IL biometrics privacy reforms apply to past cases, too: Appeals court

IL biometrics privacy reforms apply to past cases, too: Appeals court

Pending class action lawsuits under Illinois’ stringent biometrics privacy law may have become significantly less lucrative, after a federal appeals court declared reforms enacted to limit financial payouts under the law don’t just apply to the lawsuits filed since the reforms took effect a little less than two years ago.

On April 1, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals sided with railroad Union Pacific and other businesses on the hotly debated question, with potentially hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars collectively at stake.

In the ruling, the Seventh Circuit judges said they believed the reforms were “procedural” in nature, and not “substantive.” Therefore, under prior, consistent rulings from the Illinois Supreme Court, the appeals court said, the reforms must also be considered “remedial” in nature, and therefore, retroactive, even if lawmakers didn’t include language specifically saying so.

Essentially, the judges said, the reforms did not alter how lawsuits can be filed under the law, or for which causes. Rather, lawmakers intended the reforms to only apply to limit the potential financial damages the plaintiffs can demand and prevent the law from being misused to demand payouts that could destroy businesses.

The decision was authored by Seventh Circuit Judge Michael Brennan. Judges David Hamilton and Candace Jackson-Akiwumi concurrred.

“… The amendment did not alter when ‘a cause of action … has arisen,’ nor did it change ‘the rights, duties, and obligations of persons to one another’ —the hallmarks of substantive changes,” Brennan wrote in the opinion. “It simply cabined the recovery available against defendants who violate the Act.”

The decision comes as potentially a final answer on one of the hottest questions surrounding Illinois’ unique and controversial Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA).

Since 2015, the BIPA law has spawned thousands of class action lawsuits against employers and businesses operating in Illinois or serving customers in Illinois over alleged violations of Illinoisans’ biometric privacy rights.

Some of the lawsuits famously targeted tech giants, including Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, and Google, among others, resulting in headline-grabbing settlements worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

The overwhelming bulk of BIPA litigation, though, has landed on employers in Illinois, who have been routinely accused of wrongly scanning workers’ fingerprints, faces, voices and other biometric characteristics, without first obtaining written consent or providing notices about how that information might be stored, used, shared and destroyed, among other technical provisions in the law.

The law, to this point, however, has largely allowed trial lawyers to rake in hundreds of millions of dollars in fees paid by businesses targeted by the lawsuits, without ever having to prove any of their clients were actually harmed.

To coerce compliance, the law gave plaintiffs the so-called right of private action – meaning they can file suit without permission from the state. And those sued under the law can face steep potentially payment demands of $1,000-$5,000 per violation.

However, under a series of decisions offering a broad interpretation of the law, the Illinois Supreme Court empowered trial lawyers to use the BIPA statute as a club against targeted defendants, to secure relatively quick and easy big-money settlements, often worth millions of dollars.

Most recently, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled the BIPA law should be interpreted to allow plaintiffs to claim the $1,000-$5,000 damage award for each and every scan of their biometrics, not just the first one. They further ruled those claims should have a five-year statute of limitations.

Justices on the state high court warned these rulings put Illinois businesses at risk of financial ruin and placed the economy of the state at risk. Those justices joined with business advocates calling on Illinois lawmakers to bring balance to the law and rein in the potentially ruinous burdens of the law, as interpreted by the state high court.

In 2024, after years of ignoring pleas for relief from the business community, Illinois Democratic lawmakers enacted BIPA reforms, which made clear that the law should be read to count “individual violations” as once per person, not per biometric scan. Thus, BIPA plaintiffs should be limited to demand $1,000-$5,000 each, not multiplied across potentially hundreds or even thousands of potential biometric scans per person over five years.

However, those reforms included no specific guidance on which lawsuits should be governed by the changes limiting potential payouts.

All parties agreed the law should apply to lawsuits filed after the law was changed. However, trial lawyers and the businesses they targeted differed on whether the change should be interpreted to also apply retroactively, to lawsuits still pending in court at the time the law was changed.

The potential reward disparity was great enough to produce a surge in BIPA filings during the months between the Illinois General Assembly’s approval of the reform bill and Gov. JB Pritzker’s signing of the legislation, making the reforms law.

In the months since, that argument has played out in court. Three federal judges have ruled on the question, siding with trial lawyers in determining the reforms should not be considered retroactive.

On appeal, however, the Seventh Circuit said those judges were wrong.

Some observers had expected the Seventh Circuit to punt the question to the Illinois Supreme Court, to let that court answer definitively.

Brennan and his colleagues on the panel, however, said they believed the state high court has been consistent enough in its rulings on retroactivity for the federal appeals court to answer the question themselves, now.

In the ruling, the Seventh Circuit judges noted the reforms applied only to the damages provisions in the BIPA law, in a section known as Section 20. The reforms did not apply to a separate provision, Section 15, which trial lawyers use to bring their class actions.

So, Brennan and the panel said, the reforms serve only to “cabin” how much plaintiffs can demand, but doesn’t limit their ability to sue, meaning it doesn’t affect the viability of their lawsuits, only how much plaintiffs might be able to secure in a settlement or judgment.

They further noted the Illinois Supreme Court has made clear judges are not obligated to award the damages allowed under the statute, and could even choose to award nothing at all.

“If courts have discretion to decide whether to award damages at all, then plaintiffs were not guaranteed any specific recovery in the first place. So this amendment, which limits them to ‘at most, one recovery,’ did not alter any substantive rights or the number of injuries they sustained. It simply changed the statutory award of damages available to plaintiffs, cabining the discretion of trial court judges when they fashion the remedy,” Brennan wrote.

“The best reading of BIPA Section 20 is that it covers only remedies.”

“… We hold that this amendment applies retroactively because it impacts only the statutory damages available to plaintiffs — it does not change BIPA’s substantive standards of liability,” Brennan wrote.

Brennan and his colleagues remanded the cases to the lower courts with instructions to “ensure they (judges) follow the latest guidance of the legislature when calculating damages under BIPA Section 20.”

The ruling was welcomed by Illinois business advocates, including Mark Denzler, president and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers Association.

Denzler is among the leaders of an Illinois coalition that has pushed for years for reforms of the BIPA law.

But Denzler said he business leaders believe there are still more changes needed for the BIPA law, particularly those aimed at ensuring the law does not hinder Illinois’ growth as a tech business hub. Tech sector business advocates have urged reforms specifically to ensure trial lawyers can’t use the BIPA law to aim potentially massive class actions at the operators of data centers, which industry sources say don’t actually have any control over the collection of biometric data.

“Illinois’ punitive BIPA law has taken hundreds of millions of dollars out of the economy despite the fact that no harm has been alleged or no loss of biometric information,” Denzler said. “We appreciate the Court’s ruling that makes the 2024 reform retroactive, but there is more work to do including fixing the issues that are hampering the development of data centers in Illinois, which are key to a future tech economy.”

Editor’s note: This story has been revised from an earlier version to now include comments from Mark Denzler, of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Airline nixes perk for flying lawmakers as DHS shutdown continues

Airline nixes perk for flying lawmakers as DHS shutdown continues

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square As a partial government shutdown continues, one major airline has suspended services for flying lawmakers as travel chaos builds at U.S. airports. The ongoing partial...
Student sues school over removal of Charlie Kirk tribute

Student sues school over removal of Charlie Kirk tribute

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square A North Carolina high school student is suing over alleged violations of her constitutional rights after her school painted over her Charlie Kirk tribute and...
Illinois quick hits: Coalition calls for more action on data centers

Illinois quick hits: Coalition calls for more action on data centers

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Coalition calls for more action on data centers The Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition says more action is needed from the Illinois...
Asylum advocates disappointed by Supreme Court arguments

Asylum advocates disappointed by Supreme Court arguments

By Emily Rodriguez and Andrew RiceThe Center Square Immigration asylum advocates expressed disappointment with justices on the Supreme Court after arguments Tuesday regarding asylum protections. The case, Noem v. Al...
IL House GOP asks “Have you had enough yet” following student’s murder

IL House GOP asks “Have you had enough yet” following student’s murder

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – After the alleged murder of a Loyola University student by a migrant who was in the country...
EXCLUSIVE: 5-year anniversary of Operation Lone Star, nearly 540,000 apprehended

EXCLUSIVE: 5-year anniversary of Operation Lone Star, nearly 540,000 apprehended

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Texas’ border security mission, Operation Lone Star, reached a milestone in March, its five-year anniversary. Gov. Greg Abbott first launched OLS in March 2021, in...
Many Republicans say proposed bipartisan DHS funding deal 'impossible'

Many Republicans say proposed bipartisan DHS funding deal ‘impossible’

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Senate Republican leaders appear close to reaching a Department of Homeland Security funding deal with Democrats, but many rank-and-file Republicans view the proposed compromise as...
Mullin sworn in as secretary of Homeland Security

Mullin sworn in as secretary of Homeland Security

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square As the Department of Homeland Security nears 40 days since a government stalemate shut it down, Markwayne Mullin has been sworn in as the ninth...
Gas spike continues for Illinoisans; state leaders offer no plan to help yet

Gas spike continues for Illinoisans; state leaders offer no plan to help yet

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As fuel prices continue rising, government leaders in Illinois have responded to growing concern over the impact...
BREAKING: Minnesota sues feds for evidence in Metro Surge shootings

BREAKING: Minnesota sues feds for evidence in Metro Surge shootings

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota filed a lawsuit Tuesday against the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for refusing to share evidence regarding three...
Supreme Court appears to favor Trump's asylum border policy

Supreme Court appears to favor Trump’s asylum border policy

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court appeared in favor of the Trump administration's policy to prevent immigrants making asylum claims from being processed if they are on...
NASA plans to build $20 billion base on the Moon

NASA plans to build $20 billion base on the Moon

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square NASA has abandoned its plans to build a lunar-orbiting space station and will instead use those resources to construct a $20 billion permanent base on...
HUD launches investigation into race-based Washington housing program

HUD launches investigation into race-based Washington housing program

By Tim ClouserThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development launched a fair-housing investigation into the Washington State Housing Finance Commission Tuesday over its race-based Covenant Homeownership...
Illinois lagging the nation for entrepreneurship, economic growth

Illinois lagging the nation for entrepreneurship, economic growth

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Policy Institute’s Josh Bandoch says he could have easily predicted the state would rank as...
Illinois Quick Hits: Iowa PA license wait times half of Illinois

Illinois Quick Hits: Iowa PA license wait times half of Illinois

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals, and Licensing says the state’s average wait time for new physician...