that the 
phrase “entitled to [Medicare Part A] benefits” means all patients who qualify for Part A, 
not merely those who received those benefits for part or all of a hospital stay, but 
expressly left unresolved the meaning of “entitled to [SSI] benefits”
 (Advocate Christ 
Med. Ctr. v. Becerra). 
  
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•  
Securities: The Court agreed to hear a case to resolve a circuit split regarding the scope 
of what must be disclosed in the “risk factors” section of a public company’s 10-K filing. 
Some circuits hold that companies must disclose that a risk materialized in the past if the 
company knows it will harm the business, while the Sixth Circuit holds that companies 
need not disclose such past risks. This case arises out of the Ninth Circuit, which adopted 
a third position that companies must disclose risks that materialized in the past even 
where there is no known threat of business harm. The Court declined to hear a second 
issue raised by the petitioner, for which a split also exists among the circuits, regarding 
the proper pleading standard for the loss causation element of a private securities-fraud 
claim
 (Facebook, Inc. v. Amalgamated Bank). 
Decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals 
Topic headings marked with an asterisk (*) indicate cases where 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. 
•  
*Civil Procedure: In a per curiam decision, the Seventh Circuit sided with the majority 
view of a circuit split regarding the time limit for appealing a district court’s order under 
a statutory provision colloquially known as the
 Hyde Amendment, which permits 
criminal defendants to recoup fees incurred in the course of defending against a federal 
prosecution that was “vexatious, frivolous, or in bad faith.” Before considering the merits 
of the petitioner’s challenge to the district court’s denial of his motion for fees, the panel 
first considered the government’s argument that the petitioner had not timely appealed the 
lower court’s decision. The panel rejected the government’s position, and that of at least 
one other circuit, that defendants have only 14 days to appeal a Hyde Amendment order. 
The panel joined the majority of circuit courts that have considered the matter and held 
that such appeals are subject to the more generous 60-day 
civil time limit from a final 
judgment, rather than the 14-day deadline for 
criminal appeals, because Hyde 
Amendment motions are civil in nature. Finding the petitioner’s appeal was timely, the 
panel nonetheless affirmed the district court’s denial of fees, though on different grounds 
than the lower cour
t (United States v. Onamuti). 
•  
Civil Rights: The
 Second Circuit affirmed summary judgment for a public bus service in 
a case brought under th
e Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by a paralyzed 
individual who uses a wheelchair for mobility. The court also agreed that the availability 
of paratransit services does not relieve a bus service of its obligation to make its regular 
rout
es “readily accessible” to individuals with disabilities. It held in this case, however, 
that the bus service was readily accessible, and that the defendant’s action in altering 
signage at its bus stops did not trigger a duty to ma
ke accessibility upgrades to other 
portions of the stops 
(Woods v. Centro of Oneida, Inc.). 
•  
Criminal Law & Procedure: The D.C. Circuit affirmed the lower court’s denial of a 
criminal defendant’s request for vacatur of his convictions under
 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) for 
using a firearm in connection with a “crime of violence.” The panel rejected the 
defendant’s arguments that a predicate offense under
 21 U.S.C. § 848(e), which sanctions 
those who cause the intentional killing of another as part of a continuing criminal 
enterprise, does not constitute a crime of violence. Section 924(c)
 defines a crime of 
violence as an offense having “as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of 
physical force against the person or property of another.” The circuit panel disagreed with 
the defendant’s arguments that a Section 848(e) offense is not a crime of violence 
because it covers instances where a killing is not directly and actively perpetrated by the 
  
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defendant himself. The panel joined every other circuit in holding that those who aid and 
abet a crime of violence done by others have likewise committed a crime of violence. The 
panel further held that an intentional killing under Section 848(e) necessarily involves the 
use of force against another, regardless of whether that force is employed directly or 
indirectly, is carried out by another, or whether the victim’s death is accomplished 
through action or deliberate omission
 (United States v. Smith). 
•  
*Criminal Law & Procedure: The Second Circuit reversed a district court’s decision to 
grant the appellee’s motion for compassionate release from custody
. Section 
3582(c)(1)(A)(i) of Title 18 of the 
U.S. Code authorizes the court to reduce a federal 
prisoner’s term of imprisonment for “extraordinary and compelling reasons.” The circuit 
panel concluded that the lower court abused its discretion in considering the appellee’s 
“potential innocence” claim because potential-innocence claims must be brought under 
28 U.S.C. § 2255. The panel further concluded that the disparity between his sentence 
and his codefendants was not an extraordinary or compelling reason for a sentence 
reduction, because there were valid justifications for the disparity in this case. With its 
decision, the Second Circuit joins the majority of a lopsided circuit split, where only the 
First Circuit has concluded that a trial court may consider nearly any claim as a possible 
extraordinary and compelling reason
 (United States v. Fernandez). 
•  
Criminal Law & Procedure: A Sixth Circuit panel affirmed a criminal defendant’s 
convictions for various health care fraud and mail fraud offenses. The panel interpreted 
21 U.S.C. § 353(b)(1), which criminalizes dispensing certain drugs without the “written 
prescription of a practitioner licensed by law to administer such drug.” The panel held 
that the fact that the prescriptions at issue were written by a licensed professional did not 
preclude Section 353(b)(1) liability. The panel ruled that the statute contained an implicit 
validity requirement, such that it required a prescription to be based on the considered 
and lawful action of a licensed professional within a doctor-patient relationship. Finding 
that no such relationship informed the prescription of drugs here, the panel affirmed the 
defendant’s convi
ction (United States v. Bolos). 
•  
Criminal Law & Procedure: The Ninth Circuit upheld a defendant’s conviction for 
committing a hate crime un
der 18 U.S.C. § 249(a)(2) and his related conviction und
er 18 
U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A) for discharging a firearm during a “crime of violence.” The panel 
rejected the defendant’s argument that the hate crimes statute, both on its face and as 
applied to him, exceeded Congress’s power to regulate interstate or foreign commerce 
under th
e Commerce Clause. The panel rejected the facial challenge because Section 
249(a)(2) specifies that jurisdiction exists only when (1) a weapon used in the hate crime 
traveled in interstate or foreign commerce or (2) the defendant’s conduct affected 
interstate or foreign commerce. The panel rejected the defendant’s as-applied challenge 
because the government proved that he used firearms and ammunition that traveled 
across state lines. The panel also concluded, for purposes of Section 924(c) liability, that 
Section 249(a)(2) was divisible into distinct hate crime offenses. Because the offense for 
which the defendant was convicted involved an attempt to kill a person, the court held 
that the defendant’s offense constituted a “crime of violence” under Section 924(c)(1)(A) 
(United States v. Howald). 
•  
Education: A divided Sixth Circuit panel upheld a preliminary injunction blocking the 
Department of Education (ED) from enforcing within 20 plaintiff states certain policy 
documents that address discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender 
identity in federally funded school
s. Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 
generally bars discrimination based on sex in education programs and activities that 
receive federal funding. In the challenged documents, ED interprets Title IX’s prohibition 
  
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to cover discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. The panel 
majority held that the plaintiff states were likely to succeed in their argument that ED 
improperly issued the documents without under
going notice-and-comment rulemaking 
under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The majority concluded that the 
documents constituted legislative rules subject to APA requirements because they carry 
out an express delegation of authority from Congress, impose new obligations on states to 
investigate claims of discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity, and 
effect substantive changes in regulations because they impose obligations that conflict 
with existing ED regulations. The majority also held that other factors favoring a 
preliminary injunction were satisfied. The majority additionally ruled that ED’s recently 
issued regulations implementing its interpretation of Title IX did not moot the case 
because the regulations do not go into effect until August 2024 and the regulations do not 
cover certain matters, including student housing and athletics, covered by the documents 
(Tennessee v. Dept. of Ed.). 
•  
Firearms: The Ninth Circuit rejected claims by a California gun show operator that its 
First and Second Amendment rights were violated b
y state laws barring the sale of 
firearms on certain state properties. As to the First Amendment challenge, the court found 
that the challenged statutes restrict nonexpressive conduct—commercial transactions—
and were therefore not subject to First Amendment scrutiny. As to the Second 
Amendment challenge, the court concluded that the Second Amendment’s plain text does 
not cover contracting for the sale of firearms and ammunition on state property, and the 
plaintiff failed to show that the statutes meaningfully constrained a person’s ability to 
keep and bear arms given the ability to purchase the same firearms on nonstate properties 
(B&L Prods. v. Newsom). 
•  
*Environmental Law: The Ninth Circuit reversed a district court holding regarding the 
scope of Industrial Stormwater General Permits (ISGP) issued by Washington State 
pursuant to it
s delegated authority under the Clean Water Act (CWA). An environmental 
organization alleged that a port failed to abide by the state permitting requirements 
related to a cargo terminal area. Under the federal regulations governing the National 
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program, a permit would not have 
been required for stormwater discharges at the terminal, because that section of the port 
was not involved in specific categories of operations. The state’s permitting regulations, 
however, imposed more stringent requirements. The court held that the state’s general 
stormwater discharge permit for industrial facilities applies across the entirety of each 
covered facility, including those portions that would not be required by the NPDES 
program. Acknowledging a circuit split, the court also rejected arguments that a citizen 
suit could not proceed under the CWA where the state regulation exceeded the 
requirements of the federal regulation
s (Puget Soundkeeper All. v. Port of Tacoma). 
•  
*Immigration: The Fourth Circuit affirmed a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) 
decision upholding the denial of applications for asylum and withholding of removal. The 
court agreed with the BIA that the petitioners, a brother and sister, failed to show 
persecution on account of a protected ground, including their membership in a particular 
social group, in this case defined as “the children of their mother.” The court held that the 
petitioners could not establish the required nexus to a protected ground because they 
failed to show that their family relationship was “one 
central reason” for their feared 
persecution. In reaching this conclusion, the court rejected the petitioners’ contention that 
the “one central reason” standard for proving a nexus does not apply to withholding of 
removal actions, thereby adding to 
a circuit split on whether the nexus standard in the 
  
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withholding statute is materially different (and, in the petitioners’ view, less onerous) than 
that found in th
e asylum statute (Diaz-Hernandez v. Garland). 
•  
Indian Law: The Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court’s order compelling arbitration 
between the Choctaw Nation (Nation) and Caremark, LLC, after the Nation filed a 
lawsuit in federal court alleging Caremark viol
ated the Indian Health Care Improvement 
Act in denying the Nation’s pharmacy reimbursement claims. The Nation argued that the 
act rendered the arbitration agreement between the parties unenforceable, but the court 
held that a delegation clause in the parties’ arbitration agreement delegated such threshold 
arbitrability questions to the arbitrator. The court also rejected the Nation’s argument that 
the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the petition to compel arbitration, 
because the court concluded the Nation had expressly waived its tribal sovereign 
immunity by contractually agreeing to arbitrate its claims
 (Caremark, LLC v. Choctaw 
Nation). 
•  
Intellectual Property: The Fourth Circuit held that neith
er Section 21 nor other 
provisions of the Lanham Act bar a petitioner from bringing suit under the APA regarding 
the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office’s compliance with applicable laws and regulations 
concerning trademark registration renewa
l (Bacardi & Co. v. U.S. Pat. & Trademark 
Off.). 
•  
International Law: The Eleventh Circuit rejected constitutional challenges brought by 
three foreign nationals to their convictions under th
e Maritime Drug Law Enforcement 
Act (MDLEA) for trafficking drugs on the high seas using a stateless vessel. The 
MDLEA was enacted under Congress’s power under the
 Felonies Clause to 
“define and 
punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas.” The circuit court rejected the 
defendants’ argument that their conduct fell outside the scope of the Felonies Clause 
because it occurred in another country’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)—the area 
extending beyond a country’s territorial waters but within 200 nautical miles of the 
country’s coastal baseline, where that country has special economic rights. The court 
observed that EEZs did not exist when the Framers adopted the Felonies Clause, and the 
“high seas” were understood to cover that nautical area outside a country’s territorial 
waters. The court held that EEZs are part of the high seas covered by the Felonies Clause 
and are covered by the MDLEA
 (United States v. Alfonso). 
•  
Labor & Employment: The Seventh Circuit affirmed the decision of an administrative 
law judge (ALJ) awarding benefits to a former coal miner under the
 Black Lung Benefits 
Act, finding that the ALJ did not erroneously apply a “regulatory preamble” as binding 
law or make factual findings lacking in evidentiary support. The ALJ concluded that the 
miner suffered from pneumoconiosis based in part on a set of medical findings found in 
the preamble to Department of Labor
 regulations. Acknowledging that preambles lack the 
force of law and have no binding effect on administrative adjudications, the Seventh 
Circuit noted that ALJs may, given their broad discretion, adopt a preamble’s findings so 
long as those findings are supported by substantial evid
ence (Safeco Ins./Liberty Mutual 
Surety v. Director, Off. Workers’ Comp. Programs). 
•  
Labor & Employment: Rehearing a case en banc, the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district 
court’s dismissal of claims challenging a California law that codified th
e “ABC” test for 
determining if app-based delivery or transportation services workers are classified as 
employees or independent contractors for the purpose of state wage laws, while applying 
a different test for other app-based workers. The court reinstated the three-judge panel’s 
decision affirming the dismissal of Due Process, Contract Clause, and Bill of Attainder 
claims brought by Uber, Postmates, and others. However, the en banc court affirmed the 
  
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district court’s dismissal of the plaintiff’s equal protection claims, which had been 
reversed by the panel. The court concluded that under rational basis review, “plausible 
reasons” exist for the law codifying the ABC test for some industries and not for others, 
and thus the state law did not violate equal protection principles under either the U.S. or 
California State Constitu
tions (Olson v. California). 
•  
Sovereign Immunity: The D.C. Circuit affirmed the denial of a Brazilian state-owned oil 
company’s motion for summary judgment based on its assertion of immunity under the 
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), concluding that there was sufficient evidence 
to establish that th
e “direct-effect” exception to the FSIA applied in a U.S. investment 
fund’s fraud suit against the company. This exception permits suits against foreign states 
or their instrumentalities based on an act related to commercial activity when the act 
occurs outside U.S. territory and “causes a direct effect in the United States.” According 
to the panel, to qualify for the exception, the effect must be an “immediate” consequence 
of the defendant’s activity in the United States, but the defendant’s activity need not be 
the only cause. The court held that the plaintiff alleged sufficient facts here—involving a 
sustained course of dealing by the defendant to obtain an equity investment of hundreds 
of millions of dollars—to allow the case to proceed 
(EIG Energy Fund XIV, L.P. v. 
Petroleo Brasileiro, S.A.).  
 
Author Information 
 Michael John Garcia 
  Clay Wild 
Deputy Assistant Director/ALD 
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
 
  
Congressional Research Service 
8 
 
 
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