From: In These Times
A Pennsylvania judge has drawn a hard line against so-called corporate ‘persons.’
Do corporations count as people? The Supreme Court said as much in Citizens United,
but a Pennsylvania judge recently issued a resounding “no.” On March
20, Judge Debbie O’Dell-Seneca ruled that the state’s constitution
doesn’t guarantee corporations a right to privacy—because that’s a
privilege reserved for people.
Two local newspapers had petitioned O’Dell-Seneca to unseal a 2011
settlement between a western Pennsylvania family and several fracking
companies. The Hallowich family had sued over charges that hydraulic
fracking operations on their land were causing them chronic nosebleeds,
headaches and sore throats. The companies agreed to settle but imposed a
strict gag order—something the fracking industry regularly insists upon
in health-related lawsuits.
Gas extraction company Range Resources Corp. argued before
O’Dell-Seneca that the companies’ privacy rights protected them from
disclosing the details of the settlement. But the judge disagreed,
finding the argument “meritless” because the companies have no right to
privacy.
In fact, Judge O’Dell-Seneca spent roughly one-third of her 32-page decision forcefully articulating
the reasons why corporations are not considered legal persons under the
state’s constitution, observing that, “the constitutional rights that
business entities may assert are not coterminous or homogeneous with the
rights of human beings.” She continued, “It is axiomatic that
corporations, companies and partnerships have no ‘spiritual nature,’
‘feelings,’ ‘intellect,’ ‘beliefs,’ ‘thoughts,’ ‘emotions’ or
‘sensations,’ because they do not exist in the manner that humankind
exists.”
“The ruling represents the first crack in the judicial armor that has
been so meticulously welded together by major corporations,” Thomas
Linzey, Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF) executive
director, told AlterNet. In what it calls a “new civil rights
movement,” CELDF has helped more than 100 communities in eight states
adopt a Community Bill of Rights to limit corporate personhood.
Other activists hope that Judge O’Dell-Seneca’s decisions will boost
the movement for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution clarifying that
corporations are not people. The Move to Amend Coalition
has gathered more than 280,000 online signatures supporting such an
amendment, and 12 states have passed resolutions of support.
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