Gallion v. Charter Communications
Concerning the constitutionality of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act ban on unsolicited calls to mobile phones using an autodialer or prerecorded voice message
- EPIC to Supreme Court: Robocall Ban is Constitutional: In an amicus brief for the U.S. Supreme Court, EPIC today defended the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, a law that prohibits unwanted robocalls. EPIC said that the robocall ban is "constitutionally permissible and serves important governmental interests." EPIC explained in Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants that "the harm caused by unwanted automated calls" is more acute than when the robocall ban was enacted in 1991. EPIC said "without the autodialer ban, the assault of unwanted calls could make cell phones unusable." EPIC also argued that "a minor amendment to an otherwise constitutional law, passed decades after the original enactment, should not take down an act of Congress." Senator Markey, Representative Eshoo, and more than a dozen members of Congress also filed an amicus brief in support of the consumer privacy law. EPIC frequently files amicus briefs on the TCPA, including in the related case, Gallion v. Charter Communications. (Mar. 2, 2020)
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- EPIC Joins Coalition Urging FCC Not to Permit Unfettered Ringless Voicemails » (Oct. 5, 2021)
EPIC has joined a coalition of consumer groups led by the National Consumer Law Center to urge the FCC to reject a proposal that would make it legal for callers to drop voicemails directly into people's phones without their consent. The groups explained that allowing such “ringless voicemail” would clog consumers’ voicemail boxes with spam, scams, and debt collection notices. More than 90,000 consumers signed a petition urging the FCC to reject the proposal, and thousands of others, including small businesses and medical professionals, have filed comments with the FCC registering their concern with the harms presented by ringless voicemail. EPIC routinely participates in regulatory and legislative processes concerning robocalls and files amicus briefs in robocall cases.
- EPIC & National Consumer Law Center Tell Court Not to Let Robocallers Off the Hook » (Feb. 2, 2021)
EPIC and the National Consumer Law Center have filed an
amicus brief in
Lindenbaum v. Realgy, LLC, urging the Sixth Circuit to reject immunity for illegal robocalls made between 2015 and 2020. The case follows the Supreme Court’s decision in
Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants, in which the Court held that an exception added in 2015 to the decades-old robocall restriction was unconstitutional and must be severed from the broad robocall ban. As defendant in a separate robocall suit, Realgy argued that the Supreme Court’s decision meant that the broad robocall ban was unenforceable for the period that the unconstitutional exception was in effect, from 2015-2020. The district court agreed and granted Realgy’s motion to dismiss. EPIC and NCLC filed an amicus brief arguing that granting robocallers immunity “would reward those who made tens of billions of unwanted robocalls and deprive consumers of any remedy for the incessant invasion of their privacy.” EPIC regularly files
amicus briefs supporting consumers in illegal robocall cases.
- Supreme Court to Decide Scope of Robocall Ban » (Jul. 9, 2020)
Just days after
upholding the federal robocall ban against a First Amendment challenge, the U.S. Supreme Court has
agreed to decide the scope of the ban in a new case, Duguid v. Facebook. Following the D.C. Circuit’s
invalidation of the FCC’s definition of an “autodialer”—the technology companies use to automatically dial vast numbers of consumers— federal appeals courts have split on how to interpret the term. Telemarketers argue that an autodialer must generate random or sequential numbers, while consumers and consumer groups like EPIC maintain that the law bans systems that automatically call numbers from lists. In
Gadelhak v. AT&T, EPIC argued that adopting the telemarketers’ autodialer definition “would undermine the law's effectiveness by inviting easy circumvention and rendering the restriction obsolete.” EPIC routinely files
amicus briefs in cases on the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act.
- Supreme Court Hears Oral Argument in Robocall Ban Case » (May. 6, 2020)
Earlier today, the U.S. Supreme Court heard
oral argument in
Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants. The argument was
livestreamed, with EPIC staff providing
commentary on Twitter. The case asks whether an exemption to the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act, a law that prohibits unwanted robocalls, is constitutional, and, if not, whether the exemption should be severed or the whole law struck down. EPIC defended the TCPA in an
amicus brief. EPIC said that the robocall ban is "constitutionally permissible and serves important governmental interests." EPIC explained that cell phone adoption has made "the harm caused by unwanted automated calls" greater than when the robocall ban was enacted in 1991. EPIC said that "without the autodialer ban, the assault of unwanted calls could make cell phones unusable." EPIC also argued that "a minor amendment to an otherwise constitutional law, passed decades after the original enactment, should not take down an act of Congress." EPIC frequently files
amicus briefs on the TCPA, including in the related case,
Gallion v. Charter Communications.
- EPIC, Consumer Groups Call for Review of Robocall Ruling » (Mar. 12, 2020)
EPIC joined the National Consumer Law Center and other consumer groups in an
amicus brief supporting review of recent decision that limits consumer robocall protections. In
Gadelhak v. AT&T Services, the Seventh Circuit
concluded that consumers who receive an automated text message can sue under the
federal anti-robocall law, but only if the autodialer has a random number generator. The decision deepened a split among federal appeals courts over the scope of federal robocall protections. EPIC and NCLC also filed an
amicus brief during the court's original consideration of the case. The EPIC brief explained that allowing telemarketers to auto-dial consumers "would undermine the law's effectiveness by inviting easy circumvention and rendering the restriction obsolete." EPIC routinely files amicus briefs on
consumer privacy issues, including several
amicus briefs on the TCPA.
- EPIC to Supreme Court: Robocall Ban is Constitutional » (Mar. 2, 2020)
In an
amicus brief for the U.S. Supreme Court, EPIC today defended the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act, a law that prohibits unwanted robocalls. EPIC said that the robocall ban is "constitutionally permissible and serves important governmental interests." EPIC explained in
Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants that "the harm caused by unwanted automated calls" is more acute than when the robocall ban was enacted in 1991. EPIC said "without the autodialer ban, the assault of unwanted calls could make cell phones unusable." EPIC also argued that "a minor amendment to an otherwise constitutional law, passed decades after the original enactment, should not take down an act of Congress." Senator Markey, Representative Eshoo, and more than a dozen members of Congress also filed an
amicus brief in support of the consumer privacy law. EPIC frequently files
amicus briefs on the TCPA, including in the related case,
Gallion v. Charter Communications.
- Federal Appeals Court Rules Consumers Can Sue for Automated Texts—But Only If Calls Are Random » (Feb. 19, 2020)
The Seventh Circuit has
concluded that consumers who receive an automated text message can sue under the
federal anti-robocall law, but only if the autodialer has a random number generator. The decision in
Gadelhak v. AT&T Services deepens a split among federal appeals courts over the scope of federal robocall protections. EPIC and the National Consumer Law Center filed an amicus brief in the case, arguing that an autodialer need only dial numbers from a list, such as a customer contact database. EPIC and the NCLC explained that allowing telemarketers to robocall consumers from a list "would undermine the law's effectiveness by inviting easy circumvention and rendering the restriction obsolete." The EPIC routinely files amicus briefs on
consumer privacy issues, including several
amicus briefs on the TCPA.
- Supreme Court to Review Constitutionality of Federal Robocall Ban » (Jan. 11, 2020)
The Supreme Court has
aqreed to hear a challenge to the constitutionality of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, a federal law that prohibits unwanted robocalls. The law generally restricts the use of autodialers, but in 2015 Congress created an exception for robocalls to collect debts guaranteed by the federal government. Several groups have since challenged the law on First Amendment grounds, arguing that the TCPA discriminates against particular speakers. The Court will now consider the issue in
Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants. EPIC filed an
amicus brief in
Gallion v. Charter Communications, a related case, arguing that “these challenges represent a systematic effort by companies to undermine the purpose of the TCPA and to inundates consumers with unwanted calls.” EPIC routinely files amicus briefs on
consumer privacy issues, including several
amicus briefs on the TCPA.
- House Passes Bill to Combat Robocalls » (Jul. 25, 2019)
In a 429-3 vote, the House
passed a bill to combat the onslaught of robocalls. The
Stopping Bad Robocalls Act would increase the fines for illegal robocalls, require phone companies to block robocalls by default, require more businesses to obtain consumer consent before calling, and much more. The Act comes two months after the Senate
passed a similar bill—the
Traced Act—with near unanimous support. Many
criticized the Senate's bill for not going far enough. EPIC joined a coalition of consumer groups that
urged members of Congress to support the House bill. EPIC has long advocated for stronger regulations surrounding robocalls. EPIC provided
expert analysis to Congress, submitted
numerous comments, and filed multiple
amicus briefs emphasizing the need to limit robocalls.
- Ninth Circuit Strikes Down Debt-Collection Exception to Robocall Ban » (Jul. 9, 2019)
The Ninth Circuit has again
found that the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act limits the ability of government debt collectors to make robocalls. The law prohibits automated calls to cell phones, except in emergencies or with the consent of the called party. But in 2015 Congress created an exception for calls made to collect debts guaranteed by the federal government. In
Duguid v. Facebook, the Ninth Circuit found that the exception violated the First Amendment because it preference debt collectors over other companies that could might use robocall technology. The outcome is favorable for consumer privacy. EPIC filed a
"friend of the court" brief in
Gallion v. Charter Communications, a similar case in the Ninth Circuit, arguing that "the TCPA prohibitions are needed now more than ever." EPIC routinely files amicus briefs on
consumer privacy issues, including several
amicus briefs on the TCPA.
- EPIC, NCLC Urge Federal Appeals Court to Limit Robocalls » (Jul. 9, 2019)
EPIC and the National Consumer Law Center have filed an
amicus brief in a case concerning the scope of the federal law, the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act, that protects consumers against robocalls. In
Gadelhak v. AT&T Services, EPIC and NCLC argued that list-based systems are included among the law's definition of "autodialers." To do otherwise, the brief explained, "would undermine the law's effectiveness by inviting easy circumvention and rendering the restriction obsolete." EPIC and NCLC further explained that the "mass texting from a list, such as the system used by AT&T in this case, is precisely the type of technology the TCPA sought to restrict." The amici warned that a narrow interpretation of the law "would accelerate the rising levels of robocalls and texts." EPIC routinely files amicus briefs on
consumer privacy issues, including several
amicus briefs on the TCPA.
- Congress, FTC Take Action Against Robocallers » (Jun. 27, 2019)
A House subcommittee voted unanimously to advance a wide-ranging bill intended to crack down on robocalls. The
Stopping Bad Robocalls Act (H.R. 3375) would enroll customers in free call-blocking programs and take more aggressive rulemaking steps to ensure people only get calls they ask to receive. The FTC also
announced a partnership with state enforcers--"Operation Call it Quits"—to crack down on illegal robocalls. The initiative includes 94 actions targeting robocallers responsible for more than one billion calls. EPIC has worked to ensure that telephone users are protected from invasive business practices
through agency comments and
amicus briefs in cases such as
ACA International and
Gallion v. Charter Communications.
- Supreme Court Sidesteps Merits in Junk Fax Case » (Jun. 20, 2019)
The Supreme Court today
directed a lower court to reexamine
PDR Network v. Carlton & Harris Chiropractic, a case which concerns a company's efforts to disregard an FCC rule about junk faxes. The Court told the Fourth Circuit to resolve "preliminary" questions about the legal effect of the FCC rule and the company's ability to challenge the rule through the agency process. EPIC filed an
amicus brief in the case. EPIC explained that permitting companies to challenge FCC rules outside the process Congress established "will exclude the voices of consumers" in agency decision-making. EPIC also explained that the company's efforts to sidestep agency rules will benefit those "who have resources to attack FCC rules." EPIC and other consumer organizations routinely provide comments to federal agencies through the federal agency rule making process. EPIC also
contributed to the development of the robocall and junk fax laws. EPIC has since worked to ensure that telephone users are protected from invasive business practices
through agency comments and
amicus briefs in cases such as
ACA International and
Gallion v. Charter Communications.
- EPIC to Congress: FCC Must Protect Consumers From Location Tracking and Phone Record Surveillance » (Jun. 12, 2019)
Prior to an FCC oversight
hearing, EPIC sent a
statement to the Senate Commerce Committee outlining priorities for the agency: ending the data retention regulation and protecting location data. In 2015, EPIC
petitioned the FCC to repeal the data retention regulation, which requires telephone companies to keep all telephone customer records for 18 months. Every
comment received by the FCC favored the EPIC petition, yet the agency has failed to withdraw the regulation. EPIC has long worked to ensure that telephone users are protected from invasive practices
through agency comments and
amicus briefs in cases such as
ACA International and
Gallion v. Charter Communications.
- FCC Affirms Robocall Blocking By Default to Protect Consumers » (Jun. 7, 2019)
The FCC voted to confirm that voice service providers may aggressively block unwanted robocalls before they reach consumers. The Commission
stated: "While many phone companies now offer their customers call blocking tools on an opt-in basis, the Declaratory Ruling clarifies that they can provide them as the default, thus allowing them to protect more consumers from unwanted robocalls and making it more cost-effective to implement call blocking programs." EPIC has long advocated for robust
telephone privacy protections. Last week, EPIC submitted
comments to the FCC recommending that the agency (1) require phone providers to proactively block calls from numbers that are unassigned, unallocated, or invalid; (2) prohibit spoofing if there is an intent to defraud or cause harm; and (3) encourage the use of call authentication technology that safeguards caller anonymity. EPIC filed amicus briefs
earlier this year and in
2015 that strengthened consumer protections for robocalls.
- Senate Passes Anti-Robocall Act 97-1 » (May. 23, 2019)
The Senate overwhelmingly passed the
Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence (TRACED) Act, sponsored by
Senator John Thune (R-S.D.) and
Senator Ed Markey (D-Mass.). The Act would give regulators more time to find scammers, increases civil penalties, promotes call authentication and blocking techniques, and brings together federal agencies and state attorneys general to coordinate prosecution of robocallers. EPIC has long advocated for
robust telephone privacy protections and regularly files
amicus briefs and
comments in support of stronger consumer protections against robocalls.
- Appeals Court Strikes Down Debt Collector Exception to Robocall Ban » (Apr. 25, 2019)
A federal appeals court
ruled today that an amendment to the federal robocall ban is unconstitutional. The
Telephone Consumer Protection Act prohibits automated calls to cell phones, except in emergencies or with the consent of the called party. But in 2015 Congress created an exception for calls made to collect debts guaranteed by the federal government. The court in AAPC v. FCC found that the debt-collection exemption "undercuts" the privacy protections in the law. So the court found the exception unconstitutional and struck it from the law. EPIC filed a
"friend of the court" brief in
Gallion v. Charter Communications, a similar case in the Ninth Circuit, arguing that "the TCPA prohibitions are needed now more than ever." EPIC has
testified in support of the TCPA and has submitted
extensive comments and
amicus briefs on the consumer privacy law.
- Bill to Limit Robocalls Moves Forward in Senate » (Apr. 3, 2019)
The Senate Commerce Committee today approved a bill to strengthen the FCC's ability to prevent robocalls. The
Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence or TRACED Act, enhances the FCC's authority to issue fines against robocallers, extends the statute of limitations, and promotes call authentication and blocking adoption. EPIC has long advocated for robust
telephone privacy protections. Last week, EPIC submitted
comments to the FCC recommending that the agency (1) require phone providers to block calls from numbers that are unassigned, unallocated, or invalid; (2) prohibit spoofing if there is an intent to defraud or cause harm; and (3) encourage the use of call authentication technology that safeguards caller anonymity. EPIC filed amicus briefs
earlier this year and in
2015 that strengthened consumer protections for robocalls.
- EPIC Urges Supreme Court to Preserve Public Voice in Robocall and Junk Fax Law » (Feb. 14, 2019)
EPIC has filed an
amicus brief urging the Supreme Court to safeguard FCC rules that protect the public from robocalls and junk faxes. The case,
PDR Network v. Carlton & Harris Chiropractic, concerns a company's efforts to disregard an FCC rule about junk faxes. EPIC explained that permitting companies to avoid FCC rules "will exclude the voices of consumers" in agency decision making. EPIC also explained that the company's efforts to sidestep agency rules will benefit those "who have resources to attack FCC rules." EPIC
contributed to the development of the robocall and junk fax laws. EPIC has since worked to ensure that telephone users are protected from invasive practices
through agency comments and
amicus briefs in cases such as
ACA International and
Gallion v. Charter Communications.
- EPIC Supports Constitutionality of "Robocall" Law » (Nov. 13, 2018)
EPIC has filed a
"friend of the court" brief in a case concerning the constitutionality of the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act, the law the prohibits unwanted "robocalls." In
Gallion v. Charter Communications, EPIC argued that "the TCPA prohibitions are needed now more than ever," citing the intrusiveness of marketing calls directed toward cell phones. EPIC also said the TCPA "protects important consumer privacy interests." EPIC
testified in support of the TCPA and has submitted
extensive comments and
amicus briefs on the consumer privacy law.
- EPIC Redials FCC, Urges Agency to Block Unlawful Robocalls » (Sep. 25, 2018)
In
comments to the FCC, EPIC has renewed its call to the agency to
block unlawful robocalls. The FCC proposed
a rule that would allow phone companies to block calls from numbers they know are invalid, such as numbers that have not been assigned to a subscriber. EPIC recommended that the FCC (1) require phone providers to proactively block calls from numbers that are unassigned, unallocated, or invalid; (2) prohibit spoofing if there is an intent to defraud or cause harm; and (3) encourage the use of call authentication technology that safeguards caller anonymity. EPIC previously filed
comments in when the FCC proposed the rule, and has long advocated for robust
telephone privacy protections. EPIC filed an
amicus brief in 2015 that strengthened consumer protections.
- EPIC Advises FCC on Robocalls Regulation » (Jun. 29, 2018)
EPIC
advised the
FCC on how to interpret the
Telephone Communications Protection Act to best protect consumers in light of the recent
decision in
ACA Int'l v. FCC. EPIC filed a
friend of the court brief in that case arguing that consumers could revoke consent by any "reasonable means." The court agreed but vacated other aspects of the rule. Many industry groups urged the Commission to make a rule that if "any" human intervention is involved in the dialing or sorting of the list of numbers a calling system would not be considered an "automatic telephone dialing system." EPIC opposed that recommendation, explaining that such a definition would allow autodialers to use deceptive tactics to evade regulation. EPIC contributed to the development of the Telephone Communications Protection Act and regularly submits
comments to the FCC.
- EPIC Advises FCC on Robocalls Regulation » (Jun. 13, 2018)
EPIC
advised the
FCC on how to interpret the
Telephone Communications Protection Act to best protect consumers in light of a recent
decision in
ACA Int'l v. FCC. EPIC filed a
friend of the court brief in that case arguing that consumers could revoke consent by any "reasonable means." The court agreed but vacated other aspects of the rule. EPIC's comments argue that the FCC should require callers to meet three conditions to simplify the revocation of consent: (1) inform consumers of their right to revoke, (2) provide a simple means of revocation, and (3) comply in a timely manner. EPIC contributed to the development of the Telephone Communications Protection Act and regularly submits
comments to the FCC.
- EPIC Supports Additional Regulation of Robocalls » (Apr. 17, 2018)
In advance of a
hearing on "Abusive Robocalls and How We Can Stop Them" EPIC
recommended reforms that would combat fraud while protecting privacy. EPIC supports regulations that would (1) allow phone providers to proactively block numbers that are unassigned, unallocated, or invalid; (2) block invalid numbers without requiring consumer consent; (3) provide strong security measures for any database of blocked numbers; and (4) prohibit spoofing with the intent to defraud or cause harm. EPIC played a leading role in the creation of the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act and continues to defend the Act.
- D.C. Circuit Affirms "Consent" Protection in FCC Robocall Rule » (Mar. 16, 2018)
A federal appeals court
ruled today in a closely watched case concerning robocalls. The rule under review in
ACA International v. FCC concerned the FCC's regulations for the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act. EPIC filed a
friend of the court brief in the case in support of the FCC regulations. EPIC said that companies "seeking to engage in privacy-invading business practices" bear "the burden of proving consent." The court agreed that consumers could withdraw consent by all "reasonable means." However, the court vacated other aspects of the rule, including the definition of automated telephone dialing system and proposed procedures for calls to reassigned numbers.
- DC Appeals Court Hears Arguments in Telemarketing Privacy Case » (Oct. 20, 2016)
The federal appeals court in Washington, D.C. heard oral arguments Wednesday in a case with major implications for telephone privacy. The suit,
ACA International v. FCC, was brought against the Federal Communications Commission by telemarketing companies and others challenging
rules adopted under the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act that prohibit automated calls made to cell phones without their consent. EPIC and six consumer privacy groups
filed an amicus brief in the case, stressing the importance of privacy protections for cell phone users. EPIC also challenged a claim made by the telemarketers that "37 million" numbers were reassigned each year, making it difficult, the companies claimed, to comply with the privacy law. During the argument, one of the judges
pressed the telemarketers' attorney on the point (
audio), citing research in the EPIC amicus brief. EPIC frequently participates as
amicus curiae in cases that raises novel privacy issues.
- EPIC, Consumer Coalition Tells FCC to Limit Health Care Robocalls » (Oct. 19, 2016)
EPIC and a coalition of consumer privacy advocates have
urged the Federal Communications Commission to reject a
request by health insurance companies to make unlimited health-related robocalls to consumers under the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act. The insurance companies asked the FCC to amend the TCPA so that once a consumer provides her phone number to her doctor, she has "consented" to receiving telemarketing calls from other health care providers on anything medically related. The coalition comments, led by the
National Consumer Law Center, urge the FCC to limit the scope of consumers' consent to medical robocalls by exclude telemarketing calls and allowing only calls related to the original reason the consumer provided her phone number. EPIC supports robust
telephone privacy protections and filed an
amicus brief in support of the FCC's 2015
order that strengthened consumer protections under the TCPA.
- EPIC Advises Congress on Modernizing Telemarketing Rules to Protect Consumers » (Sep. 21, 2016)
EPIC has sent a
letter to the House Energy and Commerce Committee in advance of the hearing on “
Modernizing the Telephone Consumer Protection Act.” The telemarketing law bars telemarketers and robocallers from contacting consumers by phone fax, or text without prior consent. EPIC urged the Committee to ensure that an update to the law “protects consumers from unwanted commercial communications.” EPIC said legal rights should be “robust, enforceable and minimally burdensome for consumers." Earlier this year, EPIC filed an
amicus brief in support of strengthening TCPA protections for consumers. EPIC has also
testified before Congress about the telemarketing law and
submitted many comments concerning its
implementation.
- EPIC, Consumer Coalition Oppose Robocalls by Government Contractors » (Jul. 26, 2016)
EPIC and a coalition of consumer groups have
petitioned the FCC to reverse its recent decision to exempt federal contractors from restrictions on telemarketing and robocalls. The FCC incorrectly
determined that the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) “does not apply to calls made by or on behalf of the federal government in the conduct of official government business.” The petition, led by the
National Consumer Law Center, warns of significant increases in unwanted robocalls from government contractors that consumers would be powerless to stop. EPIC supports robust
telephone privacy protections and filed an
amicus brief in support of the FCC’s 2015
order that strengthened consumer protections under the TCPA.
- Senate Examines "Do Not Call" Law » (May. 19, 2016)
The Senate Commerce Committee held a
hearing yesterday on the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act. The "TCPA" bars telemarketers and robocallers from contacting consumers by phone or fax without prior express consent. In January, EPIC filed an
amicus brief to provide greater TCPA protections for consumers. EPIC said that widespread use of cellphones “has amplified the nuisance and privacy invasion caused by unwanted calls and text messages.” EPIC has
testified before Congress about the TCPA and
submitted many comments concerning the implementation of the consumer privacy law.
- EPIC and Consumer Privacy Groups File Brief Supporting FCC in Telephone Privacy Case » (Jan. 25, 2016)
EPIC and six consumer privacy organizations have filed a
"friend-of-the-court" brief in support of the Federal Communications Commission in
ACA International v. FCC. The case was brought against the FCC by industry groups charged with violating the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act. The FCC had made clear that companies cannot make automated or prerecorded calls to consumers without their consent. EPIC argued in its brief that widespread adoption of cell phones "has amplified the nuisance and privacy invasion caused by unwanted calls and text messages." EPIC and the consumer organizations urged the federal court to uphold the
FCC order safeguarding consumers.
- Supreme Court Rules Settlement Offers Can't Moot Consumer Class Actions » (Jan. 20, 2016)
The Supreme Court has
ruled that a company cannot terminate class action litigation by strategically making a settlement offer of full relief to individual plaintiffs. The case,
Campbell-Ewald Co. v. Gomez, involved a consumer who refused to drop his
Telephone Consumer Protection Act lawsuit in exchange for such an offer. The defendant company argued that the offer, which exceeded the statutory damages under the TCPA, mooted his case. The Justices disagreed, ruling 6-3 that "an unaccepted settlement offer has no force. Like other unaccepted contract offers, it creates no lasting right or obligation." EPIC routinely
works to protect
consumer privacy interests in
class action settlements.
- FCC Implements Strict Rules to Halt Unwanted Telemarketing » (Jun. 19, 2015)
The
Federal Communications Commission has adopted
new rules that impose strict limits on
telemarketing practices. Under the rules, consumers can halt unwanted messages by telling companies to stop calling. The rules also allow phone companies to offer call-blocking services to screen out automated telemarketing calls. In 2014, the FCC received more than 215,000 complaints from consumers regarding unwanted telephone solicitations. EPIC has previously
urged the Commission to require express consumer consent for telemarketing calls and to
protect wireless subscribers from telemarketing. EPIC President Marc Rotenberg
helped establish the Telephone Consumer Protection Act.
- Senators Urges FCC to Protect Consumers Against Unsolicited Calls » (Jun. 9, 2015)
Almost a dozen senators have
urged the Federal Communications Commission to uphold consumer privacy protections within the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act. Next week the Commission
will vote on two dozen proposals seeking to relax enforcement of the Act. According to Senator Markey and others, the FCC's recommendation to permit unsolicited texts and calls without consumer consent "would threaten privacy and result in an increase in disruptive and annoying calls for American consumers." The Commission will vote on the proposals during an
Open Meeting on June 18, 2015. EPIC supported
enactment of the TCPA and has
advocated for strong enforcement.
- FCC Issues Stronger Telemarketing Rules to Protect Consumers » (Jun. 12, 2012)
The Federal Communications Commission's
final rule amending the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (TCPA) regulations is now in effect. The rule requires "(1)prior express written consent for all autodialed or prerecorded telemarketing calls to wireless numbers and residential lines; (2) allow[s] consumers to opt out of future robocalls during a robocall; (3) limit[s] permissible abandoned calls on a per-calling campaign basis, in order to discourage intrusive calling campaigns; and (4) exempts prerecorded calls to residential lines made by health care-related entities governed by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996." EPIC has previously urged the Commission to
require express consumer consent for telemarketing calls and to
protect wireless subscribers from telemarketing. For more information, see
EPIC: Telemarketing and the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA).
Summary
This case concerns the constitutionality of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), which prohibits using an “automated telephone dialing system” or prerecorded voice to call an individual’s cell phone without prior authorization. Since its enactment in 1991, courts have found that the TCPA’s autodialer rules are constitutional, but several groups are now challenging the law’s constitutionality again based on Congress’ decision in 2015 to amend the rules and include an exception for “government debt collection” calls. In this case, Steven Gallion sued Charter Communications for violating the TCPA. Charter Communications filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the TCPA, as amended, violates the First Amendment. The lower court in the Central District of California found that the TCPA is constitutional under the First Amendment despite the new content-based exception. However, the lower court certified the question for immediate appeal and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit granted the appeal.
Background
Factual Background
Steven Gallion alleges that Charter Communications spammed him, and thousands of others, with daily robocalls promoting its telecommunications services using automatic telephone dialing systems and prerecorded voice. Gallion says that he and thousands of others were never customers of Charter and never provided any personal information, including their cellular telephone numbers, to Charter for any purpose.
Procedural Background
U.S. District Court for the Central District of California
Steven Gallion brought a class action lawsuit against Charter Communications, Inc, alleging that Charter placed thousands of automated calls to individuals, such as Gallion, without their consent. Charter responded with a motion to dismiss, claiming that the TCPA is unconstitutional on its face because the government-debt exception, which allows collectors of government-held or -backed debt to make automated calls, makes the TCPA, as amended, a content-based restriction on speech. Charter argued that the TCPA does not pass strict scrutiny because it is (1) underinclusive, in that government debt collectors using automated calls threaten just as much if not more of an individual's privacy, and (2) because the TCPA, as amended, allows for such intrusion on privacy, it does not further the government's claimed compelling interest of protecting privacy. Gallion responded that the TCPA is not a content-based restriction, but even if it were, it passes strict scrutiny, and the government-debt restriction is severable. On January 9, 2018, the United States intervened for the limited purpose of defending the TCPA's constitutionality.
The U.S. District Court for the Central District of California agreed with Charter that the TCPA, as amended, is a content-based restriction on speech, but agreed with Gallion that it passes strict scrutiny. The District Court thus denied Charter's motion to dismiss in an order on Feb. 26, 2018, but certified the question for appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) because the court found that there were substantial grounds for difference of opinion on the constitutionality of the TCPA. Charter filed a petition to appeal to the Ninth Circuit, which was granted on May 22, 2018.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
On appeal, the challengers have argued that the lower court was wrong to uphold the TCPA cell phone ban as constitutional. They have argued that the cell phone ban (1) does not further a compelling governmental interest, (2) is not narrowly tailored, and that (3) there are less restrictive alternatives that would achieve the government’s purpose. In particular, the challengers argued that time-of-day limitations, mandatory disclosure of the caller’s identity, or do-not-call lists would be alternatives to the autodialer and prerecorded voice ban.
EPIC's Interest
Since its inception, EPIC defended both free speech and privacy rights as they are challenged by emerging technologies. EPIC has filed many “friend of the court” briefs in important First Amendment cases, including several cases in the Supreme Court concerning anonymity and First Amendment privacy interests: Packingham v. North Carolina, 137 S. Ct. 1730 (2017) ; John Doe #1 v. Reed, 561 U.S. 186 (2010); and Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of N.Y., Inc. v. Village of Stratton, 536 U.S. 150 (2002).
In Watchtower Bible v. Stratton, EPIC argued that a local ordinance requiring registration and identification during door-to-door petitioning violated the right of anonymity. In Forensic Advisors, Inc. v. Matrixx Initiatives, Inc., 170 Md. App. 520 (2006), EPIC and co-amici argued that the First Amendment right to read anonymously meant that a reporter could not be compelled to disclose a list of subscribers. In an amicus brief filed for Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Becerra, EPIC argued that the deep-rooted tradition of anonymous charitable donations should be upheld because it protects the privacy of both donors and recipients.
EPIC has also filed or joined amicus briefs arguing that the First Amendment prohibits compelled disclosure of petition signatories (in Doe v. Reed), the issuance of National Security Letter gag orders (Gonzales v. Doe), and the blanket nondisclosure of information about NSLs (In re National Security Letter).
Most recently, EPIC submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court for the case Packingham v. North Carolina, arguing that the North Carolina statute that banned registered sex offenders from accessing social media sites violated the First Amendment because it impermissibly restricted individuals’ access to information.
The TCPA
EPIC has a strong interest in upholding the TCPA’s privacy protections for cell phone users. EPIC contributed to the formation of the TCPA, and has since worked to ensure that telephone users are protected from invasive calling practices. EPIC has testified in the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, arguing for an opt-in system that ensured that consumers had adequate notice and gave affirmative consent before being called.
More recently, in January 2016, EPIC, along with other consumer privacy organizations, submitted an amicus brief for the case ACA International v. FCC, urging the FCC to protect consumers from unwanted and invasive robocalls made using an autodialer and a prerecorded voice in direct violation of the TCPA. EPIC stated that “the TCPA prohibits invasive business practices... [and requires] business[es] to obtain meaningful consent from subscribers before subjecting them to automated to prerecorded calls.”
In June 2018, EPIC submitted comments to the FCC regarding the Commissions proceedings after ACA International decision. In the comment, EPIC urged the FCC to add a definition for a “called party” under the TCPA. EPIC also advised the FCC to have a three-pronged way to have callers “facilitate the revocation of consent by called parties.” This included letting called parties know they had the right to revoke consent, giving consumers an easy way to revoke, and then following through with the revocation of consent quickly.
In 2017, EPIC submitted comments to FCC on Advanced Methods to Target and Eliminate Unlawful Robocalls, urging the agency to take measurable steps to target and block invasive robocalls. EPIC specifically outlined a plan that included blocking invalid numbers, eliminating the need for consumer consent for phone calls that are clearly invalid numbers in an effort to save time and energy, and implementing secure security measures for databases of blocked numbers.
Legal Documents
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (No. 18-55667)
U.S. District Court for the Central District of California (No. 5:17-CV-01361)
Resources