Biometrics privacy law’s territorial reach limited, appeals court says

Biometrics privacy law’s territorial reach limited, appeals court says

Spread the love

Amazon has turned aside another attempt to use Illinois’ stringent biometrics privacy law to extract a potentially big payout from the company, after a federal appeals court again shut down a class action lawsuit over claims Illinois’ residents voices were allegedly wrongly recorded when financial services firm John Hancock used Amazon Web Services and another company to verify customers’ identities over the phone.

In the ruling, the appeals court judges said they were joining with other courts in limiting the reach of the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA), determining the BIPA law can’t be used to sue companies anytime an Illinois resident or someone located in Illinois engages in e-commerce anywhere.

On May 12, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia agreed a federal district judge in Delaware had been correct to dismiss the lawsuit.

The case had landed at the Third Circuit following a long and winding procedural history.

The case was first filed in 2019 in Madison County Circuit Court by attorneys with the firm of Schlichter Bogard & Denton, of St. Louis.

The case sought a potentially big payout from Amazon Web Services, the cloud infrastructure hosting arm of the Amazon family of companies. AWS offers companies web-hosting and computing power space to companies that lack the ability to invest in their own digital infrastructure.

According to some published estimates, AWS accounts for as much as 40% of the cloud infrastructure market and hosts 6% of all global websites, including some of the world’s busiest platforms.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of named plaintiffs, identified as Christine McGoveran, of Wood River in Madison County; Joseph Valentine, of Antioch, in Lake County; and Amelia Rodriguez, of Chicago, in Cook County.

However, the plaintiffs sought to expand the action to include potentially thousands of others with similar claims.

The lawsuit centered on claims lodged by the plaintiffs that AWS and a voice identity verification company, Pindrop Security, had improperly recorded their voices when they called financial services firm, John Hancock.

According to court documents, the calls were routed to John Hancock through servers, reportedly located in Virginia. At that point, court documents said Pindrop’s software was used to verify their identities using their spoken voices, allegedly recorded over the phone.

Neither Pindrop nor John Hancock were named as defendants in that version of the lawsuit.

According to the complaint, the plaintiffs claimed that alleged recording violated the BIPA law. Specifically, the lawsuit accused the companies of allegedly violating BIPA’s requirements that companies obtain expressed consent and provide notice before scanning their so-called biometric identifiers, which can include voice recordings or so-called “voiceprints.”

Under the BIPA law, the plaintiffs demanded payments of up to $5,000 per alleged violation. When multiplied across thousands of potential class members, the total could quickly run into the many millions of dollars.

The lawsuit was transferred to Southern Illinois federal district court, where a judge dismissed the case “because the only activity occurring in Illinois was Plaintiffs’ use of their phones,” according to the Third Circuit’s ruling.

The plaintiffs then filed a substantially similar complaint in federal court in Delaware, this time adding Pindrop as a co-defendant. The federal judge in Delaware dismissed both that new lawsuit and an amended version.

In those rulings, U.S. District Judge Stephanos Bibas found Pindrop couldn’t be sued under an exception in the BIPA law exempting companies engaged in financial services from lawsuits.

And the judge said the claims against AWS must also be tossed under “extraterritoriality grounds.” The judge essentially ruled the Illinois BIPA law can’t be used to sue companies for alleged conduct that occurs outside of Illinois’ state boundaries.

The plaintiffs then appealed to the Third Circuit, but their lawsuit met with the same fate.

Judge David J. Porter wrote the court’s opinion. Judges Tamika Montgomery-Reeves and Emil J. Bove concurred in the decision.

The judges agreed that the claims against Pindrop can’t get past the financial services exception.

And the judges agreed that the reach of the Illinois law should be restrained. They noted their reasoning is in line with the findings of federal appeals court in the Chicago-based U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals and the San Francisco-based Ninth Circuit.

They said the case comes down to the question of whether “Amazon’s alleged misconduct … ‘occurred primarily and substantially in Illinois.'”

And in this case, the judges said, the evidence shows it did not, even if Illinois residents originated their calls in Illinois.

“Plaintiffs argue that the District Court erred by focusing on ‘the geographic location of Amazon’s servers rather than the location of the harmed Plaintiffs.'” the Third Circuit judges wrote. “But the District Court’s emphasis was spot on. Amazon had no interaction with Illinois whatsoever. Amazon received calls (routed from AT&T) on its servers in Northern Virginia. From there, it sometimes asked Pindrop, a Georgia company, to authenticate those calls using the caller’s voiceprint.

“Then it sent reports and connected calls to John Hancock, a Massachusetts company. No Amazon employee in Illinois had access to any biometric data and Amazon did not store any biometric identifiers. Even if it had stored biometric identifiers, it could not have done so in Illinois because the relevant servers were in Virginia.”

AWS was represented in the case by attorneys with the firm of Morgan Lewis & Bockius, with offices in Chicago, New York and other cities.

In a blog post following the ruling, the Morgan Lewis & Bockius firm said: “The (Third Circuit’s) decision provides important guidance for companies relying on cloud-based call center platforms, customer-authentication tools, and other voice-enabled technologies, reinforcing that a plaintiff’s presence in Illinois alone is insufficient to bring out-of-state technology activity within BIPA’s reach.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Op-Ed: Main Street businesses, customers would bear brunt of a tax on services

Op-Ed: Main Street businesses, customers would bear brunt of a tax on services

By Noah Finley | National Federation of Independent BusinessThe Center Square Even as lawmakers reconvene in Springfield for the fall veto session, special interest groups continue to press for higher...
WATCH: Illinois leaders on both sides send Bailey family condolences for loss of 4

WATCH: Illinois leaders on both sides send Bailey family condolences for loss of 4

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Leaders on both sides of the political aisle are sending condolences to former state Sen. Darren Bailey’s...
WATCH: Pritzker to sign exec. order to ‘pursue accountability’ amid federal deployments

WATCH: Pritzker to sign exec. order to ‘pursue accountability’ amid federal deployments

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop starts the program...
Helicopter crash claims lives of Bailey's son, daughter-in-law, grandchildren

Helicopter crash claims lives of Bailey’s son, daughter-in-law, grandchildren

By The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey’s campaign has released a statement following the death of Bailey’s son Zachary and his...
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker creates commission to hear alleged ICE abuses

Illinois quick hits: Pritzker creates commission to hear alleged ICE abuses

By The Center SquareThe Center Square Pritzker creates commission to hear alleged ICE abuses Through executive order, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker created the Illinois Accountability Commission to take testimony of...
Screenshot 2025-10-17 at 2.01.44 PM

Enrollment Report Sparks Board Discussion on Lowering Kindergarten Class Sizes

Summit Hill School District 161 | October 15, 2025 Article Summary: An enrollment update presented to the Summit Hill 161 board revealed that kindergarten class sizes are averaging between 20...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Township Board for September 8, 2025

Frankfort Township Board | September 8, 2025 During its meeting on Monday, September 8, 2025, the Frankfort Township Board unanimously denied a special use permit for a new bar proposed...
Manufacturing advocate: 'Follow the actions' with Pritzker on taxes

Manufacturing advocate: ‘Follow the actions’ with Pritzker on taxes

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says he prefers growing the economy over raising taxes, but a small and midsize...
Illinois quick hits: National Guard restraining order extended; economic growth above trend

Illinois quick hits: National Guard restraining order extended; economic growth above trend

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square National Guard restraining order extended Following an agreement between the state of Illinois and the federal government, U.S. District Court Judge...

WATCH: Pritzker opposes redistricting Illinois mid-cycle as other states move forward

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The prospect of Illinois legislators changing the state’s congressional maps before the 2026 election seems unlikely with...
Op-Ed: Illinois becoming the lawsuit capital of America, and Springfield to blame

Op-Ed: Illinois becoming the lawsuit capital of America, and Springfield to blame

By Michelle SmithThe Center Square As someone who has spent decades building and rebuilding businesses in Illinois, I’ve grown accustomed to challenges that come with the territory: tight deadlines, rising...
Illinois treasurer promises to pass nonprofit legislation vetoed by Pritzker

Illinois treasurer promises to pass nonprofit legislation vetoed by Pritzker

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs says he will keep pushing nonprofit investment legislation that was vetoed by...
frankfort-park-district

Fort Frankfort Playground Grand Opening Delayed Until Spring 2026

Frankfort Park District Meeting | September, 2025 Article Summary: The grand opening of the new Fort Frankfort playground, a highly anticipated community project, has been pushed back to spring 2026 due...
Screenshot 2025-10-17 at 11.24.23 AM

Lincoln-Way to Purchase New Buses, Add Smaller Vehicles to Address Driver Shortage

LW210 Board of Education Meeting | October 16, 2025 Article Summary: Lincoln-Way District 210 plans to update its transportation fleet by purchasing 28 new gasoline-powered school buses, three activity buses,...
Screenshot 2025-10-17 at 2.01.38 PM

Summit Hill 161 Board Approves Longevity Pay Bumps for Non-Certified Staff

Summit Hill School District 161 | October 15, 2025 Article Summary: The Summit Hill District 161 Board of Education has approved a longevity-based pay increase for all non-certified staff, excluding...