Skip to content

ABC Tool

  • Home
  • About / Contect
    • PRIVACY POLICY
Supreme Court arguments make it clear that FCC fines are “nonbinding”

Supreme Court arguments make it clear that FCC fines are “nonbinding”

Posted on April 22, 2026 By safdargal12 No Comments on Supreme Court arguments make it clear that FCC fines are “nonbinding”
Blog

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson told the carriers’ lawyer, “Your argument is that you don’t have the right to invoke a jury trial unless the government comes after you in terms of the enforcement proceeding, and I’m really struggling with why you aren’t happy that the government is not coming after you. If the government is abandoning its claim by not seeking enforcement of it, I don’t know why you would need the right to a jury trial, and why isn’t that a good thing for you?”

Wall argued that when a company’s primary regulator “tells us we owe $100 million… you can’t sit around and do nothing.” He said an unpaid FCC fine could harm a company in future FCC proceedings.

The FCC could “use the fact that we didn’t pay and are a law-breaker when it considers character or persistent disregard of the law, statutory circumstances that the commission can consider under a host of different provisions that deal with things like licenses and spectrum,” Wall said.

SEC fine system was struck down

One question is whether the FCC ran afoul of the Supreme Court’s June 2024 ruling in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, which held that “when the SEC seeks civil penalties against a defendant for securities fraud, the Seventh Amendment entitles the defendant to a jury trial.”

Wall argued that the FCC’s strategy “would carve a huge hole in Jarkesy.” Agencies with schemes like the one ruled illegal in Jarkesy could simply describe their forfeiture orders as nonbinding even if regulated companies “effectively have to comply,” he said.

Suri countered that the two agencies’ enforcement powers were different, as the SEC could deduct penalties from tax refunds or garnish wages. If the SEC went after a non-payer in court, a trial “would be limited to the issue of whether you had paid the penalty,” without any “review of whether the underlying order was correct,” he said.

SEC fine decisions also resulted in interest accruing immediately, whereas interest on FCC fines only accrues after a jury makes a determination, he said. “For the FCC, the only way to get to the penalties is to file a collection suit where you do get a jury trial,” Suri said.



Source link

Post Views: 1

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Google Photos is rolling out its long-awaited face touch-up tools
Next Post: Xbox Drops Game Pass Ultimate Price, Brings Bad News for Call of Duty Fans ❯

You may also like

Sam Altman throws shade at Anthropic’s cyber model, Mythos: ‘fear-based marketing’
Blog
Sam Altman throws shade at Anthropic’s cyber model, Mythos: ‘fear-based marketing’
April 21, 2026
Trump picks qualified, normal health leader to head CDC; experts still cautious
Blog
Trump picks qualified, normal health leader to head CDC; experts still cautious
April 19, 2026
Room for the Moon is thrillingly weird experimental pop
Blog
Room for the Moon is thrillingly weird experimental pop
April 12, 2026
BYOD in schools: Manage personally-owned devices securely
Blog
BYOD in schools: Manage personally-owned devices securely
April 16, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Tim Cook was an innovator — just not the Jobs kind
  • Samsung’s unannounced earbuds have a design you might not expect
  • Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Answer and Help for April 22 #780
  • Meta will record employees’ keystrokes and use it to train its AI models
  • ChatGPT Images 2: Why OpenAI Built a New Image Model After Killing Sora

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • April 2026

Categories

  • Blog

Copyright © 2026 ABC Tool.

Theme: Oceanly News by ScriptsTown