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Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Doe

2026-06-23

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2025 1

Syllabus

NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is

being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.

The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been

prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.

See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

Syllabus

CISCO SYSTEMS, INC., ET AL. v. DOE ET AL.

CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR

THE NINTH CIRCUIT

No. 24–856. Argued April 28, 2026—Decided June 23, 2026

Plaintiffs contend that the Chinese Government persecuted them because of their religious beliefs, and that Cisco Systems, Inc. enabled

that persecution by developing surveillance technology that allowed

China to identify and apprehend them. Plaintiffs allege that Cisco and

its executives are liable for aiding and abetting violations of international law, citing the Alien Tort Statute (ATS). One plaintiff also seeks

to hold two Cisco executives liable for aiding and abetting violations of

the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991 (TVPA).

The ATS grants federal district courts jurisdiction over “any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of

nations or a treaty of the United States.” 28 U. S. C. §1350. The ATS

lay mostly dormant for two centuries after its enactment. In the last

few decades, however, litigants have urged courts to allow private

rights of action under the ATS for various alleged human rights

abuses. In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U. S. 692, this Court held

that “the ATS is a jurisdictional statute creating no new causes of action.” Id., at 724. At the same time—and in considerable tension with

that point—the Court said that the ATS allows for the possibility of

new, judicially created causes of action to enforce norms of international law. Id., at 724–725. Though Sosa did not “close the door” on

judicially created rights of action under the ATS, Sosa emphasized the

narrowness of its view and underscored the need for “vigilant doorkeeping.” Id., at 729. Sosa proposed a two-step framework for creating

those causes of action: First, a plaintiff must show that the norm has

a “definite content and acceptance among civilized nations,” id., at 732;

second, a plaintiff must show that it would be prudent for the court to

create the proposed cause of action when the political branches have

not acted, id., at 726, 736, n. 27. Since Sosa, the Court has never 2 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

Syllabus

created an ATS right of action.

In this case, the District Court dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint, but

the Ninth Circuit reversed in relevant part. The Ninth Circuit focused

on whether aiding-and-abetting liability may be imposed under the

ATS. 73 F. 4th 700, 716. At Sosa’s first step, the Ninth Circuit found

that “aiding and abetting liability is sufficiently definite and universal

to be a viable form of liability under the ATS.” 73 F.4th, at 718. At

the second step, it concluded that neither “foreign relations concerns”

nor “deference to Congress” supplied a “prudential reason to decline to

recognize aiding or abetting liability.” Id., at 720. The Ninth Circuit

also held that the TVPA “encompasses claims against those who aid

and abet torture.” Id., at 744. The Court granted certiorari to determine whether Cisco may be held liable for aiding and abetting offenses

under the ATS, and whether two of its executives may be held liable

under the TVPA for aiding and abetting torture.

Held:

1. Courts may not create new causes of action for violations of international norms under the ATS. Pp. 7–12.

Two points drive the Court’s decision. First, judicial authority under Sosa’s second step was “narrow at the outset.” Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe, 593 U. S. 628, 636 (opinion of THOMAS, J.). Sosa instructed federal courts to exercise “great caution in adapting the law of nations to private rights,” 542 U. S., at 728, and to assess the “practical consequences” of creating new liability under the ATS, including the “risks of adverse foreign policy consequences.” Id., at 728, 732–733. Because ATS cases by their nature implicate foreign policy, it is difficult to think of a case in which a court “might safely conclude” that a new ATS cause of action would not have detrimental foreign policy consequences. Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, 584 U. S. 241, 284 (2018)

(GORSUCH, J., concurring). Second, the power to create causes of action belongs to Congress. See, e.g., Sosa, 542 U. S., at 727; Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 634–635 (opinion of THOMAS, J.). The Court has “rejected the practice of fashioning rights of action as [it] see[s] fit,” FS Credit Opportunities Corp. v. Saba Capital Master Fund, Ltd., 608 U. S. ___, ___–___ (slip op., at 3–4). Congress is better positioned than courts to evaluate the policy tradeoffs of creating liability. This is especially true in an area like this one, where the Constitution expressly delegates authority to Congress to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Nations.” Art. I, §8, cl. 10. For that reason, creating any cause of action “is an extraordinary act that places great stress on the separation of powers.” Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 636 (opinion of THOMAS, J.).

Because of these concerns, Sosa consciously designed a test that would be extremely difficult to meet. But what Sosa made difficult, subsequent legal developments have made impossible. Since Sosa was

Cite as: 609 U. S. ___ (2026) 3

Syllabus

decided, the Court has firmly committed to the view that judicially created causes of action offend the separation of powers in almost every circumstance. Recent cases emphasize that “ ‘[i]f there are sound reasons to think Congress might doubt the efficacy or necessity of a damages remedy, the courts must refrain from creating it.’ ” Egbert v. Boule, 596 U. S. 482, 491 (quoting Ziglar v. Abbasi, 582 U. S. 120, 137; alterations omitted). In the ATS context, there will always be at least a “single sound reason” to conclude that Congress might not want the judiciary to take the lead. Sosa itself identified one applicable in every case: “the possible collateral consequences of making international rules privately actionable.” 542 U. S., at 727. And Congress has created an “alternative remedial structure”—the TVPA—which precludes the creation of a cause of action. Ziglar, 582 U. S., at 137.

The Court therefore will not continue to “indulge the fiction” that creating new ATS causes of action is sometimes appropriate. Edwards v. Vannoy, 593 U. S. 255, 274. Correcting Sosa’s unfulfilled prediction will not upset reliance interests and will promote stability. Sosa was overly optimistic in its prediction that there might be a narrow class of cases in which courts may create ATS actions without infringing on the prerogatives of the political branches. In truth, this class is a null set. And because courts cannot create new rights of action to remedy violations of international law, there is necessarily no liability for aiding and abetting such violations.

2. The TVPA, which contains an express cause of action against someone who “subjects” another to torture, does not provide for aidingand-abetting liability. Pp. 12–14.

In Central Bank of Denver, N. A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N. A., 511 U. S. 164, the Court held that §10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 does not create civil aiding-and-abetting liability because the statute does not mention “aiding and abetting,” differentiating §10(b) from other civil statutes in which Congress expressly provided for that specialized form of liability. Id., at 175−177, 182−183. The TVPA similarly nowhere mentions aiding-and-abetting liability, and that silence is enough to settle the issue.

Plaintiffs argue that “subjects” in the TVPA is broad enough to include aiding-and-abetting liability, but it is not. To “subject” another to torture means “to cause to undergo or submit to,” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2275, signaling a causal connection between torturer and victim. Aiding-and-abetting liability, by contrast, encompasses many forms of assistance provided by those who are one (or more) steps removed from the torturer. See Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh, 598 U. S. 471, 497. Central Bank rejected a similar argument that the phrase “ ‘directly or indirectly’ ” authorized aiding-andabetting liability, explaining that “aiding and abetting liability 4 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

Syllabus

extends beyond persons who engage, even indirectly, in a proscribed

activity.” 511 U. S., at 175−176. The same analysis applies here: Aiding-and-abetting liability sweeps more broadly than the language Congress chose.

73 F. 4th 700, reversed and remanded.

BARRETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS, C. J., and THOMAS, ALITO, GORSUCH, and KAVANAUGH, JJ., joined. JACKSON, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which KAGAN, J., joined. SOTOMAYOR, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which KAGAN and JACKSON, JJ., joined as to Parts I–III and V.

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 1

Opinion of the Court

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the

United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of

Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543,

pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

No. 24–856

CISCO SYSTEMS, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v.

DOE I, ET AL.

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF

APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

[June 23, 2026]

JUSTICE BARRETT delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Alien Tort Statute grants federal courts jurisdiction

to hear cases involving violations of the law of nations.

While conceding that the ATS is “strictly jurisdictional,” we

have also said that courts have narrow authority to create

causes of action under it. Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542

U. S. 692, 713, 724–725 (2004). These positions are in obvious tension with one another. More significantly, however, asserting such authority would intrude on both Congress’s prerogative to provide rights of action and the power

of the political branches to direct the Nation’s foreign policy. It is therefore unsurprising that this Court has never

created an ATS action. The authority to do so, always described as slight, is more accurately described as nonexistent.

Today, we close the door that Sosa cracked and hold that

courts may not create new causes of action for violations of

international norms. We also hold that the Torture Victim

Protection Act of 1991, which contains an express cause of

action, does not provide for aiding-and-abetting liability.

2 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

Opinion of the Court

I

A

In the early days of our Nation, two incidents involving

foreign diplomats “caused substantial foreign-relations

problems.” Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, 584 U. S. 241, 253

(2018). The French Minister Plenipotentiary complained to

the Continental Congress and threatened to leave the country after the Secretary of the French Legation was assaulted in Philadelphia. See Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 569 U. S. 108, 120 (2013). And a New York

constable caused an “international incident” a few years

later when he entered the house of the Dutch Ambassador

to arrest one of his servants. Jesner, 584 U. S., at 253.

At the time, the Articles of Confederation did not provide

a federal forum to redress injuries like these. True, the

wronged foreign officials could resort to state court. But

Secretary of Foreign Affairs John Jay cautioned that “the

Federal Government does not appear . . . to be vested with

any judicial powers competent to the cognizance and judgment of such cases.” 3 Dept. of State, The Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States of America 446 (1837).

Other leading figures were similarly troubled that the Articles failed to “provi[de] for the case of offenses against the law of nations” and “consequently le[ft] it in the power of

any indiscreet member to embroil the Confederacy with foreign nations.” The Federalist No. 42, p. 265 (C. Rossiter ed.

1961) (J. Madison).

The new Constitution equipped the Federal Government

to deal with this problem. Article III extends the judicial

power to “all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public

ministers and Consuls,” and “to Controversies . . . between

a State, or the Citizens thereof, and foreign States, Citizens or Subjects.” §2. The First Congress implemented these

provisions through the Judiciary Act of 1789, which established lower federal courts and granted them jurisdiction to

hear suits implicating foreign affairs. See, e.g., §9, 1

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Opinion of the Court

Stat. 77 (admiralty and maritime jurisdiction); ibid. (jurisdiction over “suits against consuls or vice-consuls”); §11, id., at 78 (jurisdiction over suits where “an alien is a party”).

The Act also included what is now known as the Alien Tort

Statute. §9, id., at 77. The ATS grants federal district

courts jurisdiction over “any civil action by an alien for a

tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a

treaty of the United States.” 28 U. S. C. §1350.

The ATS lay mostly dormant after its enactment. Litigants only occasionally invoked its jurisdictional grant. See

Bolchos v. Darrel, 3 F. Cas. 810 (No. 1,607) (SC 1795) (seizure of slaves from a captured ship); Moxon v. The Fanny,

17 F. Cas. 942 (No. 9,895) (Pa. 1793) (seizure of a brig and

cargo by French privateers). And in time, another statute

authorized federal courts to hear claims arising under treaties. See Act of Mar. 3, 1875, §1, 18 Stat. 470, as amended,

28 U. S. C. §1331. So for almost 200 years, the ATS did virtually no work.

That changed in 1980. In Filartiga v. Pena-Irala, 630

F. 2d 876, the Second Circuit permitted an ATS suit by foreign plaintiffs against a foreign offender for engaging in torture in violation of international law. The court identified

no express cause of action; instead, it held that the ATS

“open[s] the federal courts for adjudication of the rights already recognized by international law.” Id., at 887. Taking

note, other plaintiffs urged courts to allow private rights of action under the ATS for various alleged human rights

abuses. See, e.g., Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic, 726

F. 2d 774 (CADC 1984) (per curiam); Kadic v. Karadžić, 70

F. 3d 232 (CA2 1995); Beanal v. Freeport-McMoran, Inc.,

197 F. 3d 161 (CA5 1999); In re Estate of Marcos, Human

Rights Litigation, 25 F. 3d 1467 (CA9 1994); Abebe-Jira v.

Negewo, 72 F. 3d 844 (CA11 1996).

While the Courts of Appeals wrestled with novel ATS

suits, Congress enacted a related cause of action. The Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991 allows certain victims

4 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

Opinion of the Court

who are tortured or killed to recover damages against the

perpetrators. 106 Stat. 73, note following 28 U. S. C. §1350.

But because many human rights abuses fall outside the

TVPA, plaintiffs continued pressing courts to fashion rights

of action under the ATS.

Over a decade later, this Court interpreted the ATS for

the first time. In Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, we held that the

ATS does not permit a court to create a cause of action for

arbitrary detention in violation of international law. 542

U. S., at 699, 736–738. In so holding, we stressed that “the

ATS is a jurisdictional statute creating no new causes of action.” Id., at 724. At the same time—and in considerable

tension with the first point—we said that the ATS allows

for the possibility of new, judicially created causes of action to enforce norms of international law. Id., at 724–725.

To justify this conclusion, Sosa reasoned that the First

Congress would not have expected the ATS to “l[ie] fallow”

until Congress or state legislatures enacted causes of action

for violations of the law of nations. Id., at 719. Law-ofnations offenses formed part of “the ambient law of the era,”

and some “were understood to be within the common law.”

Id., at 714, 720. William Blackstone’s legal treatise discussed three: “violation of safe conducts, infringement of

the rights of ambassadors, and piracy.” Id., at 715 (citing 4

Commentaries on the Laws of England 68 (1769)). Given

this history, Sosa “assume[d] that the First Congress understood that the district courts would recognize private

causes of action for certain torts in violation of the law of

nations.” 542 U. S., at 724. But Sosa “found no basis to

suspect Congress had any examples in mind beyond those

torts corresponding to Blackstone’s three primary offenses.”

Ibid. And it acknowledged that when the ATS was enacted,

no one would have understood the statute as a grant of authority to create causes of action. Id., at 725–726. Nonetheless, Sosa asserted that courts have very modest

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 5

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authority to create causes of action under the ATS for violations of international norms. Id., at 724–725.

Recognizing the tension between this interpretation of

the ATS and the limits of the judicial role, Sosa emphasized

the narrowness of its view. Though it did not “close the

door” to “independent judicial recognition of actionable international norms,” it underscored the need for “vigilant

doorkeeping.” Id., at 729. To that end, Sosa proposed a

two-step framework. First, a plaintiff must show that the

norm has a “definite content and acceptance among civilized nations.” Id., at 732. (This was an effort to head off

judicial creativity with respect to the norms themselves.)

Second, a plaintiff must show that it would be prudent for

the court to create the proposed cause of action when the

political branches have not acted. Id., at 726, 736, n. 27;

Jesner, 584 U. S., at 257–258 (plurality opinion). (This was

a warning that courts must tread lightly, because creating

rights of action is Congress’s prerogative, and foreign policy is the political branches’ domain.) In Sosa, the plaintiff ’s

claim failed at the first step, so the Court had no occasion

to proceed to the second. 542 U. S., at 736–738.

Since Sosa, we have repeatedly turned away plaintiffs asserting claims under the ATS. In Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., we held that any ATS claims are subject to the

presumption against extraterritoriality; thus, those “seeking relief for violations of the law of nations occurring outside the United States” are “barred.” 569 U. S., at 124. We

reiterated that point in Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe, holding that “allegations of general corporate activity . . . cannot alone

establish domestic application of the ATS.” 593 U. S. 628,

634 (2021). And in Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, we refused

to impose ATS liability on foreign corporations. 584 U. S.,

at 272.

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B

Plaintiffs in today’s case are practitioners of Falun Gong,

a religious movement that originated in China in the 1990s.

They contend that the Chinese Government persecuted

them because of their religious beliefs, and that Cisco Systems, Inc. enabled that persecution by developing surveillance technology that allowed China to identify and apprehend them. By engaging in this conduct, plaintiffs say,

Cisco and its executives aided and abetted violations of international law—namely, torture; cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment; forced labor; prolonged and arbitrary

detention; crimes against humanity; extrajudicial killing;

and forced disappearance. One plaintiff also seeks to hold

two Cisco executives liable under the TVPA for aiding and

abetting torture.

After the District Court dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint,

66 F. Supp. 3d 1239, 1247 (ND Cal. 2014), the Ninth Circuit

reversed in relevant part, 73 F. 4th 700, 746 (2023). It did

not decide whether the underlying violations of international law satisfied Sosa’s test. 73 F. 4th, at 716. Instead,

it analyzed only whether aiding-and-abetting liability may

be imposed under the ATS. Ibid. At Sosa’s first step, the

Ninth Circuit found that “aiding and abetting liability is

sufficiently definite and universal to be a viable form of liability under the ATS.” 73 F. 4th, at 718. And at the second

step, it concluded that neither “foreign relations concerns”

nor “deference to Congress” supplied a “prudential reason

to decline to recognize aiding or abetting liability.” Id., at 720. The Ninth Circuit also held that the TVPA “encompasses claims against those who aid and abet torture or extrajudicial killing.” Id., at 744.

Judge Christen dissented in part. She saw “several

sound reasons to decline to recognize a cause of action for

aiding and abetting” the alleged acts. Id., at 748. Notably,

she reasoned that “a finding of liability in this case would

necessarily require a showing that the Chinese Communist

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 7

Opinion of the Court

Party and Ministry of Public Security violated international

law.” Ibid. And such a finding “could have serious ramifications” for U. S.-China relations, “fraught as they already

are.” Id., at 749. Permitting aiding-and-abetting liability

under the ATS is thus “inconsistent with [the court’s] obligation to exercise ‘great caution in adapting the law of nations to private rights.’” Id., at 751 (quoting Sosa, 542

U. S., at 728).

Six judges dissented from the denial of rehearing en banc.

They reasoned that ATS liability should be restricted “to

causes of action comparable to historically recognized

torts.” 113 F. 4th 1230, 1237 (CA9 2024) (opinion of Bumatay, J.). That is so because creating any additional liability under the ATS violates the separation of powers. Id., at

1245–1247. And the dissenting judges would exercise

greater caution before “intrud[ing] in the delicate relations

with another world superpower.” Id., at 1237, 1247–1248.

We granted certiorari to determine whether Cisco may be

held liable for aiding and abetting offenses under the ATS,

as well as whether two of its executives may be held liable

under the TVPA for aiding and abetting torture. 607 U. S.

1120 (2026).

II

Our starting point is Sosa’s key insight: The ATS “is a

jurisdictional statute creating no new causes of action.” 542

U. S., at 724. Put differently, “[a]s enacted in 1789, the ATS gave the district courts ‘cognizance’ of certain causes of action,” which “bespoke a grant of jurisdiction, not power to

mold substantive law.” Id., at 713.

Justice Scalia would have stopped there. Id., at 743–744

(opinion concurring in part and concurring in judgment).

He cited “[t]he general rule” that “ ‘grants of jurisdiction

alone . . . are not themselves grants of lawmaking authority’ ” and noted that Sosa had not identified any reason why

the ATS is an exception. Ibid. He then observed that Sosa’s

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“reasons why courts must be circumspect” in developing law

under the ATS are actually “reasons why courts cannot possibly be thought to have been given” this power in the first

place. Id., at 747.

These criticisms resonated, and since then, various Members of the Court have thoughtfully explained the problems

with Sosa’s openness—no matter how limited—to judicially

created causes of action under the ATS. See Jesner, 584

U. S., at 274 (THOMAS, J., concurring); id., at 280–293

(GORSUCH, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment); Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 634–640 (opinion of THOMAS, J.,

joined by GORSUCH and KAVANAUGH, JJ.); see also id.,

at 658 (ALITO, J., dissenting) (noting the “strong arguments

that federal courts should never recognize new claims under the ATS”). These opinions highlight the great difficulty

of satisfying Sosa’s second step under our modern separation-of-powers precedent.

Two points drive our decision today. First, judicial authority under Sosa’s second step was “narrow at the outset.”

Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 636 (opinion of THOMAS, J.). Indeed,

Sosa instructed federal courts to exercise “great caution in

adapting the law of nations to private rights.” 542 U. S.,

at 728. Before doing so, courts must assess the “practical

consequences” of creating new liability under the ATS, including the “risks of adverse foreign policy consequences.”

Id., at 728, 732–733.

But ATS cases by their nature implicate foreign policy.

As we have explained, “the danger of unwarranted judicial

interference in the conduct of foreign policy is magnified in

th[is] context.” Kiobel, 569 U. S., at 116. After all, the

“point of [a new ATS cause of action is] to vindicate ‘a norm

of international character.’ ” Jesner, 584 U. S., at 284

(GORSUCH, J., concurring) (quoting Sosa, 542 U. S., at 725).

It is thus difficult to think of a case in which a court “might safely conclude” that a new ATS cause of action would not

have detrimental foreign policy consequences. Jesner, 584

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U. S., at 284 (GORSUCH, J., concurring). Even suits against

American defendants (like this one against Cisco) generally

require a court to examine allegations of heinous acts committed by foreign nations or individuals.1

The second point is that the power to create causes of action belongs to Congress. See, e.g., Sosa, 542 U. S., at 727;

Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 634–635 (opinion of THOMAS, J.). For

this reason, Sosa cautioned that the “decision to create a

private right of action is one better left to legislative judgment in the great majority of cases.” 542 U. S., at 727.

This understates the point. While our cases at one time

permitted courts to provide redress if Congress remained

silent, see, e.g., J. I. Case Co. v. Borak, 377 U. S. 426, 433 (1964), “we have since rejected the practice of fashioning

rights of action as we see fit,” FS Credit Opportunities Corp. v. Saba Capital Master Fund, Ltd., 608 U. S. ___, ___–___

(2026) (slip op., at 3–4). That is so because “[h]ome-grown

causes of action are difficult to reconcile with ‘the Constitution’s separation of legislative and judicial power.’” Id., at ___ (slip op., at 4) (quoting Egbert v. Boule, 596 U. S. 482,

491 (2022)); see also Ziglar v. Abbasi, 582 U. S. 120, 133

(2017). Congress is better positioned than courts to evaluate the policy tradeoffs of creating liability. See Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 638–639 (opinion of THOMAS, J.). This is especially

true in an area like this one, where the Constitution expressly delegates authority to Congress. Art. I, §8, cl. 10

(Congress may “define and punish . . . Offences against the

Law of Nations”). For that reason, creating any cause of

action “is an extraordinary act that places great stress on

1 The dissent is confident about the ability of federal courts to “improve

foreign relations” and make judgments that are “ ‘consonant with U. S. foreign policy interests.’ ” Post, at 16 (opinion of SOTOMAYOR, J.). The Constitution’s allocation of power, however, requires greater judicial humility.

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the separation of powers.” Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 636 (opinion

of THOMAS, J.).

Sosa acknowledged both these points: that crafting new

causes of action under the ATS “raise[s] risks of adverse

foreign policy consequences,” 542 U. S., at 728, and intrudes

on Congress’s prerogative to create private rights of action,

id., at 727. Because of these concerns, it consciously designed a test that would be extremely difficult to meet. But

what Sosa made difficult, subsequent legal developments

have made impossible.

Since Sosa was decided, we have firmly committed to the

view that judicially created causes of action offend the separation of powers in almost every circumstance. As a result, we have virtually eliminated the practice of fashioning

them. Our cases have emphasized that “‘[i]f there are

sound reasons to think Congress might doubt the efficacy

or necessity of a damages remedy, the courts must refrain

from creating it.’ ” Egbert, 596 U. S., at 491 (quoting Ziglar, 582 U. S., at 137; alterations omitted); Jesner, 584 U. S., at 264 (quoting this language). Indeed, “ ‘[e]ven a single sound

reason to defer to Congress is enough.’ ” Egbert, 596 U. S.,

at 491 (quoting Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 635 (opinion of

THOMAS, J.); emphasis added). In the ATS context, there

will always be at least a “single sound reason” to conclude

that Congress might not want the judiciary to take the lead.

Sosa itself identified one applicable in every case: “the possible collateral consequences of making international rules

privately actionable.” 542 U. S., at 727. For Sosa, this was

reason “for judicial caution.” Ibid. Under our current precedent, it is reason not to proceed at all. Cf. Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment, LLC, 576 U. S. 446, 458 (2015) (“ ‘growth of

judicial doctrine’ ” is a relevant consideration when reconsidering a prior case).

Though one is enough, there is another “sound reason”

staying the judiciary’s hand. Our post-Sosa cases have

stressed that if Congress has created “an alternative

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remedial structure,” then “that alone” precludes the creation of a cause of action. Ziglar, 582 U. S., at 137 (emphasis added); see also Egbert, 596 U. S., at 493. Such a structure

exists here: the TVPA, which creates an express cause of

action under the ATS. Sosa acknowledged that Congress

had limited the TVPA “to specific subject matter” and had

taken no subsequent action to expand the covered conduct.

542 U. S., at 728. Again, for Sosa, this was reason to slow

down, ibid.; under our current precedent, it is reason to

stop.

Beyond changes in the law, it is hard to see how correcting Sosa’s unfulfilled prediction would upset reliance interests. Any such interests would belong to future plaintiffs—

who surely are not relying on the remote possibility that

U. S. courts would create an ATS action if they were someday injured and sought one. As for stability, today’s decision promotes rather than undermines it. We have never—

not once—created an ATS cause of action. Cf. Edwards v.

Vannoy, 593 U. S. 255, 274 (2021) (“No one can reasonably

rely on a supposed exception that has never operated in

practice”). And given the “high bar” that Sosa set, 542

U. S., at 727, it is a stretch to believe that we ever would

have. We thus see no need to “indulge the fiction” that creating new ATS causes of action is sometimes appropriate.

Edwards, 593 U. S., at 274. Doing so would “mislea[d] litigants” by suggesting that recovery might be available while

“needlessly expend[ing] . . . scarce [judicial] resources.” Id., at 275.2

2 While few plaintiffs have successfully litigated ATS suits to final

judgment, many more have sued and obtained large settlements. See C. Ewell, O. Hathaway, & E. Nohle, Has the Alien Tort Statute Made a Difference?: A Historical, Empirical, and Normative Assessment, 107 Cornell L. Rev. 1205, 1251–1252, 1278 (2022) (discussing ATS settlements, some of which resulted in “multimillion-dollar payments to plaintiffs”). Shutting off the possibility of additional ATS liability thus also provides clarity to defendants.

12 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

Opinion of the Court

In sum, we close the door that Sosa cracked to judicially

created ATS liability. We do not disturb Sosa’s holding that

the ATS is a jurisdictional statute; nor do we revisit its assumption that causes of action are available for torts corresponding to the Blackstone three.3 We conclude only that

Sosa was overly optimistic in its prediction that there might

be a narrow class of cases in which courts may create ATS

actions without infringing on the prerogatives of the political branches. In truth, this class is a null set.

What result for this case? Cisco argues that the Ninth

Circuit erred in holding that aiding-and-abetting liability

exists under the ATS for the torts alleged by the plaintiffs.

Cisco is correct. Courts cannot create new rights of action

to remedy violations of international law, so there is necessarily no liability for aiding and abetting such violations.

Plaintiffs’ ATS claims against Cisco must be dismissed.

III

One of the plaintiffs also sued two Cisco executives under

the TVPA for aiding and abetting torture. Recall that the

TVPA provides a cause of action against someone who

3 The dissent recruits the Blackstone three as support for judicial

power to create ATS actions. If the Blackstone three, the dissent asks, then why not more? Post, at 12. The Blackstone three do not give the dissent what it is looking for, because Sosa did not invoke them as evidence that the ATS originally granted courts the authority to create causes of action. Under the prevailing jurisprudence of the time, Sosa said, such torts were understood to be “found or discovered” by courts rather than “made or created.” 542 U. S., at 725. Offering examples, Sosa stated that offenses against ambassadors “appea[r] to have been” at top of mind, violations of safe conduct “were probably understood to be actionable,” and “individual actions arising out of prize captures and piracy may well have also been contemplated.” Id., at 720. Those are the only ATS actions this Court has ever specifically mentioned, and to the extent there has been reliance on the availability of those three actions, we see no need to revisit them. But while we say “this far and no further,” the dissent would go very far indeed. In the name of honoring the expectations of the First Congress, it would leverage the Blackstone three to justify power that would have confounded the First Congress.

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 13

Opinion of the Court

“subjects” another to torture. 106 Stat. 73, note following

28 U. S. C. §1350.

In Central Bank of Denver, N. A. v. First Interstate Bank

of Denver, N. A., 511 U. S. 164 (1994), we held that §10(b)

of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 does not create civil

aiding-and-abetting liability. Our analysis was straightforward: Section 10(b) “ ‘does not in terms mention aiding and

abetting.’ ” Id., at 175. That fact differentiates it from other civil statutes in which Congress expressly provided for that

specialized form of liability. Id., at 176−177, 182−183 (collecting statutes). Because Congress “‘ha[s] little trouble’”

imposing aiding-and-abetting liability “ ‘expressly,’ ” its

omission of the phrase in §10(b) was dispositive. Id., at 177

(quoting Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores, 421 U. S.

723, 734 (1975)).

Just so here. The TVPA nowhere mentions aiding-andabetting liability, and that silence is enough to settle the

issue. As then-Judge Kavanaugh put it, Central Bank

makes it “crystal clear” that no aiding-and-abetting liability exists under the TVPA because Congress has not expressly

provided for it. Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 654 F. 3d 11, 87

(CADC 2011) (dissenting opinion). We agree.

Plaintiffs counter that “subjects” is broad enough to include aiding-and-abetting liability. It is not. To “subject”

another to torture means “to cause to undergo or submit to.”

Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2275 (1993);

see also American Heritage Dictionary 1788 (3d ed. 1992)

(“[t]o cause to experience”). The term thus signals a causal

connection between torturer and victim. Aiding-and-abetting liability, by contrast, encompasses many forms of assistance provided by those who are one (or more) steps removed from the torturer. See Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh, 598

U. S. 471, 497 (2023) (disclaiming a “strict nexus” requirement). Central Bank rejected a similar argument—that the

phrase “ ‘directly or indirectly’ ” in §10(b) authorized aidingand-abetting liability. 511 U. S., at 175−176. The “basic

14 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

Opinion of the Court

flaw” in that interpretation “is that aiding and abetting liability extends beyond persons who engage, even indirectly,

in a proscribed activity.” Id., at 176. After all, it encompasses those “who do not engage in the proscribed activities

at all, but who give a degree of aid to those who do.” Ibid.

The “basic flaw” we identified in Central Bank exists here

too: Aiding-and-abetting liability sweeps more broadly than

the language Congress chose.4

* * *

We recognize, as does the dissent, post, at 23–24, that

ATS and TVPA cases frequently involve heinous and inhumane acts. The political branches or other international actors may well provide redress. But we decline to distort the

statutory text or the Constitution’s allocation of powers to

enlist U. S. courts in that project. The judgment of the

Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

It is so ordered.

4 We have noted that the TVPA “contemplates liability” against those

“who do not personally execute the torture”—in particular, those who “giv[e] an order to torture.” Mohamad v. Palestinian Authority, 566 U. S. 449, 458 (2012); see also post, at 25 (opinion of SOTOMAYOR, J.) (relying on this assertion). Such liability, however, is much more limited than aiding-and-abetting liability.

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 1

Opinion of JACKSON, J.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

No. 24–856

CISCO SYSTEMS, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v.

DOE I, ET AL.

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF

APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

[June 23, 2026]

JUSTICE JACKSON, with whom JUSTICE KAGAN joins, concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in part.

I agree with JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR’s discussion of the Alien Tort Statute. See post, at 5–10 (dissenting opinion).

But I think the Court is correct to conclude that the Torture

Victim Protection Act of 1991 (TVPA) does not encompass

aiding-and-abetting liability. I write separately because,

while my textual analysis of the TVPA tracks the majority’s, see ante, at 12–14, I do not agree with how the majority deploys Central Bank of Denver, N. A. v. First Interstate

Bank of Denver, N. A., 511 U. S. 164 (1994), here.

Central Bank is relevant insofar as it instructs that

“there is no general presumption” that a statute imposes

aiding-and-abetting liability; rather, Congress must provide it. Id., at 182. And here, Congress’s use of the term

“subjects” does not do so. But, as JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR discusses, post, at 26–27, the majority is wrong to treat Central Bank as creating a “magic words” test for aiding-and-abetting liability generally. Contra, ante, at 10–11; see Soto v.

United States, 605 U. S. 360, 373 (2025) (“[W]e have so often

denounced” a “ ‘magic words’ test”). Instead, the absence of

the words “aid” and “abet” in the statute we interpreted in

Central Bank was but one consideration of many. See 511

U. S., at 176–180. I therefore concur only in the judgment

as to the majority’s TVPA holding.

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 1

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

No. 24–856

CISCO SYSTEMS, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v.

DOE I, ET AL.

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF

APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

[June 23, 2026]

JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE KAGAN and

JUSTICE JACKSON join as to Parts I, II, III, and V, dissenting.

Petitioner Cisco Systems, Inc., allegedly knowingly designed and intentionally built a mass-surveillance system

for the Chinese Communist Party to use to identify, track,

arrest, and torture thousands of religious minorities. As all

agree, if respondents’ allegations were to be proved true,

then that would mean Cisco violated universally recognized

norms of international law. Respondents thus sued Cisco

in a federal action under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS),

which vests jurisdiction in district courts over “any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations,” 28 U. S. C. §1350. In Sosa v. AlvarezMachain, 542 U. S. 692 (2004), this Court held that the ATS

permits federal courts to find implied causes of action authorizing plaintiffs to sue defendants who violated international law.

The Court nonetheless closes the courthouse doors not

just to respondents, but to virtually every future litigant

seeking redress for a violation of international law under

the ATS. It thus overrules Sosa, without even acknowledging that it is doing so. Today’s decision marks yet another

low point in this Court’s esteem for its precedents.

2 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

Further, the Court also errs by ignoring the plain meaning of the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991 (TVPA) and

slamming the door completely shut to claims by U. S. citizens against those who aid and abet torture.

I respectfully dissent from both of the Court’s holdings.

I

A

The following factual allegations are drawn from respondents’ amended complaint and are assumed to be true

because this appeal arises from the grant of a motion to dismiss. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U. S. 731, 734 (2011).

Respondents are members of Falun Gong, a Chinese spiritual movement. Falun Gong members believe in the three

core tenets of “Truthfulness, Compassion, and Tolerance.”

App. 2. Many of its members have vocally opposed the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

In 1999, the CCP designated Falun Gong organizations

as illegal and called for violent political crackdowns against them. During these “violent struggle” campaigns (or

“douzheng”), CCP and Chinese Government officials subjected Falun Gong targets to brutal human-rights abuses,

including torture, arbitrary detention, and reeducation

through labor. Id., at 12; see 73 F. 4th 700, 712 (CA9 2023)

(detailing “beatings with steel rods[,] . . . shocking with electronic batons, sleep deprivation, . . . violent force-feeding,” and more). The United States State Department estimates

that hundreds of thousands of Falun Gong believers have

been persecuted, and media sources report that thousands

have been tortured to death.

To target Falun Gong members, the CCP determined that

it needed to develop a sophisticated, nationwide internetsurveillance tool to track Falun Gong activity online. It

thus devised the anti-Falun Gong “ ‘Golden Shield’ ”: a

“ ‘vast and multi-tiered’ ” bespoke “ ‘surveillance system’ ”

that the CCP contemplated would obtain and organize all

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 3

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

manner of data on the Falun Gong members across China,

including address information, internet history, and financial and family information. Id., at 710. At the time the

CCP came up with the idea, however, Chinese engineers

lacked the technical expertise to create such technology. As

a result, the CCP turned to American technology companies

and invited them to submit proposals to design its Golden

Shield system.

Petitioner Cisco answered the CCP’s call with an aggressive campaign to secure the Golden Shield contract. Cisco’s

CEO (and other senior executives) personally met with

China’s President and other officials to discuss and “explicit[ly] support” “the Golden Shield’s douzheng objectives

and goals.” App. 62. Internal files reveal Cisco’s “pledge to

satisfy the repressive anti-Falun Gong purposes of the” program, while characterizing Falun Gong and its members as

“ ‘viruses,’ ” “ ‘despicable,’ ” and an “ ‘evil cul[t]’ ”—all mirroring CCP propaganda denigrating Falun Gong members as

“subhuman.” Id., at 20–21. Cisco’s public Chinese marketing materials also described the company’s “promis[e] to

tailor the apparatus” to meet the CCP’s objectives, including “the douzheng of ” Falun Gong. Id., at 22–23; see 73

F. 4th, at 710 (describing Cisco brochures offered at Chinese trade shows marketing its services “as useful to the

‘douzheng’ of Falun Gong”).

Cisco’s push succeeded. In 2001, the CCP selected Cisco

to submit designs for the Golden Shield and later awarded

it contracts to develop the program. Cisco, using engineers

working from the United States, then created a massive

surveillance system that “ ‘analyzed patterns of Falun Gong

Internet activity to enable the intelligent identification of

individual Falun Gong Internet users,’ ” while providing

“ ‘real time monitoring’ ” of “ ‘Falun Gong Internet traffic

patterns’ ” and sharing the results with the CCP to “facilitate the . . . forced conversion through torture’ ” of Falun

Gong members. Id., at 711. Over time, Cisco engineers in

4 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

San Jose, California continued to provide support while also

upgrading and expanding the system. For example, Cisco

later created a video-surveillance system that, combined

with facial-recognition technology, has become a “ ‘primary

means’ of identifying Falun Gong practitioners through

non-internet activities, such as protests or religious practice.” Ibid.

Armed with the vast suite of technological tools Cisco provided, the CCP identified, arrested, and tortured thousands

of Falun Gong members. Id., at 712.

B

Respondents in this case are among those victims or are

family members of those who have disappeared and are suspected or confirmed dead. They allege that the CCP used

information collected and stored by the Golden Shield program in forced-conversion sessions to which they were subjected. For example, on top of prolonged isolation and physical torture, Chinese officials leveraged information about

some of respondents’ family members (and employed

threats against those family members) to coerce respondents into renouncing their religious beliefs.

In 2011, respondents filed this action against Cisco and

two of its executives, suing under the ATS and alleging that

Cisco aided and abetted seven international-law violations:

torture; cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment; forced labor; prolonged and arbitrary detention; crimes against humanity; extrajudicial killing; and forced disappearance.

One of the respondents, who is a U. S. citizen, also brought

a claim alleging that two individual defendants aided and

abetted his torture in violation of the TVPA.

After the District Court dismissed the action, the Ninth

Circuit reversed, holding that aiding-and-abetting liability

was available under both the ATS and the TVPA. Id., at

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 5

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

709. This Court then agreed to review the Ninth Circuit’s

judgment. 607 U. S. 1120 (2026).1

II

A straightforward application of this Court’s settled case

law should have allowed respondents’ ATS claims against

Cisco to proceed.

A

The ATS, enacted in 1789, permits foreign nationals

harmed by violations of international law to obtain compensation for their injuries in U. S. court. See 28 U. S. C. §1350 (“The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any

civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States”). The statute is limited: As this Court explained in Sosa v.

Alvarez-Machain, 542 U. S. 692, the ATS “is in terms only

jurisdictional,” meaning that it gives courts authority to entertain suits but does not itself create any causes of action

that permit plaintiffs to sue someone. Id., at 712. Even so,

consulting the historical context surrounding the ATS’s

passage, the Court determined that Congress “intended” for

the ATS “to have practical effect the moment it became

law.” Id., at 724. Consistent with that understanding, Sosa

held that, although federal courts should be “restrained” in

doing so, they may find implied private causes of action under the ATS “for violations of any international law norm”

comparable to “the historical paradigms familiar when [the

ATS] was enacted.” Id., at 725, 732. Those paradigms include three international-law offenses that were well established when the ATS was enacted: “violation of safe conducts, infringement of the rights of ambassadors, and

1 Petitioners did not allege a split among the Circuits over whether aiding-and-abetting liability is available under either statute. See Pet. for Cert. 14–24, 29–33.

6 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

piracy.” Id., at 715. As all agree, the ATS allows implied

private rights of action for at least these three offenses.

To invoke an additional implied cause of action under the

ATS, Sosa explained, the plaintiff must identify a norm of

international law that has sufficiently “definite content”

that has gained “acceptance among civilized nations.” Id.,

at 732. As part of that inquiry, courts must also make a

“judgment about the practical consequences of making that

cause available to litigants in the federal courts.” Id., at

732–733. Applying this test, the Court rejected the arbitrary-detention claim that had been raised there. The

plaintiff had not alleged a sufficiently definite norm of international law. Recognizing the plaintiff ’s proposed cause

of action would also have “breathtaking” consequences by

permitting “a cause of action in federal court for any arrest, anywhere in the world,” so long as it is “unauthorized by

the law of the jurisdiction in which it took place.” Id., at

736. The Court thus declined to allow a new cause of action

under the ATS. Ibid.

“In the years since, this Court has read Sosa to announce

a two-step test for recognizing the availability of a cause of action under the ATS.” Nestlé USA, Inc. v. Doe, 593 U. S.

628, 648 (2021) (SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). At step one, courts ask “ ‘whether a

plaintiff can demonstrate that the alleged violation is “of a

norm that is specific, universal, and obligatory.” ’ ” Ibid. If the plaintiff makes that required showing, then the court

must determine “ ‘whether allowing [a] case to proceed under the ATS is a proper exercise of judicial discretion.’ ”

Ibid. That discretionary inquiry must account for “the potential implications for the foreign relations of the United

States of recognizing such causes [of action],” as courts

must be “particularly wary of impinging on the discretion

of the Legislative and Executive Branches in managing foreign affairs.” Sosa, 542 U. S., at 727.

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 7

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

B

This case succeeds at each of Sosa’s steps. At step one,

there is no dispute. Respondents allege that Cisco aided

and abetted the violation of seven international-law norms:

torture; cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment; forced labor; prolonged and arbitrary detention; crimes against humanity; extrajudicial killing; and forced disappearance.

See 73 F. 4th, at 713. Before this Court, Cisco does not

make any arguments at all at step one. See Brief for Petitioners 17. It does not dispute that all seven norms are specific, universal, and obligatory, as required by Sosa. Nor

does it dispute that international law recognizes aidingand-abetting liability, either in general or as a substantive

part of each of these seven norms.

Cisco, joined by the United States as amicus curiae, instead exclusively focuses on Sosa’s second step, at which

courts ask “‘if there are sound reasons to think Congress

might doubt the efficacy or necessity of a damages remedy.’ ” Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, 584 U. S. 241, 264 (2018).

Both fail to demonstrate that it would be improper to allow

this case to proceed.

First, Cisco and the United States argue that an aidingand-abetting theory of liability can never satisfy Sosa’s second step because such liability will always endanger foreign-policy concerns. Those concerns, however, are best addressed on a case-by-case basis, rather than a categorical

one. See Sosa, 542 U. S., at 733, n. 21 (discussing possibility of “case-specific deference to the political branches”).

This case disproves the idea that recognizing aiding-andabetting liability will necessarily impair U. S. foreign-policy interests. The political branches have already consistently

condemned China’s treatment of Falun Gong members.

The Solicitor General confirmed in this very case that “the

United States [has] long condemned China’s treatment of

Falun Gong practitioners,” and has sanctioned Chinese officials for “gross violations of human rights,” including

8 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

“particularly severe violations of religious freedom.” Brief

for United States as Amicus Curiae on Pet. for Cert. 9. Similarly, in 2020, the Trump administration released a report

on the Government’s strategic approach to China that highlighted how the Government had released “statements calling on the [Chinese] government to respect the rights of ”

religious minorities including “Falun Gong adherents, all of

whom face repression and persecution in China”; the report

also announced that the “United States will continue to

take a principled stand against the use of our technology to

support China’s military and its technology-enabled authoritarianism.”2 In addition, the State Department has

“denounce[d]” China’s “particularly abhorrent behavior” toward Falun Gong. Dept. of State, Annual Report on International Religious Freedom 2000, 106th Cong., 2d Sess.,

xxix, xxxii (Joint Comm. Print 2000). So has Congress. See,

e.g., H. Res. 605, 111th Cong., p. 5 (2010) (condemning the

Chinese Government’s “campaign to persecute, intimidate,

imprison, and torture Falun Gong practitioners”); see also

Brief for Members of Congress et al. as Amici Curiae 22–26

(listing other congressional resolutions and actions condemning China’s persecution of Falun Gong). Given that

both political branches have so publicly and directly condemned China’s persecution of Falun Gong members, it

strains credulity to say that allowing a private suit against

an American company to proceed would meaningfully

change the state of relations between the United States and

China.

In addition, any potential foreign-policy consequences are

further reduced because neither China nor any Chinese instrumentality is a party to the case itself. Rather, the suit

2 National Security Council, United States Strategic Approach to the

People’s Republic of China 15 (2020), https://trumpwhitehouse.archives. gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/U.S.-Strategic-Approach-to-The-PeoplesRepublic-of-China-Report-5.24v1.pdf (archived at https://perma.cc/ 2PHC-HLKP).

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 9

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

is against an American company and focuses primarily on

its conduct in the United States. China also could have appeared in this case if it opposed it. It could have filed a brief in this case saying so, just as it did in a previous ATS case

that involved China. See Doe v. Qi, 349 F. Supp. 2d 1258,

1264, 1296–1301 (ND Cal. 2004) (noting that, in an ATS

suit against Chinese local-government officials, China,

“through the United States Department of State, submitted

a letter to this Court urging this Court not to assert jurisdiction over the instant cases”). Other foreign states have

filed similar materials in other ATS cases. See, e.g., Jesner, 584 U. S., at 271 (citing brief filed by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in ATS suit against a Jordanian bank). That

China has not done so here is additional evidence that this

case is unlikely to aggravate U. S.–China relations.

Second, Cisco and the United States argue that this

Court’s decision in Central Bank of Denver, N. A. v. First

Interstate Bank of Denver, N. A., 511 U. S. 164 (1994), forecloses aiding-and-abetting liability here, reading that case

to permit aiding-and-abetting liability only if a statute expressly so states. Central Bank has minimal bearing here.

It involved the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the text of

which limits liability to those who “‘directly or indirectly’ ” engage in certain kinds of conduct. Id., at 171. The Court

there recognized that Congress “has taken a statute-bystatute approach to civil aiding and abetting.” Id., at 182.

The Court reasoned that the text of that statute did not extend liability to aiders and abettors because they do not necessarily engage in the underlying activity they facilitate.

Id., at 176–177. That conclusion was buttressed by the fact

that it was “uncertain” whether state common law supplied

“a deeply rooted background of aiding and abetting tort liability.” Id., at 181–182, 184. Here, by contrast, the ATS

does not limit liability to those who engage in certain acts.

Instead, it authorizes courts to entertain suits involving a

“tort . . . committed in violation of the law of nations.”

10 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

§1350. As noted above, Cisco does not dispute that liability

for aiding and abetting the seven underlying violations is

universally recognized in international law. Central Bank’s

holding about a textually distinct statute rooted in domestic

law thus says little about what the ATS recognizes under

international law.

Because Cisco does not dispute that Sosa’s first step is

satisfied and has not identified a sound reason for this suit

not to proceed at Sosa’s second step, the Court should affirm

the Ninth Circuit’s judgment.3

III

The majority, however, is in a rush. Not wanting to dally

on niceties like binding precedent, or to confine itself to deciding the case before it, the majority casts aside Sosa’s twostep framework altogether. It disclaims any future authority by any court to find additional causes of action in all

cases to come, even though it declines to disturb the three

implied causes of action previously recognized under the

ATS. Ante, at 1. In short, it overturns Sosa. In doing so,

the Court brushes past the stare decisis factors that this

3 The Ninth Circuit treated aiding-and-abetting liability as the relevant international-law norm at Sosa’s first step, concluding that “customary international law recognizes aiding and abetting liability as a specific and universal form of liability.” 73 F. 4th 700, 718 (2023). Arguably, however, the relevant norm for the Sosa analysis might be the underlying offense that Cisco allegedly aided, such as torture. Whether aiding-and-abetting liability is available would then be assessed simply by determining the substantive breadth and scope of liability of a norm that has been sufficiently established. See 113 F. 4th 1230, 1243 (CA9 2024) (Bumatay, J., dissenting from denial of reh’g en banc). For example, Blackstone described slightly varying scopes of secondary liability as to each of the three offenses he identified. See 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 69–73 (1769). If the majority were inclined to preserve Sosa’s two-step framework, and if the parties disputed Sosa’s first step at all before this Court, the Court could have vacated and remanded this case for the Ninth Circuit to reconsider what the relevant norm is for purposes of Sosa’s first step.

Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026) 11

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

Court considers when deciding whether to overturn precedent. It also slams the door in the faces of victims of horrific mistreatment without giving any reason to think that Congress, whom the Court purports to respect, would have

wanted to do so. The majority errs at each turn.

A

To begin, the majority fails to demonstrate that Sosa is

wrong, never mind that there is the special justification

needed to overturn it.

Start with the common ground: There is no dispute that

the ATS contains judicially implied causes of action. Specifically, it contains implied causes of action for “ ‘violation of safe conducts, infringement of the rights of ambassadors,

and piracy.’ ” Ante, at 4 (quoting Sosa, 542 U. S., at 715).

Those causes of action appear nowhere in the ATS’s text.

They instead come from authoritative accounts of international law, most notably the work of 18th century English

jurist William Blackstone. See 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 68 (1769). (Hence the moniker “Blackstone three.”) As Sosa explained, suits alleging

violations of safe conducts, infringements on the rights of

ambassadors, and acts of piracy all may proceed under the

ATS because Congress likely had these three offenses “in

mind” when it passed the ATS, even if it did not say so expressly. 542 U. S., at 724–725.4

4 The majority attempts to distance itself from the notion that the ATS

contains implied private rights of action for the Blackstone three, saying that Sosa merely assumed that the Blackstone three would be actionable under the ATS. See ante, at 12, and n. 3. That is perplexing. Sosa explained at length that the First Congress did not intend to leave the ATS “lying fallow” and that Congress instead intended for at least the Blackstone three to be actionable. See 542 U. S. 692, 712–724. To the extent the majority is unsure that even the Blackstone three are actionable under the ATS, it is unclear why the majority is willing to leave the door ajar for those three causes of action but not for any others that enforce similarly well-established norms of international law.

12 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

If the ATS allows these three implied causes of action

drawn from international law, then it is hard to see why it

does not allow others similarly drawn from that body of law.

Indeed, this is a key part of Sosa’s reasoning and its central holding. See Bucklew v. Precythe, 587 U. S. 119, 136 (2019)

(“[J]ust as binding as [a case’s] holding is the reasoning underlying it”). When Congress passed the ATS, “the accepted

conception” of the common law was that federal courts,

when adjudicating individual cases, were “discover[ing]” a

pre-existing and “ ‘transcendental body of law outside of any

particular State’ ” and applying it. Sosa, 542 U. S., at 725.

Working under that assumption, Congress omitted any specific causes of action from the ATS, see §1350, and left it to courts to draw upon the body of international law, which

included the Blackstone three, and apply relevant principles in other, specific cases. Id., at 724–725, 730.

Ample historical evidence corroborates Sosa’s account of

the ATS. The First Congress passed the ATS after the Continental Congress (operating under the Articles of Confederation) “was hamstrung by its inability to ‘cause infractions of treaties, or of the law of nations to be punished.’ ” Id., at 716 (quoting J. Madison, Journal of the Constitutional Convention 60 (E. Scott ed. 1893)). For example, on

at least two occasions prior to the Constitution’s ratification, foreign diplomats were assaulted on American soil.

542 U. S., at 716–717. The Continental Congress called on

States to pass legislation authorizing their courts to hear

cases involving violations of international law, but just one

answered the call. Id., at 716. Understandably offended,

at least one foreign ambassador lodged a protest that was

discussed during the Constitutional Convention. Id., at

717. As Sosa explained, given the “anxieties of the preconstitutional period,” it is unlikely that Congress intended for the ATS to serve only “as a jurisdictional convenience to be

placed on the shelf for use by a future Congress or state legislature that might, someday, authorize the creation of

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causes of action.” Id., at 719. Rather, Congress intended

for its handiwork to have immediate effect, without further

express creation of causes of action.

Contemporaneous legal sources discussing international

incidents that transpired shortly after Congress passed the

ATS further support Sosa’s holding. In 1792, Secretary of

State Thomas Jefferson and Attorney General Edmund

Randolph each issued an opinion addressing incidents in

which Americans entered Spanish Florida and French

Haiti, abducted slaves, and returned them to the United

States. See T. Jefferson, Opinion on Offenses Against the

Law of Nations (Dec. 3, 1792), in 24 The Papers of Thomas

Jefferson 693–696 (J. Catanzariti ed. 1990) (Jefferson Opinion); E. Randolph, Opinion on Offenses Against the Law of

Nations (Dec. 5, 1792), in 24 id., at 702–703 (Randolph

Opinion). Both agreed that federal courts could hear civil

suits relating to these incidents under the ATS. Jefferson

wrote that the ATS would cover any suit by “an alien . . . for a tort only,” Jefferson Opinion 694 (emphasis deleted),

while Randolph agreed that “damages may be recovered in

the courts of the United States, under the jurisdictions established by the judicial law”—that is, under the ATS, Randolph Opinion 702. Similarly, in 1795, Attorney General

William Bradford issued an opinion explaining that “Americans who had taken part in the French plunder of a British

slave colony in Sierra Leone,” and thus arguably breached

a declaration of neutrality, “ ‘no doubt’ ” could be held civilly liable “ ‘in the courts of the United States; jurisdiction being expressly given to these courts in all cases where an alien

sues for a tort only, in violation of the laws of nations, or a treaty of the United States.’ ” Sosa, 542 U. S., at 721 (quoting 1 Op. Atty. Gen. 57, 59).

Taken together, the opinions of these early American

statesmen confirm that the ATS was understood to allow

civil suits for violations of international law even without

any express causes of action. They also support the

14 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

conclusion that the ATS was not understood to be limited

to the Blackstone three: None of these early incidents involved safe conducts, ambassadors, or piracy at sea. Instead, they involved violations of other international-law

principles, including neutrality and prohibitions on “plunder” and “robbery.” 2 E. de Vattel, The Law of Nations, ch.

VI §78 (J. Chitty ed., 6th ed. 1844); see Franchise Tax Bd.

of Cal. v. Hyatt, 587 U. S. 230, 239 (2019) (describing de

Vattel as “the founding era’s foremost expert on the law of

nations”). As Sosa did, the founding generation thus understood the ATS to leave the door open to other causes of

action rooted in the law of nations beyond the Blackstone

three.

The majority does not explain why implied causes of action for the Blackstone three are permissible but implied

causes of action for any other norm of international law,

which either existed in 1791 or exist today, are not. The

majority instead turns down a different road, one paved not

with the opinions of the Court, which are the law, but with

the opinions of individual Justices, which are not. Despite

claiming that its “starting point is Sosa’s key insight,” the

majority veers off with its very next paragraph. Ante, at 7.

It observes that Justice Scalia, who concurred in part and

concurred in the judgment in Sosa, “would have stopped”

with just the Blackstone three, ante, at 7, and then in the

next paragraph, cites four more individual opinions expressing sympathy for that view, but none of which was the

controlling majority opinion. See ante, at 8 (citing Jesner,

584 U. S., at 274 (THOMAS, J., concurring); id., at 280–293

(GORSUCH, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment); Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 634–640 (opinion of THOMAS, J.);

id., at 658 (ALITO, J., dissenting)).

These five opinions, however, are not, and never have

been, the law. The Sosa majority expressly rejected the call

to stop at the Blackstone three, dismissing Justice Scalia’s

position as “particularly unconvincing in light of what we

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

know about congressional understanding bearing on this issue.” 542 U. S., at 729–730. Nor did any of the subsequent

opinions garner a majority, as the Court in each case rejected liability under the ATS on narrower grounds than

the separate writings advocated. See Nestlé, 593 U. S., at

634 (rejecting extraterritorial application of the ATS); Jesner, 584 U. S., at 270–272 (holding that Sosa’s second step

counseled against extending ATS liability to foreign corporations). To say something three times (or five) does not

make it true. See L. Carroll, The Hunting of the Snark

(1876).

Setting that aside, the majority distills two points from

its tour through separate writings: (1) judicial authority to

recognize causes of action is “‘narrow’ ” because ATS suits

“by their nature implicate foreign policy”; and (2) “the

power to create causes of action belongs to Congress.” Ante,

at 8–9.

Neither point explains why it respects Congress to recognize causes of action for the Blackstone three but not for

other international-law principles that are sufficiently similar to those causes of action. To the extent the majority

thinks that the Blackstone three are uniquely supported by

the historical record, that is doubtful for the reasons given

above. See supra, at 13–14. There also is no indication that

Congress intended to “tra[p]” the ATS “in amber.” United

States v. Rahimi, 602 U. S. 680, 691 (2024).5

In any event, this Court already resolved the majority’s

objections in Sosa itself. First, Sosa explained that foreignpolicy concerns can arise from the failure to provide

5 The majority’s limit is also unfaithful to Blackstone. Blackstone recognized secondary liability as part of the substantive offenses he identified. See 4 Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, at 69– 72. Thus, even if Blackstone supplied the authoritative account of suits available under the ATS, that would still permit liability to extend beyond just those who principally commit the three offenses Blackstone identified.

16 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

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remedies for international-law violations just as they can

arise from the imposition of liability for such violations.

The founding generation was deeply concerned with foreign

tensions resulting from “the Continental Congress’s incapacity to deal with,” and States’ failures to provide remedies for, international-law violations, especially when an American defendant was involved. 542 U. S., at 716–718. The

ATS was a direct response to those “anxieties of the preconstitutional period.” Id., at 719. Indeed, the incidents discussed above all came to the Federal Government’s attention because foreign nations complained to the United

States about them. See, e.g., Jefferson Opinion 693 (noting

complaints from Spanish and French diplomats); 1 Op.

Atty. Gen., at 58 (referring to complaint submitted by British minister).

Today, too, providing an American forum for international-law violations can improve foreign relations, as evidenced by the fact that foreign sovereigns have sometimes

filed briefs expressing support for ongoing ATS litigation.

See, e.g., In re Estate of Ferdinand Marcos Hum. Rights Litigation, 94 F. 3d 539, 547 (CA9 1996) (noting that the Philippines “urged” an ATS “suit to proceed in American courts”

because “ ‘relations may well be improved if Filipino citizens see that justice is available in U. S. courts’”); Sarei v. Rio Tinto, PLC, 671 F. 3d 736, 756 (CA9 2011) (noting that Papua New Guinea “expressly urged” that an ATS aiding-andabetting case “ ‘be heard by courts in the United States’” because it would not “ ‘adversely affec[t] any relations between [Papua New Guinea] and the United States’”), judgt. vacated, 569 U. S. 945 (2013). Former United States Ambassadors-at-Large for War Crimes also explain that authorizing aiding-and-abetting liability under the ATS “is

consonant with U. S. foreign policy interests” in light of the United States’ “consisten[t] promot[ion of] aiding and abetting as an essential means for holding perpetrators of international crimes to account.” Brief for Former U. S.

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Ambassadors-at-Large for War Crimes Issues/Global Criminal Justice et al. as Amici Curiae 10, 12; see id., at 9, 11– 29 (describing the United States’ role in supporting aidingand-abetting liability in proceedings before the Nuremberg

Tribunal and other international criminal courts).

Given that there are strong foreign-policy interests on

both sides of the scale, Sosa correctly rejected the argument

that fear of “adverse foreign policy consequences” should

categorically preclude judicial involvement in this area.

542 U. S., at 728. Instead, although it stressed that courts

must act “with great caution” when finding implied causes

of action, Sosa left the door open to doing so. Id., at 728,

731.6

Second, Sosa also fully addressed the majority’s charge

that, according to modern legal sensibilities, Congress, not

courts, should create causes of action. Like today’s Court,

the Sosa Court was well aware that “this Court has recently

and repeatedly said that a decision to create a private right

of action is one better left to legislative judgment in the

great majority of cases.” Id., at 727; see ante, at 9. Even so, Sosa explained that the First Congress, which passed the

ATS, did not see things the same way and that it would be

“particularly unconvincing” to impose present-day legal

theories on a Congress from two centuries ago. 542 U. S.,

at 730. It would be “unreasonable,” Sosa continued, to fault

Congress for failing in 1791 to anticipate the prevailing legal fashion two centuries down the line and to calcify a statute that Congress intended to be flexible. Ibid.

For all these reasons, Sosa correctly held that courts may

find implied private rights of action cognizable under the

ATS, so long as they proceed with “great caution” and do

not recognize causes of action dissimilar to the Blackstone

6 The majority urges “judicial humility” when it comes to matters of

foreign affairs. Ante, at 9, n. 1. True judicial humility, however, is following precedent and respecting the wisdom of the jurists who precede us.

18 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

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three: that is, those “for violations of any international law norm with less definite content and acceptance . . . than the

historical paradigms familiar when [the ATS] was enacted.”

Id., at 728, 732.7

B

Even if Sosa was wrongly decided, that still would not

justify the result the majority reaches today. The rule of

stare decisis, or “[a]dherence to precedent,” this Court has

explained, is “ ‘a “foundation stone of the rule of law,” ’ ” Kisor v. Wilkie, 588 U. S. 558, 586 (2019). This “important

doctrine . . . ensure[s] that the law will not merely change

erratically, but will develop in a principled and intelligible fashion.” Vasquez v. Hillery, 474 U. S. 254, 265 (1986). It

also “permits society to presume that bedrock principles are

founded in the law rather than in the proclivities of individuals, and thereby contributes to the integrity of our constitutional system of government, both in appearance and in

fact.” Id., at 265–266. Overturning a prior decision therefore requires “special justification”; “it is not alone sufficient that we would decide a case differently now than we did

then.” Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment, LLC, 576 U. S.

446, 455–456 (2015).

The majority, however, nowhere mentions stare decisis.

Indeed, the Court’s opinion does not even state the necessary consequence of what it decides today: that Sosa is overruled. Disturbingly, this is not the first time in recent years that the Court has been “willing to overrule precedent

7 The majority claims that permitting courts to find implied causes of

action in this way “would have confounded the First Congress.” Ante, at 12, n. 3. Far from it: For all the reasons explained above and in Sosa, the First Congress expected courts to find causes of action that permit plaintiffs to recover damages for violations of norms of international law like the Blackstone three. What would have “confounded the First Congress” instead is today’s decision to override those expectations and engraft a modern hostility to implied rights of action totally inconceivable to the First Congress and the founding generation.

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

without even acknowledging it is doing so, much less

providing any special justification.” Jones v. Mississippi,

593 U. S. 98, 144 (2021) (SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting) (describing the Court’s implicit overruling of Miller v. Alabama, 567 U. S. 460 (2012), and Montgomery v. Louisiana,

577 U. S. 190 (2016)). “How low this Court’s respect for

stare decisis has sunk.” 593 U. S., at 144.

The majority’s apparent disregard for stare decisis is particularly lamentable here because this Court has long held

that stare decisis has “special force” as to decisions interpreting congressional statutes. Patterson v. McLean Credit

Union, 491 U. S. 164, 172 (1989). That is because Congress,

not this Court, has the primary responsibility to “correct

any mistake[s]” in this Court’s statutory decisions. Kimble,

576 U. S., at 456. Accordingly, this Court has consistently

required a “superspecial justification to warrant reversing”

a statutory precedent. Id., at 458. This Court has applied

this heightened standard “even when a decision has,” like

Sosa, “announced a ‘judicially created doctrine’ designed to

implement a federal statute.” 576 U. S., at 456.

When deciding whether to overturn a decision like Sosa,

this Court will “most often” consider “subsequent legal developments—‘either the growth of judicial doctrine or further action taken by Congress’—that have removed the basis for a decision.” 576 U. S., at 458. Here, however, this

“primary reason” for overruling statutory precedents, Patterson, 491 U. S., at 173, is completely absent. As discussed

above, this Court’s modern push to limit implied causes of

action was well underway by the time Sosa was decided.

See supra, at 17.

The majority says that “[s]ince Sosa was decided, we have

firmly committed to the view that judicially created causes

of action offend the separation of powers in almost every

circumstance.’ ” Ante, at 10. It relies primarily on cases

concerning not implied causes of action under the ATS, but

cases from this Court’s Bivens jurisprudence. See ante, at

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

10 (citing, among others, Egbert v. Boule, 596 U. S. 482

(2022); Ziglar v. Abbasi, 582 U. S. 120 (2017)). Those cases

are far afield: They involved implying causes of action under the Constitution, not the ATS. There are, of course,

many differences between the Constitution and the ATS,

chief among which is that Congress passed the ATS specifically to furnish a path for plaintiffs to recover monetary

damages. See Sosa, 542 U. S., at 724. Setting those differences aside, by the time this Court decided Sosa in 2004, it

was already “firmly committed,” ante, at 10, to limiting implied rights of action. Indeed, years before Sosa, this Court

had already “sworn off ” the habit of implying private causes

of action outside the ATS. Alexander v. Sandoval, 532 U. S.

275, 287 (2001); see Sosa, 542 U. S., at 727 (citing Alexander). Even so, Sosa confronted that issue and held that

courts may find implied rights of action under the ATS. The

cases the majority cites from the Bivens context therefore

did not unearth some new objection not considered by the

Sosa Court, “remov[e] the basis for [Sosa],” Kimble, 576

U. S., at 458, or render Sosa “irreconcilable with competing

legal doctrines or policies,” Patterson, 491 U. S., at 173.

Nor has Congress amended the ATS or passed other legislation that undercuts Sosa’s holding. Sosa itself “welcome[d] any congressional guidance” over the interpretation of the ATS and how courts proceed when defining

causes of action. 542 U. S., at 731. It also reiterated that

“Congress may” close the door to new causes of action “at

any time (explicitly, or implicitly by treaties or statutes that occupy the field), just as it may modify or cancel any judicial decision so far as it rests on recognizing an international

norm as such.” Ibid. Yet Congress has done none of this in

response to Sosa.8

8 The majority suggests that the TVPA displaced Sosa. Ante, at 10–11.

Congress, however, passed the TVPA in 1991, 13 years before this Court

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

The other circumstance in which this Court will sometimes overturn a statutory precedent is if its standard has

“prove[n] unworkable.” Kimble, 576 U. S., at 459. Here,

there is no reason to think that is true of Sosa’s two-step

framework. No one argues before this Court that Sosa’s

steps are unclear or hard to apply. Instead, Cisco argues

that Sosa and the ATS have allowed causes of action to proliferate, ensnaring defendants and courts in litigation. See

Brief for Petitioners 26.

No evidence supports Cisco’s worries. Federal courts

have been restrained in recognizing new causes of action

under Sosa. One study found that, as of 2022, just 300 ATS

suits had ever been filed in federal courts. C. Ewell, O.

Hathaway, & E. Nohle, Has the Alien Tort Statute Made a

Difference?: A Historical, Empirical, and Normative Assessment, 107 Cornell L. Rev. 1205, 1240 (2022) (Ewell).

Fifty-two cases succeeded, and of the 248 cases that were

dismissed, over one-third of them were dismissed at Sosa’s

first step because the plaintiffs had not identified an actionable violation of international law to begin with. Ewell

1241.

decided Sosa. It is bizarre to say that a statute that predates Sosa now undercuts Sosa’s holding. In any event, rather than being an “ ‘alternative remedial structure,’ ” ante, at 10–11, that displaces Sosa, the TVPA indicates Congress’s approval of implied rights of action under the ATS. Before Sosa, the Second Circuit had held that courts may imply private rights of action under the ATS for torture. See Filartiga v. Pena-Irala, 630 F. 2d 876, 877–878 (1980). As I have previously explained, Congress was well aware of Filartiga and passed the TVPA to “supplement the ATS” by extending a civil remedy to U. S. citizens who cannot sue under the ATS. Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC, 584 U. S. 241, 316 (2018) (dissenting opinion). As the congressional Committee Reports noted, the ATS was intended to “ ‘remain intact to permit suits based on other norms that already exist or may ripen in the future into rules of customary international law.’ ” Sosa, 542 U. S., at 728 (quoting H. R. Rep. No. 102–367, pt. 1, p. 4 (1991)); see also Jesner, 584 U. S., at 316 (opinion of SOTOMAYOR, J.) (discussing this legislative history).

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

Two observations follow from this study. First, there is

no real reason to think that ATS suits are clogging federal

courts’ dockets, as 300 cases across multiple centuries reflect a tiny fraction of the hundreds of thousands of civil

cases that are filed in federal courts each year.9 Second,

this Court’s cases narrowing ATS liability have had a significant, and effective, role in reining in federal courts and controlling the proliferation of implied causes of action for

violations of international law. For example, the number of

filed ATS cases fell precipitously after this Court held that

the ATS does not apply extraterritorially. Ewell 1237–1238

(discussing Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 569 U. S.

108 (2013)). Putting these points together, there is no reason to think that Sosa’s framework has become, or is at risk

of becoming, unmanageable.10

Again, the majority largely skips over the stare decisis

analysis and prefers instead to decree that Justice Scalia

was right in Sosa after all. Ante, at 7–12. In so doing, the

majority forgets that while creating causes of action may be

a task primarily for Congress, so too is correcting erroneous

interpretations of statutes. See Kimble, 576 U. S., at 460.

In nonetheless reaching out to correct a perceived error in

Sosa, the Court does not honor the constitutional division

of labor between Congress and this Court. Instead, it

9 See United States Courts, Federal Judicial Caseload Statistics 2025

(2025), https://www.uscourts.gov/data-news/reports/statistical-reports/ federal-judicial-caseload-statistics/federal-judicial-caseload-statistics-2025 (archived at https://perma.cc/MHE5-SXWX) (reporting 271,802 new civil filings in federal district court in 2025).

10 The majority notes that some ATS suits have resulted in settlements

in which plaintiffs and defendants have agreed to end litigation and compensate the plaintiffs in “ ‘multimillion-dollar’ ” suits. See ante, at 11, n. 2. The majority seems to suggest that somehow these settlements are objectionable, but there is no reason to think that voluntary agreements to compensate victims of heinous conduct are inherently unfair or otherwise undesirable.

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

disrespects it. Proper respect for Congress should have led

to a different outcome today.

Moreover, even if Justice Scalia did get it right in 2004,

“[l]ost arguments are not grounds to overrule a case.” Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of

Harvard College, 600 U. S. 181, 352 (2023) (SOTOMAYOR, J.,

dissenting). “When proponents of [previously rejected] arguments, greater now in number on the Court, return to

fight old battles anew, it betrays an unrestrained disregard

for precedent.” Id., at 352–353. That is exactly what the

majority again exhibits today.

C

The majority wraps up its discussion of Sosa by asserting

that “it is hard to see how correcting Sosa’s unfulfilled prediction would upset reliance interests” because “it is a

stretch to believe that we ever would have” found an implied right of action under Sosa. Ante, at 11. The majority,

however, overlooks the 107 other federal courts. Many of

them fulfilled this Court’s prediction by finding implied

causes of action under the ATS in individual cases, just as

the First Congress intended. Those courts were not “ ‘indulg[ing a] fiction.’ ” Ibid. Rather, they were dutifully applying this Court’s decision in Sosa, and their decisions are

proof that Sosa “ ‘operated in practice.’ ” Ante, at 11. It is therefore unclear what the majority means when it says

that Sosa’s promise went unfulfilled, or that no one, not

even the plaintiffs who sued under the ATS, was entitled to

rely on it.

What is clear is that the majority today forecloses future

reliance on Sosa and shuts the courthouse doors to almost

any claimed violation of international law under the ATS.

That includes torture. See, e.g., Filartiga v. Pena-Irala, 630 F. 2d 876, 878 (CA2 1980) (ATS suit brought by plaintiff alleging that his son had been kidnapped and tortured to

death in retaliation for the plaintiff ’s political beliefs). It 24 CISCO SYSTEMS, INC. v. DOE

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

includes forced labor. See, e.g., Licea v. Curacao Drydock

Co., 584 F. Supp. 2d 1355, 1359 (SD Fla. 2008) (ATS suit

alleging that the defendant trafficked Cubans to Curacao,

held them in captivity, and forced them to work repairing

ships and oil platforms). It also includes perhaps the most

universally condemned crime in the modern era: genocide.

See, e.g., Kadic v. Karadzic, 70 F. 3d 232, 236–237 (CA2

1995) (ATS suit alleging “brutal acts of rape, forced prostitution, forced impregnation, torture, and summary execution, carried out by Bosnian-Serb military forces as part of

a genocidal campaign”). “Like the pirates of the 18th century,” whose conduct so concerned Blackstone and the First

Congress, “today’s torturers, slave traders, and perpetrators of genocide are ‘hostis humani generis, an enemy of all

mankind.’ ” Nestlé, 593 U. S., at 647 (opinion of

SOTOMAYOR, J.).

As to each of these offenses, as to each of these enemies

of mankind, the majority decides that there is simply no

way that a suit could possibly proceed without offending

Congress. Noticeably absent from the majority’s analysis is

any evidence that Congress would be offended by these

suits. Of course, there may be reasons why allowing an individual ATS suit to proceed would be unwise. That possibility, however, should be addressed on a case-by-case basis. Indeed, that option was available in this very case.

Even though the analysis of the dissenting judge below was

mistaken for the reasons given above, see supra, at 5–10, it

at least applied Sosa and concluded that allowing this specific suit to proceed would not be an appropriate exercise of

judicial discretion, see 73 F. 4th, at 748–751. The possibility that one case should not be allowed through the door is

no reason to weld the door shut and lock out all others.

IV

The majority also errs by holding that the TVPA does not

allow plaintiffs to sue for the aiding and abetting of torture.

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

The TVPA states that “[a]n individual who . . . subjects an

individual to torture shall, in a civil action, be liable for

damages to that individual.” Note following 28 U. S. C.

§1350 (Establishment of Civic Action) (§1350 note). This

Court has already acknowledged that this language extends beyond those who “personally execute the torture.”

Mohamad v. Palestinian Authority, 566 U. S. 449, 458

(2012). This Court has also explained that aiding and abetting requires that “the defendant consciously and culpably

‘participate[d]’ in a wrongful act so as to help ‘make it succeed.’ ” Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh, 598 U. S. 471, 493 (2023).

Putting the terms “subjects” and “aiding and abetting” together yields a simple answer. In ordinary meaning, a person “subjects” another to torture if he “consciously and culpably ‘participate[s]’ in” the torture “so as to help ‘make it succeed.’ ” Ibid. Imagine an individual who rounds people

up and delivers them to a black site to be tortured by another person. Or a company that sets up the torture chamber with all the necessary tools. Or an informant who provides sensitive information about the victim so that another

person can tailor the torture to the victim’s weaknesses.

None of these actors conducted the torture themselves, but

they have all “subjected” those people to torture by “culpably ‘participat[ing]’ in” it and helping to “ ‘make it succeed.’ ” Ibid.

Dictionary definitions reinforce this understanding. Dictionaries define “subjects” to mean “to cause to undergo or

submit to” or to “expose.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2275 (1993) (capitalization modified); see

American Heritage Dictionary 807 (3d ed. 1992) (“[t]o expose to something,” “[t]o cause to experience”). A person

plainly causes, exposes, or otherwise makes someone submit to torture when she “consciously and culpably ‘participat[es]’ in” it. Twitter, 598 U. S., at 493; see also Restatement (Second) of Torts §876, Comment d (1977) (explaining

that, under the common law, aiding and abetting requires

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

proving the “assistance is a substantial factor in causing

the resulting tort”).

The majority’s narrow interpretation of the word “subjects” is also incompatible with another form of secondary

liability that all agree is covered by the TVPA: command

responsibility. See Brief for Petitioners 41; Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 31–32. Command responsibility

holds superior officers vicariously liable for the actions of

their subordinates. It generally requires showing that the

superior “knew, or should have known,” that subordinates

had or were about to commit torture and “failed to take all

necessary and reasonable measures to prevent” it. Chavez

v. Carranza, 559 F. 3d 486, 499 (CA6 2009); see Mohamad,

566 U. S., at 458 (approvingly citing Chavez). It requires

showing neither “proximate cause” nor that the officer participated in the torture. See Chavez, 559 F. 3d, at 499. That

the TVPA extends such attenuated liability to someone who

did not participate in torture suggests that it also holds liable someone who culpably participates in torture, such as

someone who provides tools to the torturer. Contra, ante,

at 14, n. 4.

Finally, the majority’s reliance on Central Bank is misplaced. As discussed above, that case interpreted a statute

imposing liability on someone who “ ‘directly or indirectly’ ” engaged in proscribed acts. 511 U. S., at 176. That language is narrower than the TVPA’s operative language that

extends liability to anyone who “subjects” another to torture. Yet by extending Central Bank in this way, the majority effectively creates a magic-words test and “impose[s]

a ‘clarity tax’ on Congress by demanding that it speak unequivocally if it wants to” impose aiding-and-abetting liability. Biden v. Nebraska, 600 U. S. 477, 508 (2023) (BARRETT,

J., concurring) (quoting J. Manning, Clear Statement Rules

and the Constitution, 110 Colum. L. Rev. 399, 403 (2010)).

Even in contexts where this Court requires a clear statement, like waivers of sovereign immunity, this Court has

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SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

emphasized that “ ‘no magic words are required’ ” because

the “fact that Congress chose to use certain language” in

one statute “hardly means it was ‘foreclose[d] . . . from using different language to accomplish th[e] same goal.’ ” Department of Agriculture Rural Development Rural Housing

Service v. Kirtz, 601 U. S. 42, 52 (2024); see Sebelius v. Auburn Regional Medical Center, 568 U. S. 145, 153 (2013)

(emphasizing Congress need not “incant magic words” to

make clear that a statutory limitation is jurisdictional).

The majority offers no reason why magic words would be

required in this context.

At bottom, the TVPA expressly authorizes victims of torture to sue any “individual who . . . subjects [them] to torture.” §1350 note. Because the plain text of this statute

includes individuals who aid and abet the victim’s torture,

I would affirm the Ninth Circuit’s judgment on this score as

well.

V

The Court’s decision today is yet another notch in its belt,

unabashedly remaking the law in its preferred image. The

majority jettisons two decades of settled precedent and

breathes new life into two decades of rejected legal theories. It does all this in the name of respecting Congress and the

separation of powers. Yet in fixating on the separation of

powers, the majority ignores the foundations of its own and

shakes the public’s confidence in the stable and predictable

development of the law. Because resolving this case did not

require inflicting these wounds, I respectfully dissent.