The US supreme court backed the Federal Communications Commission’s system for levying fines, ruling on Thursday against wireless carriers AT&T and Verizon in their challenge to the agency and handing a win to Donald Trump’s administration. The ruling was 8-1.
At issue in the legal dispute was whether the agency’s in-house proceedings for imposing the penalties deprived the companies of their right to a jury trial under the US constitution. Trump’s administration defended the FCC’s system for assessing financial penalties, known as forfeiture orders.
The conservative chief justice, John Roberts, authored the ruling. Clarence Thomas, a conservative justice, was the court’s lone dissenter.
The court embraced the Trump administration’s argument that the FCC’s in-house system does not stop parties from bringing legal challenges to the agency’s assessments. The legal dispute marked the latest case to test whether a federal agency’s internal enforcement arrangement violates the constitutional right to a jury trial after the supreme court in 2024 curbed the power of in-house proceedings at the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The FCC fined AT&T $57m and Verizon nearly $47m after the agency concluded that the companies had unlawfully sold access to customer location data to third parties without securing the consent of users. In all, the FCC imposed nearly $200m in fines on carriers that it said failed to safeguard customer data.