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Supreme Court Sides With Cisco in International Human Rights Case

Experts said the Supreme Court decision on Tuesday will make human rights litigation in U.S. courts harder to pursue. Legal groups will now have to look to other statutes or foreign laws to make their case.
A sign for Cisco in San José on June 23, 2026. (Beth LaBerge/KQED)

A Supreme Court decision on Tuesday put an end to a lawsuit against Cisco that alleged China’s government used the San José-based company’s tech to persecute members of the spiritual group Falun Gong.

The 6-3 ruling limited the scope of a law from the 1700s that has been used to bring human rights litigation in the U.S. since the 1980s. The decision could make it harder to hold corporations and their executives accountable in U.S. courts for human rights abuses committed abroad.

A lower court previously ruled that the so-called Alien Tort Statute also covered situations that aided and abetted human rights violations. However, the ruling read by Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett on Tuesday reversed that decision.

“Cisco is correct,” Barrett said. “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.”

The lawsuit, first filed in 2011, claimed Cisco and its executives “are liable for aiding and abetting violations of international law.” One of the plaintiffs also targeted two Cisco executives for being “liable for aiding and abetting violations of the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991.”

Falun Gong held a rally on the west lawn of the U.S. Capitol and a march through the city in Washington on June 20, 2018. (Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

The Chinese government banned Falun Gong in 1999, and those who practice have faced detention and torture. A 2025 AP News investigation, which found evidence that some American tech companies — such as Cisco — enabled surveillance in China, impacting minorities and religious groups.

The tech company said it is deeply committed to human rights and reiterated its long-held position that the “claims are inaccurate and entirely without foundation,” in a 2023 statement about the case.

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William Dodge, an international law expert at George Washington University Law School, said the conclusion is “mistaken” and went against precedent.

“I think that this decision really puts an end to the modern era of human rights litigation under the Alien Tort Statute,” said Dodge, who wrote an amicus brief on behalf of the plaintiffs in the Cisco case. “There aren’t going to be human rights cases brought under the Alien Tort Statute anymore.”

Dodge said the decision does not rule out human rights litigation entirely, but for future lawsuits, legal groups will now have to look to other statutes or foreign law to make their case, he said.

Justices also ruled 8-1 that aiding and abetting did not come within the language of the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991 — with only Justice Sonia Sotomayor as the sole dissenting voice.

“Today’s decision marks yet another low point in this Court’s esteem for its precedents,” Sotomayor wrote in her opinion.

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