Tag Archives: Sarah Wood

U.S. District Court Holds That BIPA’s Liquidated Damages Are Discretionary

by David RiceJohn Seiver, and Sarah Wood

Photos of the authors

Left to right: David Rice, John Seiver, and Sarah Wood (photos courtesy of the authors)

Decision may provide relief from the specter of “ruinous” damage verdicts stemming from the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act.

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, issued an order on June 30, 2023, that may substantially alter the risk exposure for entities sued for violations of the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (“BIPA”), currently the most stringent of the state biometric privacy laws and the only one with a private right of action.[1] The Court held that statutory damages under BIPA are discretionary rather than fixed in amount for each violation. In doing so, the Court vacated a damages award of $228 million and set the case for a new jury trial limited to the issue of damages. While this ruling provides some potential relief for BIPA defendants, we also want to highlight that BIPA is not the only biometric privacy law despite the attention given to it, and companies need to be mindful of other state laws focused on collecting, processing, or disclosing biometric data.

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