Allegations that Twitter's hosting of unrelated content on its platform contributed to an Islamic State terrorist attack prompted Supreme Court justices to ask parties Wednesday about what liability a business would have for dealing with Osama bin Laden.
The Supreme Court was deliberating the scope of two anti-terrorism statutes after plaintiffs alleged the Big Tech platform contributed to a 2017 ISIS attack in Istanbul by hosting content not directly related to the specific incident. The core of the issue is whether a family's claims sufficiently allege Twitter knowingly provided"substantial assistance" to a terrorism act that would allow relatives of those killed in the attacks to seek damages under U.S. anti-terrorism law.
— Howard Mortman February 22, 2023 “Could, under your theory ... CNN have been sued for aiding and abetting the September 11th attacks?" Kavanaugh asked Eric Schnapper, a University of Washington law professor who represented the plaintiffs, saying the video became a"famous tool for recruiting" into the terrorist organization.
The case argued Wednesday, Twitter v. Taamneh, arose after an ISIS terrorist opened fire at a nightclub in Istanbul in 2017. The shooting killed 39 people, including Nawras Alassaf. Alassaf's family filed a suit against Twitter, Meta, and YouTube, alleging that they had aided and abetted in recruiting and promoting ISIS causes to the public.
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