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No. 10025711
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Keo Ratha v. Rubicon Resources, LLC
No. 10025711 · Decided July 31, 2024
No. 10025711·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 31, 2024
Citation
No. 10025711
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
KEO RATHA; SEM KOSAL; No. 23-55299
SOPHEA BUN; YEM BAN; NOL
NAKRY; PHAN SOPHEA; SOK D.C. No.
SANG, 2:16-cv-04271-
JFW-AS
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v. OPINION
RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
John F. Walter, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted March 27, 2024
Pasadena, California
Filed July 31, 2024
Before: Susan P. Graber, Sandra S. Ikuta, and Danielle J.
Forrest, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Ikuta;
Dissent by Judge Graber
2 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
SUMMARY *
Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act
The panel affirmed the district court’s denial of
plaintiffs’ motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
60(b)(6) for relief from judgment in an action under the
Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act
(TVPRA).
In granting summary judgment in favor of defendant
Rubicon Resources, LLC, a United States company, the
district court held that plaintiffs, alleged victims of human
trafficking, failed to adduce evidence that Rubicon
knowingly benefitted from participation in a venture that it
knew or should have known was engaged in various acts that
violated the TVPRA. This court affirmed, holding in part
that the phrase “knowingly benefits” as used in 18 U.S.C.
§ 1595(a) could not be read to extend to an attempt to
knowingly benefit from a perpetrator’s TVPRA
violation. Ratha v. Phatthana Seafood Co., 35 F.4th 1159
(9th Cir. 2022) (Ratha I), modifying 26 F.4th 1029 (9th Cir.
2022).
Congress subsequently enacted the Abolish Trafficking
Reauthorization Act, or ATRA, new legislation amending
§ 1595(a) to impose liability on a defendant who knowingly
“attempts or conspires to benefit” from participation in a
venture that it knew or should have known was engaged in
acts that violated the TVPRA. The district court denied
plaintiffs’ Rule 60(b)(6) motion to reopen the final judgment
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 3
and apply the new legislation, partially on the ground that
ATRA did not apply to events that preceded its enactment.
The panel declined to address the novel question whether
a court may reopen a final judgment under Rule 60(b)(6)
based on a legislative change in law, rather than a judicial
change in law. Instead, the panel held that ATRA does not
apply to events that occurred before its enactment. The lack
of an express statutory command to apply the statute
retroactively gave rise to a presumption that ATRA should
not be applied retroactively. This presumption was not
overcome because ATRA did not clarify what § 1595(a)
meant all along. The panel reasoned that prior to the
amendment, § 1595(a) was not ambiguous and did not
generate inconsistent judicial decisions. In addition, no
other circumstances, such as textual indicators or timing,
showed that ATRA declared what the TVPRA meant at the
time it was enacted. The panel concluded that a label
designating ATRA as a “clarifying update” suggested a
forward-looking change. Because ATRA would not apply
to the conduct that was the basis of plaintiffs’ claims, the
district court did not err in declining to reopen the final
judgment.
Dissenting, Judge Graber wrote that she would reverse
and remand for further proceedings because the amendment
in question has retroactive effect. She wrote that the
TVPRA was ambiguous because Congress intended to make
the criminal and civil provisions coextensive, but, in one
place, the civil provision omitted a phrase regarding
“attempt.” Two other circuits implicitly concluded that this
omission was an oversight, ruling that an attempt to benefit
from human trafficking creates civil liability. This court
disagreed in Ratha I, creating a circuit split. As soon as the
Supreme Court declined to grant certiorari in Ratha I,
4 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
Congress acted immediately to resolve the ambiguity and
correct this court’s error, and it did so with the label
“technical and clarifying.” In addition, Congress made the
amendment effective immediately.
COUNSEL
Agnieszka M. Fryszman (argued), Nicholas J. Jacques,
Madeleine Gates, and Emily Ray, Cohen Milstein Sellers &
Toll PLLC, Washington, D.C.; Dan Stormer, Hadsell
Stormer Renick & Dai LLP, Pasadena, California; Catherine
Sweetser, UCLA Law Clinics, Los Angeles, California; Paul
Hoffman and John C. Washington, Schonbrun Seplow
Harris Hoffman & Zeldes LLP, Hermosa Beach, California;
for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Barbara E. Taylor (argued), Bryan D. Daly, Charles L.
Kreindler, and Melissa K. Eaves, Sheppard Mullin Richter
& Hampton LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Defendant-
Appellee.
Margaret Lee, Human Trafficking Legal Center,
Washington, D.C.; Aaron Halegua, Aaron Halegua PLLC,
New York, New York; for Amici Curiae Members of
Congress Representative Nadler, et al..
John Burton, The Law Offices of John Burton, Pasadena,
California; Allison Gill and Johanna Lee, Global Labor
Justice – International Labor Rights Forum, Washington,
D.C.; Avery Kelly and Alicia Brudney, Corporate
Accountability Lab, Chicago, Illinois; for Amici Curiae
Human and Workers’ Rights Organizations and United
States Shrimp Producers.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 5
Julia Romano, King & Spalding LLP, Los Angeles,
California; Zoe M. Beiner, King & Spalding LLP,
Washington, D.C.; Anne M. Voigts, King & Spalding LLP,
Palo Alto, California; for Amicus Curiae Professor David
Abramowitz.
OPINION
IKUTA, Circuit Judge:
This appeal raises the question whether the district court
erred in declining to reopen a final judgment under Rule
60(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In granting
summary judgment in favor of the defendant, the district
court held that plaintiffs, alleged victims of human
trafficking, failed to adduce evidence that the defendant had
“knowingly benefitted from participation in a venture that
[the defendant] knew or should have known was engaged in”
various acts that violated the Trafficking Victims Protection
Reauthorization Act (TVPRA), 18 U.S.C. § 1595(a). We
upheld this ruling on appeal. Ratha v. Phatthana Seafood
Co., 35 F.4th 1159, 1164 (9th Cir. 2022) (Ratha I), modifying
26 F.4th 1029 (9th Cir. 2022). Congress subsequently
enacted new legislation amending the TVPRA to impose
liability on a defendant who knowingly “attempted to
benefit” from such a violation. The district court denied
plaintiffs’ Rule 60(b)(6) motion to reopen the final judgment
and apply the new legislation, partially on the ground that it
did not apply to events that preceded its enactment. Arguing
that the new legislation merely clarified what § 1595(a) had
meant all along, plaintiffs now appeal the denial of their Rule
60(b)(6) motion.
6 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
I
A
In 2000, Congress passed the Trafficking Victims
Protection Act (TVPA). Pub. L. No. 106-386, div. A, 114
Stat. 1466 (2000) (codified as amended at 18 U.S.C.
§§ 1589–1594). The TVPA created and expanded criminal
penalties in order “to combat trafficking in persons, . . . to
ensure just and effective punishment of traffickers, and to
protect their victims.” § 102(a). The TVPA enhanced the
penalties for the existing crimes of peonage, 18 U.S.C.
§ 1581, enticement into slavery, § 1583, and sale into
involuntary servitude, § 1584. It also created the new
offenses of providing or obtaining forced labor under
specified circumstances, § 1589, “[t]rafficking with respect
to peonage, slavery, involuntary servitude, or forced labor,”
§ 1590, and “[s]ex trafficking of children or by force, fraud,
or coercion,” § 1591. Attempted violations of these
provisions were also criminalized, as § 1594 provided that
“[w]hoever attempts to violate section 1581, 1583, 1584,
1589, 1590, or 1591 shall be punishable in the same manner
as a completed violation of that section.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 1594(a).
In 2003, Congress amended the TVPA by enacting the
TVPRA. Pub. L. No. 108-193, 117 Stat. 2875 (2003).
Among other things, the TVPRA added a civil remedy
provision, codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1595, that provided in
pertinent part:
An individual who is a victim of a violation
of section 1589, 1590, or 1591 of this chapter
may bring a civil action against the
perpetrator in an appropriate district court of
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 7
the United States and may recover damages
and reasonable attorneys fees.
TVPRA § 4(a)(4)(A), 117 Stat. at 2878. The provision
created “a civil cause of action that permits victims of
trafficking to recover compensatory and punitive damages
from individuals who violate the TVPA.” Ditullio v. Boehm,
662 F.3d 1091, 1100 (9th Cir. 2011).
In 2008, Congress amended § 1595 to expand the
TVPRA’s civil remedies. See William Wilberforce
Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008,
Pub. L. No. 110-457, § 221, 122 Stat. 5044, 5067. As
amended, § 1595(a) provided a civil remedy for any
violation of the TVPRA, and allowed victims to bring an
action not only against perpetrators of a violation of the
TVPRA, but also against anyone who “knowingly benefits,
financially or by receiving anything of value from
participation in a venture which that person knew or should
have known has engaged in an act in violation of this
chapter.” 18 U.S.C. § 1595(a) (2008). As amended, the civil
remedy provision provided:
An individual who is a victim of a violation
of this chapter may bring a civil action
against the perpetrator (or whoever
knowingly benefits, financially or by
receiving anything of value from
participation in a venture which that person
knew or should have known has engaged in
an act in violation of this chapter) in an
appropriate district court of the United States
8 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
and may recover damages and reasonable
attorneys’ fees.
18 U.S.C. § 1595(a) (2022). 1
B
Keo Ratha, Sem Kosal, Sophea Bun, Yem Ban, Nol
Nakry, Phan Sophea, and Sok Sang (collectively,
“plaintiffs”) are villagers from rural Cambodia who worked
at seafood processing factories in Thailand’s Songkhla
province. Plaintiffs claimed they suffered abuse while
working at these factories, in that they “were paid less than
promised, charged for accommodations, charged for other
unexpected expenses, unable to leave without their
passports, which they were told would not be returned until
recruitment fees and other amounts were paid, and subjected
to harsh conditions,” during the period “from sometime in
2010 until October 2012.” Ratha I, 35 F.4th at 1165 (cleaned
up). At the time plaintiffs worked there, the factories were
owned by Phatthana Seafood Co., Ltd. (“Phatthana”) and
S.S. Frozen Food Co., Ltd. (“S.S. Frozen”), both Thai
corporations that are not parties to this appeal.
Rubicon Resources, LLP (“Rubicon”) is a United States
company that was formed in 1999 as a joint venture to
1
Between 2008 and 2023, Congress amended § 1595 two other times to
adjust the statute of limitations, see Justice for Victims of Trafficking
Act of 2015, Pub. L. No. 114-22, § 120, 129 Stat. 227, 247, and to give
state attorneys general a cause of action in certain circumstances, see
Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act of 2017,
Pub. L. No. 115-164, § 6, 132 Stat. 1253, 1255. Neither amendment is
relevant to this case.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 9
market and sell Thai seafood in the United States. The
owners of Phatthana owned a stake in the Rubicon venture. 2
In October 2011, Rubicon ordered 14 containers of
shrimp from Phatthana’s Songkhla factory, intending to sell
those containers to Walmart for resale to consumers in the
United States.
In January 2012, Ratha, who was employed by S.S.
Frozen in its Songkhla factory, complained about his
working conditions to the Phnom Penh Post, a Cambodian
news organization. The Post published an article with
Ratha’s allegations. Following the publication of this article,
Rubicon stopped its attempts to sell the Phatthana shrimp
and hired a consultant to review conditions at Phatthana. In
the months that followed, the Thai and Cambodian
governments conducted investigations into Phatthana.
Although the Thai government “concluded that no crimes
ha[d] been committed,” it did identify “violations of the
labor protection law” and “intervened to address unlawful
practices on the part of [Phatthana].”
After the results of the Thai and Cambodian
investigations, Rubicon resumed its attempts to sell the
Phatthana shrimp to Walmart but was unsuccessful due to
Walmart’s concerns about working conditions in
Phatthana’s Songkhla factory. The shrimp was eventually
returned to Thailand and destroyed.
C
In June 2016, plaintiffs sued Phatthana, S.S. Frozen,
Rubicon, and Wales under the civil remedy provision of the
2
Wales & Co. Universe Ltd., a Thai corporation registered to do business
in California, was also a member of the Rubicon venture. Wales is not
a party to this appeal.
10 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
TVPRA, 18 U.S.C. § 1595(a) (effective December 23, 2008
through January 4, 2023).
Plaintiffs alleged that they were the “victims of peonage,
forced labor, involuntary servitude and human trafficking, in
violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1581, 1584, 1589, 1590, 1592, and
1593A.” They alleged that Phatthana and S.S. Frozen were
the perpetrators of these offenses, and that Rubicon and
Wales knowingly benefitted from Phatthana’s and S.S.
Frozen’s unlawful conduct. The complaint alleged that
Rubicon “provided a market and worked to expand that
market . . . knowing the conduct would continue, benefitting
from it, and intending to benefit from it.”
All defendants moved for summary judgment. The
district court concluded that it lacked extraterritorial
jurisdiction over Phatthana and S.S. Frozen because
plaintiffs had not established that those companies were
“present in the United States,” for purposes of 18 U.S.C.
§ 1596(a)(2). The court therefore granted the companies’
motions for summary judgment. The district court also
granted summary judgment in favor of Rubicon and Wales
on three alternative grounds. The district court based its
ruling on its interpretation of § 1595(a), which at the time
imposed liability on “the perpetrator (or whoever knowingly
benefits, financially or by receiving anything of value from
participation in a venture which that person knew or should
have known has engaged in an act in violation of this
chapter).” 18 U.S.C. § 1595(a) (2022).
The district court first held that plaintiffs presented no
evidence that Rubicon or Wales knowingly participated in a
human trafficking venture with Phatthana and S.S. Frozen.
The district court defined “participate” to mean taking “some
action to operate or manage the venture, such as directing or
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 11
participating in Phatthana’s labor recruitment, Phatthana’s
employment practices, or the working conditions at
Phatthana’s Songkhla factory.” Second, the district court
held that there was no evidence that Rubicon or Wales
“knew or should have known” that Phatthana violated the
TVPRA. Third, the district court held that there was no
evidence that Rubicon benefitted from Phatthana’s alleged
TVPRA violations, given that it was undisputed that
Rubicon never sold any products processed at Phatthana’s
Songkhla factory during the relevant time period. As part of
this holding, the district court rejected plaintiffs’ alternate
theory—that Rubicon was liable under § 1595(a) because it
had attempted to benefit from the sale of product processed
at Phatthana’s Songkhla factor—as lacking factual or legal
support.
We affirmed the district court’s grant of summary
judgment. Ratha I, 35 F.4th at 1164. The focus of our
opinion was on the extraterritorial reach of § 1595. Id. at
1167–72. Assuming without deciding that § 1595’s civil
remedy provision could be applied extraterritorially so long
as the requirements of § 1596 were met, we concluded that
plaintiffs’ claims against Phatthana and S.S. Frozen did not
“involve a permissible extraterritorial application of the
TVPRA,” because neither company was “ ‘present in the
United States’ as required by 18 U.S.C. § 1596(a)(2).” Id. at
1175. We affirmed summary judgment in those defendants’
favor on that basis. Id.
With respect to plaintiffs’ claims against Rubicon, we
first held that plaintiffs failed to raise a triable issue of
material fact that Rubicon benefitted from Phatthana’s
TVPRA violations. Id. at 1175–76. We rejected plaintiffs’
argument that Rubicon benefitted from marketing the shrimp
produced by Phatthana and that Rubicon obtained a
12 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
competitive advantage through its association with
Phatthana, because neither claim was supported by probative
evidence. Id. at 1175.
Turning to plaintiffs’ claim “that an attempt to benefit
satisfies § 1595(a)’s ‘knowingly benefits’ requirement,” id.
at 1176, we construed the statutory text, which provides that
“[a]n individual who is a victim of a violation of this chapter
may bring a civil action against the perpetrator (or whoever
knowingly benefits, financially or by receiving anything of
value from participation in a venture which that person knew
or should have known has engaged in an act in violation of
this chapter).” 18 U.S.C. § 1595(a) (2022) (emphasis
added). We first noted that the text “does not extend liability
to those who attempt to benefit from a perpetrator’s TVPRA
violation.” Ratha I, 35 F.4th at 1176. We held that “we
cannot read the word ‘attempt’ into the ‘knowingly benefits’
portion of § 1595 without violating ‘a fundamental principle
of statutory interpretation’ that ‘absent provision[s] cannot
be supplied by the courts.’ ” Id. (quoting Rotkiske v. Klemm,
589 U.S. 8, 14 (2019)) (alteration in original).
We then considered the text in the context of the TVPRA
as a whole. We noted that § 1594(a) included attempt
liability, by providing that “[w]hoever attempts to violate
[specified sections] shall be punishable in the same manner
as a completed violation of that section.” Id. We thought it
significant that Congress authorized attempt liability in
§ 1594(a), but not in § 1595(b). Id. As we explained,
“[w]hen ‘Congress uses certain language in one part of a
statute and different language in another, it is generally
presumed that Congress acts intentionally.’ ” Id. (quoting
Nat’l Fed’n of Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius, 567 U.S. 519, 544
(2012)). We stated that “[h]ad Congress intended to create
civil liability under § 1595 for attempts to benefit, we can
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 13
reasonably conclude that it would have done so in express
terms.” Id.
We noted a possible textual argument that could weigh
against this conclusion. Id. at 1176 n.16. The argument
proceeded in several steps. First, § 1595(a) allows a civil
action against a “perpetrator” of a violation of the TVPRA.
Id. Second, under § 1594(a), the attempted violation of
specified TVPRA provisions is itself a violation of the
TVPRA. Id. Therefore “the term ‘perpetrator,’ as used in
§ 1595(a), could be read to include those who had only
attempted to violate the TVPRA.” Id.
We concluded this argument did not help plaintiffs. Id.
As noted above, § 1595(a) gives a victim: (1) an action
against a “perpetrator” and (2) a separate action against a
person who “knowingly benefits” from participation in a
venture that violated the TVPRA. Id. While § 1595(a) could
be read to provide an action against a person who attempted
to violate the TVPRA and was therefore a perpetrator,
plaintiffs invoked the portion of § 1595(a) that provides a
separate action against a person who “knowingly benefits”
from a TVPRA violation. We held that the phrase
“knowingly benefits” as used in § 1595(a) could not be read
to extend to “an attempt to knowingly benefit from a
perpetrator’s TVPRA violation,” id., and plaintiffs’
argument therefore failed, id. at 1176.
D
Our opinion in Ratha I was filed on February 25, 2022.
26 F.4th 1029 (9th Cir.), amended by 35 F.4th 1159 (9th Cir.
2022). In March 2022, Senators Cornyn and Klobuchar
introduced a bill to reauthorize the TVPRA. Abolish
Trafficking Reauthorization Act of 2022 (ATRA), S. 3946,
117th Cong. (2022) (enacted); see 168 Cong. Rec. S1832
14 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
(Mar. 29, 2022). Although the bill was introduced after our
opinion in Ratha I had been published, the bill did not
contain any amendments to § 1595(a). See S. 3946, 117th
Cong. (as introduced, Mar. 29, 2022) (available at
https://www.congress.gov/117/bills/s3946/BILLS-
117s3946es.pdf).
In April 2022, plaintiffs filed a petition for rehearing en
banc. We denied the petition and issued an amended opinion
on May 31, 2022. 35 F.4th at 1163–64. The mandate issued
in June 2022.
Some time after we denied plaintiffs’ petition for
rehearing en banc, various advocacy organizations lobbied
Congress to amend § 1595. Martina E. Vandenberg &
Maggie Lee, Congress Amends the TVPRA to Correct Ninth
Circuit’s Erroneous Ruling in Ratha, Transnational
Litigation Blog (Aug. 1, 2023), https://tlblog.org/congress-
amends-the-tvpra-to-correct-ninth-circuits-erroneous-
ruling-in-ratha/ (last visited July 17, 2024). Plaintiffs also
sought Supreme Court review of our decision by filing a
petition for writ of certiorari in October 2022. The petition
was denied on December 5, 2022. 143 S. Ct. 491 (2022).
After the Supreme Court had denied certiorari, on
December 20, 2022, Senators Heinrich, Cornyn, and
Klobuchar proposed an amendment to S. 3946, see 168
Cong. Rec. S9610 (Dec. 20, 2022), which contained
language modifying § 1595(a), S. Amend. 6581, 117th
Cong., 168 Cong. Rec. S9658, S9658–59 (Dec. 20, 2022)
(available at
https://www.congress.gov/117/crec/2022/12/20/168/198/C
REC-2022-12-20-pt3-PgS9658.pdf). The Senate adopted
the amendment and passed the bill by consent. 168 Cong.
Rec. S9610 (Dec. 20, 2022). On January 5, 2023, ATRA
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 15
was signed into law. Pub. L. No. 117-347, 136 Stat. 6199
(2023).
Section 102 of ATRA provides:
SEC. 102. TECHNICAL AND
CLARIFYING UPDATE TO CIVIL
REMEDY.
Section 1595(a) of title 18, United States
Code, is amended by inserting “or attempts or
conspires to benefit,” after “whoever
knowingly benefits.”
§ 102, 136 Stat. at 6200. Following this amendment,
§ 1595(a) now provides:
An individual who is a victim of a violation
of this chapter may bring a civil action
against the perpetrator (or whoever
knowingly benefits, or attempts or conspires
to benefit, financially or by receiving
anything of value from participation in a
venture which that person knew or should
have known has engaged in an act in violation
of this chapter) in an appropriate district court
of the United States and may recover
damages and reasonable attorneys fees.
18 U.S.C. § 1595(a) (2023) (emphasis added).
16 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
On January 26, 2023, plaintiffs filed a motion under Rule
60(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 3 urging the
district court to vacate its order granting summary judgment
to Rubicon. Plaintiffs argued that ATRA retroactively
clarified that § 1595(a) authorizes suit against those who
attempt to benefit from TVPRA violations. They argued that
because ATRA was a clarifying amendment, the statute
applied to events that occurred before ATRA was passed. In
other words, plaintiffs contended that § 1595(a) had always
allowed plaintiffs to bring an action against persons who
attempted to benefit from a TVPRA violation. According to
plaintiffs, the enactment of ATRA constituted extraordinary
circumstances warranting relief under Rule 60(b)(6) from
the final judgment dismissing their claim against Rubicon.
The district court denied the Rule 60(b)(6) motion. This
appeal followed.
We have jurisdiction to review an order denying a Rule
60 motion as an appealable final order. 28 U.S.C. § 1291;
Plotkin v. Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co., 688 F.2d 1291, 1292 (9th Cir.
1982). We review the district court’s denial of the Rule 60
motion for abuse of discretion. Bynoe v. Baca, 966 F.3d 972,
979 (9th Cir. 2020). A district court abuses its discretion if
its denial “rested upon an erroneous view of the law.”
Phelps v. Alameida, 569 F.3d 1120, 1131 (9th Cir. 2009).
We review legal issues de novo. Bynoe, 966 F.3d at 979.
3
Rule 60(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides:
(b) Grounds for Relief from a Final Judgment, Order,
or Proceeding. On motion and just terms, the court
may relieve a party or its legal representative from a
final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following
reasons: . . .
(6) any other reason that justifies relief.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 17
II
A
Rule 60(b) permits a court to “relieve a party or its legal
representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding.”
This rule “codifies various writs used to seek relief from a
judgment at any time after the [term of court’s] expiration—
even after an appeal had (long since) concluded.” Banister
v. Davis, 590 U.S. 504, 518 (2020); see also Matter of
Brown, 68 F.R.D. 172, 174 (D.D.C. 1975) (Rule 60(b) “was
intended merely to codify and simplify common law
methods of gaining equitable relief from unfair judgments
after the time for appeal has expired.”). In addition to
codifying five common-law grounds for relieving a party
from a final judgment, the rule added a catchall provision
permitting reopening for “any other reason that justifies
relief.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b).
“[T]he catchall provision of Rule 60(b) has been used
sparingly as an equitable remedy to prevent manifest
injustice and is to be utilized only where extraordinary
circumstances prevented a party from taking timely action to
prevent or correct an erroneous judgment.” United States v.
Washington, 593 F.3d 790, 797 (9th Cir. 2010) (cleaned up).
We have held that “[a] ‘clear and authoritative’ change in the
law governing the judgment in a [party’s] case may present
extraordinary circumstances.” Bynoe, 966 F.3d at 983
(citation omitted). We generally evaluate whether the
context of the change and its consequences are sufficiently
extraordinary by considering six factors “flexibly and in
their totality.” Id. The six factors are “(1) the nature of the
legal change, including whether the change in law resolved
an unsettled legal question; (2) whether the movant
exercised diligence in pursuing reconsideration of his or her
18 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
claim; (3) the parties’ reliance interests in the finality of the
judgment; (4) the delay between the finality of the judgment
and the Rule 60(b)(6) motion; (5) the relationship between
the change in law and the challenged judgment; and
(6) whether there are concerns of comity that would be
disturbed by reopening a case.” Id.
In denying the Rule 60(b)(6) motion in this case, the
district court concluded that the first factor, the nature of the
legal change, and the fifth factor, the relationship between
the change in law and the judgment, weighed heavily against
granting relief pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6). The district court
concluded that ATRA did not apply to events occurring
before its enactment, because it did not have an effective
date or any statement indicating that it applied retroactively,
and because the law expanded defendants’ liability and
attached new legal consequences to past actions. The court
also concluded that the change in the law would not alter the
challenged judgment, because the court’s summary
judgment order was based on two additional grounds that
were not affected by the amendment to the TVPRA.
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that ATRA is a clarifying
amendment and therefore is applicable to events that
occurred before its enactment. Plaintiffs also argue that the
district court’s other grounds for summary judgment were
erroneous.
B
Plaintiffs argue that the district court should have
reopened the final judgment under Rule 60(b)(6) due to the
enactment of ATRA, and ask us to address what appears to
be a question of first impression: whether a court may reopen
a final judgment under Rule 60(b)(6) based on a legislative
change in law, rather than a judicial change in law. The
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 19
cases cited and relied on by plaintiffs primarily involved a
change in law caused by new judicial opinions. See, e.g.,
Bynoe, 966 F.3d 972 (reopening a final judgment under Rule
60(b)(6) due to a new judicial opinion resolving a procedural
issue in habeas law); Henson v. Fid. Nat’l Fin., Inc., 943
F.3d 434, 447 (9th Cir. 2019) (reversing denial of Rule
60(b)(6) motion in light of intervening Supreme Court
decision that overturned caselaw on which plaintiffs had
relied). The only case cited by plaintiffs regarding the
application of a new statute is not on point: in United States
v. Wyle (In re Pacific Far East Lines, Inc.), we did not
consider reopening a case that was already final, but rather
held that a new legislative enactment could be applied to a
pending case. 889 F.2d 242, 243–44 (9th Cir. 1989). 4
Applying our Rule 60(b)(6) jurisprudence in the context
of a legislative change in law would raise a number of thorny
issues. First, our standard for concluding there are
“extraordinary circumstances” requires the existence of a
“clear and authoritative change” in law. Bynoe, 966 F.3d at
983 (citation omitted). But if new legislation merely
clarifies what the law had always been, as plaintiffs argue is
the case here, it is unclear how such legislation would also
qualify as a clear and authoritative change. Moreover, if the
4
The analysis may be different if a party seeks relief under Rule 60(b)(6)
from ongoing compliance with a permanent injunction. See McGrath v.
Potash, 199 F.2d 166, 167 (D.C. Cir. 1952) (vacating injunction where
“[t]he statutory basis for [it] ha[d] been removed by Congress”); cf.
Agostini v. Felton, 521 U.S. 203, 237–40 (1997) (vacating a permanent
injunction pursuant to Rule 60(b)(5) given a change in Establishment
Clause caselaw); Assoc. Builders & Contractors v. Mich. Dep’t of Lab.
& Econ. Growth, 543 F.3d 275, 278–79 (6th Cir. 2008) (revisiting an
injunction pursuant to Rule 60(b)(5) after a change in ERISA caselaw).
But those circumstances are not present here.
20 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
legislation at issue did constitute an authoritative change in
law, a court could not apply the legislation to pre-enactment
conduct without first using the Supreme Court’s framework
for determining whether new legislation can be applied
retroactively. See infra at 21–22 (explaining Landgraf v.
USI Film Prod., 511 U.S. 244 (1994)).
Second, assuming the above difficulties could be
overcome, it is not clear that a court may reopen a final
judgment for the purpose of applying new legislation.
Typically, a court applies new legislation only to a case
pending on appeal, and we are not aware of a case where this
court or the Supreme Court has reopened a final judgment to
apply a new enactment. See supra at 18–19 and n.4. There
are some warning signs against doing so. The Supreme
Court has indicated that Congress can require an appellate
court to apply legislation retroactively “in reviewing
judgments still on appeal that were rendered before the law
was enacted,” but Congress cannot require federal courts to
reopen final judgments to do so, because this would violate
separation-of-powers principles. Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm,
Inc., 514 U.S. 211, 226 (1995) (emphasis added). Plaut is
not directly on point here, because Rule 60(b)(6) is not a
“legislative mandate” that requires a court to reopen a
particular case. Id. at 233; see also Taylor v. United States,
181 F.3d 1017, 1022 (9th Cir. 1999). But Plaut weighs
against creating precedent that would give Congress the
ability to “declare by retroactive legislation that the law
applicable to [a final judgment] was something other than
what the courts said it was.” 514 U.S. at 227. For instance,
if we held that courts should reopen a final judgment under
Rule 60(b)(6) whenever Congress referred to a new
enactment as a “clarification,” we would risk running afoul
of Plaut. See Pope v. Shalala, 998 F.2d 473, 483 (7th Cir.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 21
1993) (warning that if the stated intent of the later enacting
body were given dispositive weight, it “could make a
substantive change merely by referring to a new
interpretation as a ‘clarification’ ”), overruled in part on
other grounds by Johnson v. Apfel, 189 F.3d 561 (7th Cir.
1999).
We need not resolve the novel question whether Rule
60(b)(6) may be applied on the basis of changes in
legislation, however. For the reasons explained below, we
conclude that ATRA did not clarify what § 1595(a) in the
TVPRA meant all along, and therefore does not apply to
events that occurred before the enactment of ATRA.
Because ATRA would not apply to the conduct that is the
basis of plaintiffs’ claims, the district court did not err in
declining to reopen the final judgment here. 5
III
We turn to plaintiffs’ central argument: that ATRA is a
clarification of the TVPRA and therefore applies to events
that occurred before Congress enacted ATRA.
A
We start by providing the general framework for
determining whether legislation applies retroactively,
5
In focusing solely on whether ATRA was a clarifying amendment, the
dissent ignores the question whether a final judgment can be reopened
under Rule 60(b)(6) based on a legislative change in the law. But we
cannot “reverse and remand for further proceedings,” Dissent at 56,
without holding that the district court abused its discretion. The dissent
does not explain how declining to reopen the judgment under Rule
60(b)(6) here constituted an abuse of discretion given the lack of
precedent supporting reopening on the basis of legislative changes, the
absence of extraordinary circumstances as our precedent defines them,
and the separation of powers issue identified in Plaut.
22 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
meaning that it applies to events that occurred before its
enactment. In making this determination, courts generally
apply a two-step analysis. Ditullio, 662 F.3d at 1099. There
is “a time honored presumption that unless Congress has
clearly manifested its intent to the contrary, the legal effect
of conduct should ordinarily be assessed under the law that
existed when the conduct took place.” Id. (cleaned up).
Thus, a “court’s first task is to determine whether Congress
has expressly prescribed the statute’s proper reach.”
Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 280. If Congress expressly indicates
that a statute applies to pre-enactment conduct, “the statute
applies retroactively unless it runs afoul of the constitution.”
Ditullo, 662 F.3d at 1099. If the statute contains no “express
command” as to its applicability to pre-enactment conduct,
a court’s second task is to determine whether its application
would “impair rights a party possessed when he acted,
increase a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose new
duties with respect to transactions already completed.”
Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 280. If the statute has such effects, we
apply a presumption against retroactive application “absent
clear congressional intent favoring such a result.” Id.; see
also Rivers v. Roadway Exp., Inc., 511 U.S. 298, 308–09
(1994) (noting the need for “sufficient evidence of a clear
congressional intent to overcome the presumption against
statutory retroactivity”). If the presumption is rebutted, we
apply the statute retroactively unless such application would
violate constitutional commands. Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 280.
In arguing that ATRA applies to pre-enactment conduct,
plaintiffs rely on an exception we have carved out from the
Landgraf framework. When a statute is so ambiguous or
unclear that it leads to inconsistent judicial rulings, we have
held that a subsequent Congress can enact legislation to
clarify the intent of an earlier Congress. In this context,
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 23
Congress’s “power to clarify the law” is the power “to
confirm what the law has always meant.” Beverly Cmty.
Hosp. Ass’n v. Belshe, 132 F.3d 1259, 1265 (9th Cir. 1997).
Because such an enactment “merely clarifies what [the
federal law] was originally intended to mean” and “state[s]
more clearly what the law already was,” it “has no
retroactive effect that might be called into constitutional
question.” Id. Therefore “no Landgraf analysis is required.”
Beaver v. Tarsadia Hotels, 816 F.3d 1170, 1186 (9th Cir.
2016). Nor is there any presumption against retroactivity:
given that the presumption “is based, in part, on a hesitancy
to reverse settled expectations,” it does not apply when
Congress clarifies the law to “resolve[] a problem of
unsettled expectations” such as those that may arise from a
circuit split. ABKCO Music, Inc. v. LaVere, 217 F.3d 684,
691–92 (9th Cir. 2000). And because “clarifying legislation
is not subject to any presumption against retroactivity,” it “is
applied to all cases pending as of the date of its enactment.”
Id. at 689. 6
We apply this exception narrowly. As a general rule,
“the views of a subsequent Congress form a hazardous basis
for inferring the intent of an earlier one.” Consumer Prod.
Safety Comm’n v. GTE Sylvania, Inc., 447 U.S. 102, 118
(1980) (quoting United States v. Price, 361 U.S. 304, 313
(1960)). Moreover, we have recognized that “Congress’
decision to ‘legislatively overrule’ earlier interpretations of
a statute does not necessarily imply that these earlier
interpretations were inconsistent with congressional intent at
the time or even ‘wrongly decided.’ ” Beaver, 816 F.3d at
1187 (quoting Rivers, 511 U.S. at 304–05). Indeed,
6
We have not held that clarifying legislation may be applied to cases
once they are no longer pending on appeal. See supra at 19–21.
24 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
“Congress frequently ‘responds’ to judicial decisions
construing statutes, and does so for a variety of reasons,”
Rivers, 511 U.S. at 305 n.5; and “ ‘[a]ltering statutory
definitions, or adding new definitions of terms previously
undefined, is a common way of amending statutes’ so that
Congress can refine and sharpen old statutory meanings,”
Beaver, 816 F.3d at 1187 (quoting Rivers, 511 U.S. at 308).
Therefore, in discerning Congress’s intent, “[i]t is the duty
of a court in construing a statute to consider the time and
circumstances surrounding the enactment as well as the
object to be accomplished by it.” Bedoni v. Navajo-Hopi
Indian Relocation Comm’n, 878 F.2d 1119, 1120 (9th Cir.
1989).
In considering the time and circumstances surrounding a
new enactment to determine if Congress intended to confirm
what a prior enactment has always meant, id., we primarily
focus on whether the prior enactment was ambiguous and
generated inconsistent judicial opinions. We also consider
textual indications that Congress intended to clarify the
ambiguity. We discuss these considerations in turn. 7
First, we give significant weight to indicia of judicial
confusion regarding how a statutory provision should be
interpreted, because such confusion suggests that Congress’s
7
Although we also consider legislative history, our approach to this
factor has been inconsistent. In Belshe, we indicated that “less formal
types of subsequent legislative history, particularly Senate and House
Committee Reports” were not a useful basis for inferring the intent of an
earlier Congress. 132 F.3d at 1265. And in Beaver, we stated that “we
place little value on the statements of individual legislators in connection
with the enactment of a bill,” but “we nevertheless consider them in our
analysis.” 816 F.3d at 1186. However, in ABKCO Music, we gave
significant weight to a House Report and statements by members of
Congress. 217 F.3d at 690–91.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 25
enactment was for the purpose of correcting the ambiguity
and establishing the originally intended meaning. ABKCO
Music, for instance, involved a circuit split over the
definition of the word “publication” in the Copyright Act of
1909. 217 F.3d at 688. Under the 1909 Act, if a work was
published and the owner of the work did not comply with the
1909 Act’s requirements, the work would enter into the
public domain. Id. In 1976, the Second Circuit determined
that the sale of phonorecords did not constitute “publication”
of the underlying composition for purposes of the 1909 Act,
see Rosette v. Rainbo Record Mfg. Corp., 546 F.2d 461 (2d
Cir. 1976) (per curiam), but we reached the opposite
conclusion in 1995, see La Cienega Music Co. v. ZZ Top, 53
F.3d 950 (9th Cir. 1995). In ABKCO Music, a music
company sought a ruling that under La Cienega, the
distribution of a phonorecord in the late 1930s was a
publication that caused the underlying work to enter the
public domain. Id. at 686. While the case was pending,
Congress amended the Copyright Act to resolve the circuit
split, adopting the Second Circuit’s interpretation. See Pub.
L. No. 105-80, § 11, 111 Stat. 1529, 1534 (Nov. 13, 1997).
The amendment included language making the new law
retroactively applicable to conduct taking place before
January 1, 1978 (the effective date of the Copyright Act of
1976). ABKCO Music, 217 F.3d at 690.
In considering whether Congress’s new enactment
merely clarified the 1909 Act, and so did not trigger a
retroactivity analysis, we first noted that “[a]n amendment in
the face of an ambiguous statute or a dispute among the
courts as to its meaning indicates that Congress is clarifying,
rather than changing the law.” Id. at 691. We also read the
legislative history as showing that Congress intended the act
26 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
to be clarifying. 8 Based on these considerations, we
concluded that the amendment “simply clarifie[d] what the
meaning of the 1909 Act was all along,” and merely
“intended to restore the law to what it was before” our
decision in La Cienega. Id. at 690.
Second, we consider other indications of Congress’s
intent regarding retroactivity. One textual indicator is
Congress’s decision to title an enactment a “clarification.”
However, “titles of acts are not part of the law,” Belshe, 132
F.3d at 1266 n.6, and Congress does not necessarily use the
term “clarification” to indicate that a law should apply to
conduct predating its enactment. See, e.g., Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, § 2303(c)–
(d), 124 Stat. 119, 296 (2010) (codified at 42 U.S.C.
§ 1396u-7(b)(7)) (referring to an amendment as a
“clarification of coverage of family planning services and
supplies” but indicating that the new definition “shall apply
to items and services furnished on or after” the effective date
of the statute (capitalization altered)); cf. Rivers, 511 U.S. at
304 n.7 (stating that the phrase “ ‘to restore’ might sensibly
be read as meaning ‘to correct, from now on,’ ” and does
“not . . . necessarily bespeak[] an intent to restore
retroactively”). Therefore, we do not give an enactment’s
8
We further relied on the fact that the new enactment “would make no
sense if applied solely prospectively because it explicitly applie[d] to
[the distribution of phonorecords] occurring before January 1, 1978.”
217 F.3d at 691. Although a statute’s express concern with pre-
enactment conduct may demonstrate “clear congressional intent
favoring” its retroactive application, Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 280, that
ground for retroactive application is distinct from the question whether
an enactment constitutes a clarification of existing law, see Belshe, 132
F.3d at 1264–65.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 27
title dispositive weight, but consider it in a larger context, as
indicated in Belshe and Beaver.
In Belshe, disputes arose over the interpretation of a
section of the Medicaid Act that provided payment rules for
states. California interpreted this section as allowing it to
limit certain payments. 132 F.3d at 1263. Some courts
agreed with this interpretation, while others rejected it, and
even those courts that reached the same result did so for
different reasons. See id. at 1263 n.4. After appellate
briefing was completed, Congress amended the relevant
section of the Medicaid Act in an act captioned
“Clarification Regarding State Liability for Medicare Cost-
Sharing.” Id. at 1263. We held this new statute was a
clarification of the prior payment rules and could be applied
to cases pending on appeal in part because it “expressly (and
formally) stated as [Congress’s] intention that the new
provision . . . was a ‘clarification’ of the payment rules
contained” in the prior statute. Id.
But we did not rely on the title of the statute alone. In
rejecting the argument that the new statute “effected such a
substantial change in federal law . . . that it cannot be treated
as simply clarifying,” we noted the “split of authority
construing” the Medicaid provision and the fact that the
payment rules were “baffling” and “particularly resistant to
a single simple interpretation.” Id. at 1266. We concluded
that “[g]iven the extraordinary difficulty that the courts have
found in divining the intent of the original Congress, a
decision by the current Congress to intervene by expressly
clarifying the meaning of [the statute] is worthy of real
deference.” Id. Because a “clearly established meaning” of
the payment rules “simply did not exist before [the
amendment] was adopted,” we honored Congress’s
28 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
“‘clarification’ label” and accepted the amendment as a
statement of what the law had meant all along. Id.
In Beaver, plaintiffs alleged that defendants failed to
make certain disclosures in connection with the sale of
condominiums, thus violating the Interstate Land Sales Full
Disclosure Act. 816 F.3d at 1174–75. While the suit was
pending, Congress amended the act to exempt condominium
sales from its disclosure requirements. Id. at 1184–85.
Although Congress labeled the new law as “[a]n act to
amend the . . . Disclosure Act to clarify how the Act applies
to condominiums,” id. at 1187, we concluded that such
“[p]ost-hoc labeling as a ‘clarification’ by bill supporters of
what otherwise appears to be a change” was not controlling,
id. at 1186. We noted that courts and the implementing
agency had not “found extraordinary difficulty . . . in
divining the intent of the original Congress,” id. (alteration
in original) (quoting Belshe, 132 F.3d at 1266), and gave
more weight to indicia that Congress was effecting a change
in the law rather than merely clarifying it. For instance, we
noted that the amendment was silent on the issue of
retroactivity. We also considered that the amendment’s
effective date was 180 days after enactment. Id. at 1187.
Both of these considerations undermined the view that the
law applied to pending cases. We therefore concluded that
Congress had “adopted a substantive change in the law by
discarding an old application” of the law. Id.
We have also considered whether the timing of a
congressional enactment indicates an intent to correct an
ambiguity. In McCoy v. Chase Manhattan Bank, USA,
National Ass’n, we considered a plaintiff’s claims that an
increase in his credit card interest rates violated a Delaware
statute. 654 F.3d 971, 972 (9th Cir. 2011). We interpreted
the statute as not allowing discretionary increases to rates,
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 29
and therefore held that the plaintiff had stated a claim for a
violation of the statute. Id. at 972–73. But while the appeal
was pending before the Supreme Court, the Seventh Circuit
and the First Circuit expressly disagreed with our
interpretation of the statute. Id. at 973–74. In response to
this circuit split, the Delaware legislature enacted a
clarifying amendment agreeing with the First and Seventh
Circuits. Id. at 974. On remand by the Supreme Court, we
applied the new amendment to the pending case. Id. In
response to the plaintiff’s argument that the Delaware
amendment should not be applied retroactively, we reasoned
that “the amendment here does not alter the meaning of [the
Delaware statute] but merely clarifies the meaning of the
prior language, to the extent the former provision was
ambiguous and leading to conflicting results in the courts.”
Id. (emphasis omitted). In reaching this conclusion, we
noted a treatise’s statement that “[i]f the amendment was
enacted soon after controversies arose about interpretation
of the original act, it is logical to regard the amendment as a
legislative interpretation of the original act,” id. (quoting 1A
Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer, Sutherland
Statutes and Statutory Construction, § 22.31 (7th ed. 2011)),
and that under Delaware law, “[w]here the legislature passes
an amendment shortly after a controversy arises as to the
meaning of the original statute, the amendment may be
construed as a clarification of prior law,” id. (quoting Walls
v. Dept. of Corr., 663 A.2d 488 (table), 1995 WL 420801, at
*1 (Del. July 3, 1995) (unpublished)).
In sum, in determining whether new legislation merely
declares what a statutory provision meant when it was
enacted, we have focused primarily on whether the prior
enactment was ambiguous and generated inconsistent
judicial opinions. An amendment enacted shortly after such
30 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
inconsistent interpretations of a statute arose may be deemed
to be clarification of a statute, rather than a substantive
change. We gave weight to Congress’s decision to label a
new enactment as a clarification only where indicia of
ambiguity were also present.
B
We now apply this legal framework. First, ATRA
contains no “express command” to apply the statute
retroactively to events that occurred before its enactment. If
it were so applied, ATRA would “increase a party’s liability
for past conduct,” Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 280, because it
allows a civil penalty to be assessed on a new class of
defendants: those who attempt or conspire to benefit from a
TVPRA violation. This gives rise to a presumption that
ATRA should not be applied retroactively. 9 Id. In arguing
that this presumption does not apply, plaintiffs raise only one
argument: that ATRA merely clarified the intent of the
Congress that originally enacted § 1595(a), and therefore
“has no retroactive effect that might be called into
constitutional question.” ABKCO Music, 217 F.3d at 689
(quoting Belshe, 132 F.3d at 1265).
1
As explained above, prior to the enactment of ATRA,
§ 1595(a) provided that a plaintiff could bring a civil action
against any person who “knowingly benefits . . . from
participation in a venture which that person knew or should
9
We reached the same conclusion in considering whether the civil
remedy provided by § 1595 could apply to pre-enactment conduct. See
Ditullio, 663 F.3d at 1099. Ditullio held that because § 1595 “changed
substantive law and attached new legal burdens to violations of the
TVPA,” it could not “apply retroactively to conduct that occurred before
its effective date” under Landgraf. Id.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 31
have known has engaged in an act in violation” of the
TVPRA. The 2023 amendment allows a plaintiff to bring a
civil action against any person who “knowingly benefits or
attempts or conspires to benefit” from such a violation of the
TVPRA. Congress labeled this amendment a “Technical
and Clarifying Update to Civil Remedy.” 136 Stat. at 6200.
To determine whether this amendment clarified what the
TVPRA had meant all along, we first consider whether, prior
to the amendment, § 1595(a) was ambiguous and generated
inconsistent judicial decisions. We have not discerned any
such ambiguity or inconsistency. Before Ratha I, no circuit
court opinion addressed the question whether § 1595(a)
permitted a plaintiff to bring a civil action against a person
who “attempts or conspires to benefit” from a TVPRA
violation. Rather, one court noted that it had “little difficulty
in deciding what ‘knowingly benefits’ [in § 1595] means.”
Doe #1 v. Red Roof Inns, Inc., 21 F.4th 714, 723–24 (11th
Cir. 2021) (interpreting “knowingly benefit” as requiring a
plaintiff to “allege that the defendant knew it was receiving
some value from participating in the alleged venture”).
Plaintiffs argue that Ricchio v. McLean, 853 F.3d 553
(1st Cir. 2017), is an example of the unsettled state of the
law. We disagree. In Ricchio, an alleged trafficking victim
sued the man she alleged trafficked her, motel operators who
rented to the trafficker, and the motel owner. Id. at 555. The
district court dismissed the action against the motel operators
and owner for failure to state a claim. Id. The First Circuit
reversed. According to the court, the complaint alleged that
the motel operators had prior commercial dealings with the
trafficker and intended to reinstate these dealings for profit
“in circumstances in which [the trafficker’s] coercive and
abusive treatment of [the victim] as a sex slave had become
apparent” to the motel operators—namely, the motel
32 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
operators ignored the victim’s plea for help in escaping from
the trafficker and showed indifference to the victim’s
“obvious physical deterioration.” Id. The court held that
“[i]n these circumstances, it was a plausible understanding
that [the trafficker] was forcing sex in the motel room where
he held [the victim] hostage, and fairly inferable that the
gainful business that [the motel operator] spoke of had been
and would be in supplying sexual gratification.” Id. Further,
it was inferable that the motel operators “understood that in
receiving money as rent for the quarters where [the
trafficker] was mistreating [the victim], they were
associating with him in an effort to force [the victim] to serve
their business objective.” Id. The court concluded that
“these allegations and inferences suffice as plausible support
for pleading statutory violations [of the TVPRA] by the
[motel-operator] defendants in their own right.” Id. at 555–
56 (emphasis added).
The First Circuit then considered whether plaintiffs’
allegations were sufficient to support the statutory claims in
the complaint. Because the plaintiff in Ricchio sought
damages pursuant to § 1595(a), each of the claims in the suit
invoked both that section and a section corresponding to a
substantive violation. One claim invoked § 1594(a), which
prohibits attempts to violate the TVPRA. Id. at 557.
Regarding this claim, the First Circuit held that the
complaint adequately alleged that the motel operators “at the
least attempted to violate §§ 1589, 1590, and 1591,” which
respectively prohibit knowingly benefitting from
participating in a forced-labor venture, engaging in labor
trafficking by harboring a victim, and knowingly benefitting
from participating in a sex-trafficking venture. Id. This
means that the complaint plausibly alleged that each
defendant was the “perpetrator” of a violation of the
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 33
TVPRA, see § 1595(a), which includes a person who
“attempts to violate” §§ 1589, 1590 and 1591, see § 1594.
Ricchio’s reference to § 1595(a) does not indicate that
the First Circuit interpreted that section to permit a civil
action against any person who “attempts or conspires to
benefit” from a violation of the TVPRA. Rather, the First
Circuit referred to an attempt to violate various statutory
provisions, not an attempt to benefit from another’s
violation.10 We adopted a similar reading of § 1594(a) and
§ 1595 in Ratha I, see supra at 12, where we explained that
“the term ‘perpetrator,’ as used in § 1595(a), could be read
to include those who have only attempted to violate the
TVPRA,” pursuant to § 1594. Ratha I, 35 F.4th at 1176
n.16. But as we explained, this “possibility does not suggest
that an attempt to knowingly benefit from a perpetrator’s
TVPRA violation would establish liability under § 1595(a).”
Id. Neither Ricchio nor Ratha I addressed the theory
10
The dissent points to the passage in Ricchio stating that “[t]he
defendants at the least attempted to violate §§ 1589, 1590, and 1591 (see
Claims 1, 2, and 3), the necessary substantial steps including the
harboring of Ricchio and the receipt of benefit.” 853 F.3d at 557.
According to the dissent, this means that Ricchio “concluded that
attempting to benefit from human trafficking as proscribed by the
TVPRA, in and of itself, gave rise to civil liability.” Dissent at 47. But
Ricchio’s language merely states that the defendants took substantial
steps (such as harboring Ricchio and receiving benefits) towards
completing a violation of §§ 1589, 1590, and 1591, and therefore could
be liable for an attempted violation of those TVPRA provisions. It does
not indicate that an attempt to benefit from another’s TVPRA violation
is itself civilly actionable under § 1595(a).
34 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
plaintiffs now advance, and the two cases do not evidence
any judicial difficulty interpreting the TVPRA.11
Nor did the Fourth Circuit interpret § 1595(a)’s
“knowingly benefit” provision as including an “attempt to
benefit” in Roe v. Howard, 917 F.3d 229 (4th Cir. 2019),
also decided before Ratha I. In Howard, the Fourth Circuit
considered whether the civil remedy provisions of the
TVPRA applied to violations that took place
extraterritorially. Id. at 233. The court applied the
extraterritoriality framework set forth in RJR Nabisco, Inc.
v. European Community, 579 U.S. 325 (2016). RJR Nabisco
held that RICO applies to extraterritorial criminal conduct,
id. at 326, but that its civil remedy provisions do not apply
to extraterritorial conduct, id. at 346, because “[n]othing in
[the relevant provision] provides a clear indication that
Congress intended to create a private right of action for
injuries suffered outside of the United States,” id. at 349.
In holding that the TVPA’s civil remedy provision did
apply extraterritorially, the Fourth Circuit distinguished RJR
Nabisco on several grounds, including that “§ 1595
expressly and directly incorporates the TVPA’s criminal
predicates, many of which manifestly apply to foreign
conduct,” and that it “applies coextensively with its
11
The dissent argues that a court could read § 1589(b) (which makes it a
violation of the TVPRA to knowingly benefit from participation in a
forced labor venture) together with § 1594 (which provides that
“[w]hoever attempts to violate section . . . 1589” commits a TVPRA
violation) and conclude that a person who attempts to knowingly benefit
from participation in a forced labor venture is a perpetrator who is subject
to suit under § 1595(a). Dissent at 48–49. Because neither Ricchio nor
any other court has offered such an interpretation of § 1595(a), the
dissent’s interpretation does not provide evidence of judicial confusion
or ambiguity that a clarifying amendment would resolve.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 35
predicate offenses, omitting any qualifying or modifying
language.” Howard, 917 F.3d at 243. Applying this
reasoning, the Fourth Circuit concluded that the defendant’s
extraterritorial violations of TVPA could be the subject of a
civil action under § 1595, because the TVPA authorized
“civil suits by ‘a victim of a violation of this chapter [chapter
77]’ against the perpetrator or ‘whoever knowingly benefits’
from that violation.’ ” Id. at 243. This analysis does not
address the legal question at issue in Ratha I. Although the
Fourth Circuit indicated that § 1595 “applies coextensively
with its predicate offenses,” id., this statement is too general
to indicate that the Fourth Circuit interpreted “knowingly
benefits” in § 1595 as including an “attempt to benefit.”
Indeed, the opinion includes no textual analysis of § 1595(a)
whatsoever, an observation the dissent does not dispute.
Dissent at 49.
After these circuit decisions, we decided Ratha I, which
was the first case to address whether a defendant’s attempt
to benefit from TVPRA violations satisfied § 1595(a)’s
“knowingly benefits” requirement. Ratha I did not indicate
that any prior opinion shed light on this issue. We cited Roe
v. Howard only for its statement that “Congress created
several new federal criminal offenses intended to more
comprehensively and effectively combat human
trafficking,” Ratha I, 35 F.4th at 1164 (quoting Howard, 917
F.3d at 236), and did not attempt to distinguish it in any way,
suggesting we did not detect any conflict. Nor did we have
“extraordinary difficulty” interpreting the statute. Belshe,
132 F.3d at 1266. There was no missing or undefined term
we struggled to interpret. Rather, we engaged in a
straightforward statutory analysis and concluded that we
could not read § 1595(a) in the extra-textual manner urged
by plaintiffs. We concluded that § 1595(a) was
36 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
unambiguous, given that “[t]he text of § 1595 does not
extend liability to those who attempt to benefit from a
perpetrator’s TVPRA violation,” Ratha I, 35 F.4th at 1176,
and stated that “we cannot read the word ‘attempt’ into the
‘knowingly benefits’ portion of § 1595 without violating ‘a
fundamental principle of statutory interpretation that “absent
provision[s] cannot be supplied by the courts.” ’ ” Id. at
1176 (quoting Rotkiske v. Klemm, 589 U.S. 8, 14 (2019)
(alteration in original)). We are bound by our prior decision
that there was no ambiguity.
Judicial opinions issued after our decision in Ratha I
have not shown § 1595 “to be particularly resistant to a
single simple interpretation” or to be “particularly in need of
clarification.” Belshe, 132 F.3d at 1266. We have found
nothing to suggest a “split of authority construing the
statute.” Id. No circuit court decision following Ratha I has
disagreed with our interpretation. Plaintiffs cite a D.C.
Circuit decision applying the TVPRA, but it does not discuss
civil attempt-to-benefit liability under § 1595—or attempt
liability at all. See Rodriguez v. Pan Am. Health Org., 29
F.4th 706, 716 (D.C. Cir. 2022). The opinion merely
indicates in passing that a defendant who violates the
TVPRA is subject to civil liability as a perpetrator. Id. at
716. This statement does not conflict with Ratha I.
Nor do district court cases cited by plaintiffs indicate that
§ 1595(a) was ambiguous regarding whether it allowed a suit
against a person who “attempt[ed] to benefit” from a
TVPRA violation. In Paguirigan v. Prompt Nursing
Employment Agency LLC, 286 F. Supp. 3d 430, 439–40
(E.D.N.Y. 2017), for instance, the district court denied a
motion to dismiss a claim under § 1595(a) and § 1594 for the
attempted violation of § 1589 and § 1590. This ruling again
echoes the textual analysis in Ricchio and Ratha I: because
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 37
§ 1595(a) allows a plaintiff to bring an action against the
perpetrator of a violation of the TVPRA, and because § 1594
indicates that a perpetrator includes a person who attempts
to violate § 1589 and § 1590, the plaintiff could bring an
action under § 1595(a) for an attempted violation of § 1589
and § 1590. The decision did not address the distinct
question whether § 1595(a) allowed an action against a
person who attempted to benefit from a violation of TVPRA.
The other cases cited by plaintiffs likewise address an
attempted violation (as opposed to an attempt to benefit),
see, e.g., Saraswat v. Selva Jayaraman, Bus. Integra, No. 15-
CV-4680, 2016 WL 5408115, at *3–6 & n.7 (E.D.N.Y Sept.
28, 2016) (holding that the plaintiff’s allegations were
“sufficient to state a claim for attempted forced labor” under
§ 1594), or they fail to address the issue entirely.12
2
Given the lack of any indication that the courts were in
disarray on the question whether § 1595(a) authorized a
claim for an attempt to benefit from a TVPRA violation, we
consider whether other “circumstances” show that ATRA
declared what the TVPRA meant at the time it was enacted.
Bedoni, 878 F.2d at 1120.
First, we consider textual indications that could
illuminate Congress’s intent. Here, the only textual indicator
of this sort is the label Congress used for the pertinent
section of ATRA: a “Technical and Clarifying Update to
12
See Norambuena v. W. Iowa Tech Cmty. Coll., No. C20-4054, 2022
WL 987946 (N.D. Iowa Mar. 31, 2022); Sherman v. Trinity Teen Sols.,
No. 20-CV-215, 2021 WL 7286424 (D. Wyo. Nov. 30, 2021); Gilbert v.
U.S. Olympic Comm., 423 F. Supp. 3d 1112 (D. Colo. 2019); Ross v.
Jenkins, 325 F. Supp. 3d 1141 (D. Kan. 2018); A.B. v. Marriott Int’l,
Inc., 455 F. Supp. 3d 171 (E.D. Pa. 2020).
38 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
Civil Remedy.” § 102, 136 Stat. at 6200. We conclude that
this label does little to establish that Congress intended to
clarify the intent of the prior Congress that enacted the
TVPRA. Congress did not describe the enactment as a
“clarification” of § 1595, but rather as a “clarifying update”
to the TVPRA. The noun “update” means “an up-to-date
version,” Update, Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate
Dictionary (11th ed. 2020), while the act of updating
involves improving or enhancing an out-of-date version by
incorporating new information or features. When software
is updated, for example, it is modified to make the new
version run more smoothly going forward. Similarly,
updating a policy involves adapting it to new circumstances
or fixing deficiencies going forward. The primary
connotation of “update,” therefore, is one of forward-
looking improvement. Cf. Rivers, 511 U.S. at 304 n.7
(stating that “the phrase ‘to restore’ might sensibly be read
as meaning ‘to correct, from now on’”). The use of the term
“update” in the label Congress placed on ATRA
distinguishes it from the label in Belshe, “Clarification
Regarding State Liability for Medicare Cost-Sharing,” 132
F.3d at 1263–64, and the label in Beaver, “An act to amend
the [Act] to clarify how the Act applies to condominiums,”
816 F.3d at 1187. We did not give dispositive weight to the
label of “clarification” in those cases, and have even less
reason to do so here. Rather, there is reason to read the
“clarifying update to civil remedy” label as indicating a
forward-looking amendment to the statute in light of new
circumstances. Other than the reference to the amendment
as a “clarifying update” in the title, there are no other textual
indications from Congress that it intended to restore the
language of § 1595(a) as enacted in the TVPRA to what the
statute had always meant.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 39
The dissent contends that a “clarifying update” is like a
“clarifying change,” and is applied retroactively. Dissent at
54–55. We disagree that “update” and “change” are
synonymous. But even if they were, when we apply
congressional amendments retroactively under our
exception to Landgraf, we generally distinguish between
amendments that clarify and those that change existing law.
See, e.g., Beaver, 816 F.3d at 1186 (“[N]o Landgraf analysis
is required if an amendment merely serves to clarify rather
than change the substance of existing law.”); ABKCO Music,
217 F.3d at 691 (“An amendment in the face of an
ambiguous statute or a dispute among the courts as to its
meaning indicates that Congress is clarifying, rather than
changing, the law.”); Bedoni, 878 F.2d at 1121 (“Where, as
here, an act is ambiguous, an amendment thereto is an
indication that it is intended to clarify, rather than change,
the existing law.” (cleaned up)); Callejas v. McMahon, 750
F.2d 729, 730 (9th Cir. 1984) (noting that “a dispute or
ambiguity, such as a split in the circuits, is an indication that
a subsequent amendment is intended to clarify, rather than
change, the existing law” (cleaned up)). In arguing to the
contrary, the dissent cites ABKCO Music as an example of
how “we have frequently described a clarifying ‘change’ in
the law as having retroactive effect.” Dissent at 54. But
even the dissent’s quotation from ABKCO Music fails to
support this claim, since it merely states that “when an
amendment is deemed clarifying rather than substantive, it
is applied retroactively.” 217 F.3d at 689 (emphasis added)
(quoting United States v. Donaghe, 50 F.3d 608, 612 (9th
Cir. 1994)). Rather, ABKCO Music expressly differentiated
between a clarifying amendment, which “[n]ormally” is
applied retroactively, id., and a change in law, which would
40 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
“pose a series of potential constitutional problems” if applied
retroactively, id. (quoting Belshe, 132 F.3d at 1265).13
Second, aside from textual indicators, we consider
whether there are any other factors indicative of Congress’s
intent. Unlike ABKCO Music, there is no contemporaneous
legislative history regarding the enactment of ATRA. There
are no House or Senate Committee Reports, or even
statements of legislators on the House or Senate floor at the
time of the bill’s enactment. See ABKCO Music, 217 F.3d
at 690. Rather, plaintiffs rely on an amicus brief
representing the views of six legislators. We accord little
weight to such post-enactment amicus briefs, which
“represent only the personal views of the[] legislators.”
Blanchette v. Conn. Gen. Ins. Corps., 419 U.S. 102, 132
(1974) (citation omitted). Even if the legislators’ comments
had been made on the floor during the legislative process,
we “place little value on the statements of individual
legislators in connection with the enactment of a bill.”
Beaver, 816 F.3d at 1186. Plaintiffs also rely on a blog post
written by advocates from the Human Trafficking Legal
Center regarding their efforts to lobby Congress to enact
ATRA. Such an advocacy piece does not shed light on
13
The dissent also relies on United States v. Donaghe, 50 F.3d 608 (9th
Cir. 1994), which considered an amendment to the sentencing
guidelines. See Dissent at 54. This reliance is misplaced, because the
retroactive application of the Guidelines is subject to its own legal
framework. See 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2) (authorizing courts to modify
sentences based on a retroactive application of the sentencing
guidelines); see also U.S.S.G. § 1B1.11(b)(2) (explaining circumstances
where “the court shall consider subsequent amendments, to the extent
that such amendments are clarifying rather than substantive changes”);
id. § 1B1.10(d) (listing a number of “[c]overed [a]mendments” for which
retroactivity is presumed).
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 41
whether Congress intended to confirm what TVPRA had
always meant.
Finally, we consider whether the timing of ATRA
indicates that it was a response to Ratha I. As we noted in
McCoy, when Congress enacts an amendment “soon after
controversies arose about interpretation of the original act, it
is logical to regard the amendment as a legislative
interpretation of the original act.” 654 F.3d at 974 (quoting
Singer & Singer, supra, § 22.31). But here, there were no
controversies among the circuits regarding the interpretation
of § 1595(a). Prior to our decision in Ratha I, no circuit court
had addressed the question whether § 1595(a)’s “knowingly
benefits” requirement could be satisfied by evidence of an
attempt to benefit from a TVPRA violation. Nor did any
circuit court consider this issue after Ratha I was decided,
and before the congressional enactment. Therefore, the
logical inference described in McCoy does not arise. Nor
does it appear that Congress’s enactment was an effort to
make a quick correction to an errant ruling, given that
Congress enacted ATRA five years after the district court’s
final judgment and almost a year after our opinion in Ratha
I. Indeed, Congress did not enact ATRA until after the
Supreme Court denied plaintiffs’ petition for certiorari.
Congress’s amendment in ATRA, which extended liability
to those who attempted to benefit from a TVPRA violation,
is thus better understood as effecting a substantive change.14
In short, there is no persuasive evidence that Congress
intended ATRA to declare what § 1595(a) meant when it
14
Contrary to the dissent, neither the fact that the statute took immediate
effect, Dissent at 55, nor that Congress enacted ATRA unanimously,
Dissent at 52, has any bearing on the question whether Congress
intended the enactment to merely clarify existing law.
42 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
was enacted. There is no evidence of a circuit split or
judicial difficulty in interpreting the phrase “whoever
knowingly benefits” in § 1595(a). The label designating
ATRA as a “clarifying update” suggests a forward-looking
change. Moreover, we have held that the mere use of the
word “clarification” in the title of an amendment is not
controlling. Beaver, 816 F.3d at 1186. We conclude that the
requirements for applying our narrow exception to the
Landgraf framework are not present here.
***
Because we reject the argument that ATRA “merely
clarifies what [§ 1595(a)] was originally intended to mean,”
Belshe, 132 F.3d at 1265, and plaintiffs raise no other basis
for ATRA to apply retroactively, we conclude that ATRA
does not apply to pre-enactment conduct, including the
conduct that is the basis of plaintiffs’ claims. Therefore, the
district court did not abuse its discretion in denying
plaintiffs’ motion to reopen the final judgment under Rule
60(b)(6). We affirm the denial of the Rule 60(b)(6) motion
on that basis. Because we need not examine the relationship
between the change in law and the challenged judgment, we
do not review the district court’s alternative bases for
summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 43
GRABER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
A later Congress has the power to enact legislation that
is meant to “clarify” the intent of an earlier Congress and to
“confirm what the law has always meant.” Beverly Cmty.
Hosp. Ass’n v. Belshe, 132 F.3d 1259, 1265 (9th Cir. 1997)
(emphasis omitted). When Congress does so, we give its
enactment retroactive effect. Id. In determining whether an
amendment is clarifying, we first consider whether the prior
enactment was ambiguous and whether it generated
inconsistent judicial decisions. Op. at 22–25; Callejas v.
McMahon, 750 F.2d 729, 731 (9th Cir. 1984). If so, no
presumption against retroactivity applies, and we next
consider textual and other indications as to whether
Congress intended to clarify the ambiguity. Op. at 24, 26–
28; Bedoni v. Navajo-Hopi Indian Relocation Comm’n, 878
F.2d 1119, 1120–21 (9th Cir. 1989).
Proper application of those principles here demonstrates
that the amendment in question has retroactive effect. When
Congress enacted the William Wilberforce Trafficking
Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008
(“TVPRA”), it clearly intended to make the criminal and
civil provisions coextensive. But the statute was ambiguous
because, in one place, the civil provision omitted a phrase
regarding “attempt.” Two other circuit courts implicitly
concluded that this omission was an oversight, ruling that an
attempt to benefit from human trafficking creates civil
liability. See Roe v. Howard, 917 F.3d 229 (4th Cir. 2019);
Ricchio v. McLean, 853 F.3d 553 (1st Cir. 2017). Our court
disagreed in Ratha v. Phatthana Seafood Co. (Ratha I), 35
F.4th 1159, 1176 (9th Cir. 2022), generating a circuit split.
As soon as the Supreme Court declined to grant certiorari in
44 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
Ratha I, Congress acted immediately—within two weeks—
to resolve the ambiguity and to correct our error. It did so
with the label “technical and clarifying,” a label that is
entitled to great weight. In addition, Congress made the
amendment effective immediately, so there is no uncertainty
about Congress’s intent concerning retroactivity.
The majority opinion reaches the opposite result only by
making a series of key errors: it fails to give effect to the
intended parallel between the civil and criminal provisions;
it declines to recognize the ambiguity created thereby and
misconstrues the cases from other circuits demonstrating
that Congress stepped in to resolve the ambiguity; it
improperly ignores the context and timing of the
amendment’s passage; it wrongly discounts Congress’s
intentional labeling of the amendment as “technical and
clarifying” only; it sidesteps the distinctions between this
case and Beaver v. Tarsadia Hotels, 816 F.3d 1170 (9th Cir.
2016); and it engages in questionable semantic juggling. I
would reverse and remand for further proceedings.
A. Congress’s 2008 Amendment to the TVPRA Was
Ambiguous
In 2000, Congress enacted the Trafficking Victims
Protection Act (“TVPA”) “to ‘combat trafficking in persons,
a contemporary manifestation of slavery whose victims are
predominantly women and children, to ensure just and
effective punishment of traffickers, and to protect their
victims.’” Ditullio v. Boehm, 662 F.3d 1091, 1094 (9th Cir.
2011) (quoting Pub. L. No. 106-386, § 102, 114 Stat. 1464
(2000) (codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. §§ 1589–92)).
“By enacting [the] statute, ‘Congress created several new
federal criminal offenses intended to more comprehensively
and effectively combat human trafficking.’” Ratha I, 35
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 45
F.4th at 1164 (quoting Howard, 917 F.3d at 236). Congress
amended the TVPA several times, each time extending the
extraterritorial reach of the statute. See generally Howard,
917 F.3d at 235–37 (describing the history). By 2008, the
TVPA contained a series of criminal provisions, codified at
18 U.S.C. §§ 1581–94, and civil enforcement provisions,
codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1595.
In 2008, Congress enacted a reauthorized and amended
TVPRA. 1 Pub. L. No. 110-457, 122 Stat. 5044 (2008). The
TVPRA amended the civil remedy provision codified at 18
U.S.C. § 1595 to state:
An individual who is a victim of a violation
of this chapter may bring a civil action
against the perpetrator (or whoever
knowingly benefits, financially or by
receiving anything of value from
participation in a venture which that person
knew or should have known has engaged in
an act in violation of this chapter) in an
appropriate district court of the United States
and may recover damages and reasonable
attorneys fees.
Pub. L. No. 110-457, § 221, 122 Stat. at 5067 (emphasis
added). The TVPRA further expanded the extraterritorial
reach of the statute by providing:
In addition to any domestic or extra-
territorial jurisdiction otherwise provided by
law, the courts of the United States have
1
I refer to the TVPA, as reauthorized and amended in 2008, as the
TVPRA.
46 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
extra-territorial jurisdiction over any offense
(or any attempt or conspiracy to commit an
offense) under section . . . 1589, 1590, or
1591 if—
(1) an alleged offender is a national of the
United States . . . .
See id., § 223, 122 Stat. at 5071 (codified at 18 U.S.C.
§ 1596) (emphasis added).
The inclusion of the phrase “attempt” in § 1596 but its
exclusion in § 1595 created an obvious ambiguity as to
whether civil liability attached to attempted violations. As
the First Circuit correctly held in Howard, Congress
intended the civil and criminal provisions to apply
coextensively. Howard, 917 F.3d at 243. But that principle
makes sense only if Congress intended to attach civil
liability to all violations—not only to some violations. We
held otherwise in Ratha I. See 35 F.4th at 1176 (“The text of
§ 1595 does not extend liability to those who attempt to
benefit from a perpetrator’s TVPRA violation.” (citing 18
U.S.C. § 1595(a))).
B. The 2008 Amendment Led to Inconsistent Judicial
Decisions
Two other circuit courts concluded that civil liability
attaches for attempting to benefit financially, or for receiving
anything of value, from participation in a venture involving
human trafficking: Ricchio, 853 F.3d at 557, and Howard,
917 F.3d at 237, 239. As noted, our court in Ratha I reached
the opposite conclusion. 35 F.4th at 1176.
The First Circuit in Ricchio reversed the district court’s
dismissal of the plaintiff’s claims under §§ 1594(a) and
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 47
1595(a). In her complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the motel
defendants “attempted to violate 18 U.S.C. §§ 1589, 1590
and/or 1591 by attempting to obtain or provide [] Ricchio’s
forced labor and sexual services in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 1589 . . . .” Ricchio v. Bijal, Inc., 424 F. Supp. 3d 182, 194
(D. Mass. 2019) (brackets in original) (emphases added). In
reversing the district court, the First Circuit in Ricchio held
that the plaintiff’s allegations sufficed to state a claim for
relief. See Ricchio, 853 F.3d at 555–57 (noting that the
plaintiff stated a cognizable claim under Claim 6, which
plausibly gave rise to civil liability under § 1595). The First
Circuit explained that, although the motel defendants were
interrupted before they could benefit fully, there was a
plausible claim under §§ 1594(a) and 1595(a) because the
defendants “at the least attempted to violate §§ 1589, 1590,
and 1591.” Id. at 557 (emphasis added); see also id. (“While
‘mere preparation’ does not constitute a substantial step [for
the purposes of attempt], a defendant ‘does not have to get
very far along the line toward ultimate commission of the
object crime in order to commit the attempt offense.’”
(quoting United States v. Turner, 501 F.3d 59, 68 (1st Cir.
2007))). That holding makes sense only if the First Circuit
concluded that attempting to benefit from human trafficking
as proscribed by the TVPRA, in and of itself, gave rise to
civil liability.
Two years later, the Fourth Circuit in Howard also
addressed attempts in the context of § 1595 liability. The
court held that “§ 1595 expressly and directly incorporates
the TVP[R]A’s criminal predicates” and that “the text of
§ 1595 shows that it applies coextensively with its predicate
offenses.” Howard, 917 F.3d at 243; see also id. at 237
(noting that the courts have “extra-territorial jurisdiction
over any offense (or any attempt or conspiracy to commit an
48 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
offense) under section . . . 1589, 1590, or 1591” (quoting
Pub. L. No. 110-457, § 223) (emphasis added)).
But in Ratha I, we disagreed. See, e.g., 35 F.4th at 1176
(“Congress’s decision to impose civil liability on those who
‘benefit’ but not those who ‘attempt to benefit’ is significant
because attempt liability is plainly authorized elsewhere in
the TVPRA.”). We held that attempting to benefit
financially did not give rise to civil liability. Id. Our
decision, therefore, diverged from Ricchio and Howard,
which had held the opposite, creating a circuit split.
Thus, the majority opinion mistakenly asserts that,
“[b]efore Ratha I, no circuit court opinion addressed the
question whether § 1595(a) permitted a plaintiff to bring a
civil action against a person who ‘attempts or conspires to
benefit’ from a TVPRA violation.” Op. at 31. The majority
opinion engages in an extensive analysis aimed at
distinguishing an “attempt to benefit” from an “attempt to
violate,” by characterizing a party who engages in the former
as a mere beneficiary and one who engages in the latter as a
“perpetrator.” Op. at 12–13, 33–37 (emphases added). But
applying the opinion’s own definition of a “perpetrator,”
which the opinion agrees “includes a person who ‘attempts
to violate’ §§ 1589, 1590 and 1591,” Op. at 32–33, 37, the
plain statutory text of § 1589(b) requires that we deem
persons who knowingly benefit from TVPRA violations to
be “perpetrators” themselves. Knowingly benefiting from a
TVPRA violation is, in and of itself, a violation of the
TVPRA. See § 1589(b) (“Whoever knowingly benefits,
financially or by receiving anything of value . . . shall be
punished as provided in subsection (d).”); see also
Rodriguez v. Pan Am. Health Org., 29 F.4th 706, 716 (D.C.
Cir. 2022) (“The ‘financial benefit’ that violates § 1589(b) is
itself ‘wrongful conduct.’”); Bistline v. Parker, 918 F.3d 849,
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 49
871 (10th Cir. 2019) (“One can violate [§ 1589] either as a
primary offender or simply by benefiting financially from
participation in a ‘venture’ with the primary offender.”
(emphasis added)). The majority opinion’s analysis of
Ricchio is, therefore, flawed.
Even leaving Ricchio aside, the Fourth Circuit in
Howard ruled that an attempt to benefit from human
trafficking creates civil liability under § 1595 when it
expressly held that the criminal and civil provisions are
coextensive. Howard, 917 F.3d at 243.
In short, Congress acted in response to the TVPRA’s
ambiguity and the conflicting judicial determinations in
Ricchio, Howard, and Ratha I. Therefore, we next must
examine Congress’s enactment of the Abolish Trafficking
Reauthorization Act (“ATRA”) to determine whether it
intended for its legislation to have retroactive effect.
C. Congress Intended a Retroactive Amendment
Mere weeks after the Supreme Court denied certiorari in
Ratha I, Congress passed the ATRA and included the
following amendment to § 1595(a):
SEC. 102. TECHNICAL AND
CLARIFYING UPDATE TO CIVIL
REMEDY.
Section 1595(a) of title 18, United States
Code, is amended by inserting “or attempts or
conspires to benefit,” after “whoever
knowingly benefits.”
Pub. L. No. 117-347, 136 Stat. 6199, 6200 (2023).
50 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
Three factors, which we have deemed relevant in
determining whether an amendment is clarifying, establish
the ATRA’s retroactivity: (1) Congress acted swiftly
following our decision in Ratha I; (2) Congress expressly
stated that its enactment was intended only as a technical and
clarifying update; and (3) Congress made the change
effective immediately.
1. Congress Acted Swiftly
We first published Ratha I on February 25, 2022. See 26
F.4th 1029, 1045 (“The text of § 1595 does not extend
liability to those who attempt to benefit from a venture.”). 2
The ATRA was introduced in the Senate about five weeks
later, on March 29, 2022. See All Actions: S.3946 — 117th
Congress (2021–2022), available at
https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/senate-
bill/3946/all-actions (noting that the ATRA was first
introduced, “[r]ead twice[,] and referred to the Committee
on the Judiciary” on March 29, 2022). And the amendment
to § 1595(a) was proposed on December 20, 2022. S.
Amend. 6581, 117th Cong., 168 Cong. Rec. S9658, S9658–
59 (Dec. 20, 2022), available at
https://www.congress.gov/117/crec/2022/12/20/168/198/C
REC-2022-12-20-pt3-PgS9658.pdf. Before Ratha I, no
other court had interpreted the TVPRA in the same manner
on the issue of civil attempt liability. Thus, until then, there
was no reason for Congress to act. But only months after
Ratha I, very shortly after the Supreme Court denied
certiorari in Ratha I, Congress passed the ATRA. See All
2
As amended and superseded on denial of reh’g en banc, 35 F.4th 1159,
1176 (9th Cir. May 31, 2022) (“The text of § 1595 does not extend
liability to those who attempt to benefit from a perpetrator’s TVPRA
violation”).
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 51
Actions: S.3946 — 117th Congress (2021–2022) (noting
that the bill was considered and passed by the Senate and
House on December 20, 2022, and December 22, 2022,
respectively); see also Ratha I, 35 F.4th 1159, cert. denied,
143 S. Ct. 491 (Dec. 5, 2022). Congress acted immediately
to resolve the ambiguity and to correct our error.
The majority opinion erroneously measures the timing of
the amendment from the entry of the district court’s
judgment and from our initial opinion in Ratha I. Op. at 41.
But the key, as the majority opinion acknowledges, Op. at
14–15, is that the Supreme Court denied certiorari with
respect to Ratha I on December 5, 2022, and the amendment
to § 1595(a) was introduced only about two weeks later.
Until Ratha I’s erroneous interpretation of the statute was
final, Congress had no pressing need to correct our error.
“It is the duty of a court in construing a statute to
consider time and circumstances surrounding the enactment
as well as the object to be accomplished by it.” Callejas, 750
F.2d at 731. As we and other circuits have held, a fast-acting
legislative body that amends a statute in the face of an
ambiguity or a dispute among courts as to the meaning of the
statute suggests that Congress’s change is a mere
clarification, rather than a substantive change in the law.
See, e.g., id. (“[A] ‘dispute or ambiguity, such as a split in
the circuits, [is] an indication that a subsequent amendment
is intended to clarify, rather than change, the existing law.’”
(quoting Brown v. Marquette Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 686 F.2d
608, 615 (7th Cir. 1982) (second alteration in original)));
ABKCO Music, Inc. v. LaVere, 217 F.3d 684, 689–90 (9th
Cir. 2000) (“An amendment in the face of an ambiguous
statute or a dispute among the courts as to its meaning
indicates that Congress is clarifying, rather than changing,
the law.” (citing Bedoni, 878 F.2d at 1121 and Callejas, 750
52 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
F.2d at 731)); McCoy v. Chase Manhattan Bank, USA, Nat’l
Ass’n, 654 F.3d 971, 974 (9th Cir. 2011) (“If the amendment
was enacted soon after controversies arose about
interpretation of the original act, it is logical to regard the
amendment as a legislative interpretation of the original act
. . . .” (quoting 1A Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer,
Sutherland Statutes and Statutory Construction, § 22.31 (7th
ed. 2011))); Liquilux Gas Corp., v. Martin Gas Sales, 979
F.2d 887, 890 (1st Cir. 1992) (finding that, despite the court’s
decision ten days before the enactment of the amendment,
“the amendment was not a change at all, but a clarification
that did not alter the law, and merely explicated it”).
Although the ATRA’s legislative history is not extensive,
Congress enacted the amendment quickly and unanimously.
In my view, Congress’s speed and its minimal discussion on
this topic in Committee and on the House and Senate floors
strongly suggest that the amendment is clarifying only, and
not a substantive change in the law.
2. Congress Used the Label “Technical and Clarifying,”
a Label That Is Entitled to Great Weight
Congress added the term “attempt” to § 1595(a), the very
term that we held was missing and that foreclosed Plaintiffs’
claims from proceeding as cognizable. Ratha I, 35 F.4th at
1176. In addition, the amendment’s title provides that it is a
“Technical and Clarifying Update.” Pub. L. No. 117-347,
§ 102, 136 Stat. at 6200 (emphasis added). We consistently
have ruled that such phrasing suffices to demonstrate that an
amendment is clarifying. See Belshe, 132 F.3d at 1266–67,
1266 n.6 (noting that titles of acts, while not part of the law,
may be used to “resolve ambiguity” in a statute so long as
they do not contradict the text and holding that the
amendment at issue was a clarification because, among other
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 53
indicators, “clarification” was in the title of the Act
(emphasis added)). Thus, the amendment title’s notation in
Section 102—that the change to § 1595(a) was intended as a
technical and clarifying update—must be given considerable
weight. See id. at 1265 (“It has been established law since
nearly the beginning of the republic . . . that congressional
legislation that thus expresses the intent of an earlier statute
must be accorded great weight” (citing Red Lion Broad. Co.
v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367, 381–82 (1969) and Loving v. United
States, 517 U.S. 748, 770 (1996))); see also id. at 1266 (“We
therefore honor Congress’[s] ‘clarification’ label . . . .”).
Of course, a label or title alone, stating that an
amendment serves only to “clarify,” does not necessarily
demonstrate an amendment’s retroactive effect. See, e.g.,
Or. Pub. Util. Comm’n v. ICC, 979 F.2d 778, 780 (9th Cir.
1992) (“The title of a statute can be used to resolve[]
ambiguity, but the title cannot control the plain meaning of a
statute.”). But when considered with other relevant factors,
a label or title can be a strong indicator of intended
retroactivity. Those circumstances exist here.
In addressing the amendment’s label, the majority
opinion misreads Beaver v. Tarsadia Hotels, 816 F.3d 1170
(9th Cir. 2016). In Beaver, we did not hold that heavy
reliance on an act’s title is never sufficient when determining
whether an amendment should be construed as a retroactive
technical clarification. Rather, we explained that the
defendant’s heavy reliance was “misplaced” given the other
factors that were at play, id. at 1187—factors not at play in
the present case. Specifically, the “lapse between the
enactment of the bill and the bill’s effective date (180 days),
coupled with the bill’s silence on the issue of retroactivity”
suggested to the panel that the amendment “was actually a
change in the law.” Id.; see id. (noting that “the 180-day
54 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
delay in the bill’s effective date suggests that the amendment
ought to be applied prospectively, so that actors may adjust
their behavior to conform to the new legislation”); see also
Pub. L. No. 113–167, 128 Stat. 1882, 1882 (Interstate Land
Sales Full Disclosure Act (“ILSA”)) (stating that “[t]he
amendments made by [the ILSA] shall take effect 180 days
after the date of the enactment of [ILSA]”).
The majority opinion asserts that the label’s inclusion of
the term “update” suggests a “forward-looking change.” Op.
at 37–38, 42. That assertion construes the term “update” in
too cramped a manner. In ordinary speech we use the word
“update” to refer to current information about a past—not a
future—event. I may tell a friend that my high school senior
has been accepted at two of five colleges applied to. In a
later communication titled “update” I might say: “Just to
clarify, the two colleges we’ve heard from are the University
of Oregon and the University of Washington.” To reiterate,
the majority opinion places undue and inaccurate weight on
the word “update.”
Moreover, we frequently have described a clarifying
“change” in the law as having retroactive effect. See
ABKCO Music, 217 F.3d at 689–90 (“Normally, when an
amendment is deemed clarifying rather than substantive, it
is applied retroactively.” (quoting United States v. Donaghe,
50 F.3d 608, 612 (9th Cir. 1994))); see also Donaghe, 50 F.3d
at 612 (explaining in the Sentencing Guideline context that
an amendment that “has been designated a clarifying
change” is normally applied retroactively when it “is deemed
RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC 55
clarifying rather than substantive” (emphases added)). 3 The
word “update” is no more forward-looking than the word
“change.” See, e.g., Change, Merriam-Webster.com
Dictionary, https://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/change (last visited July 11, 2024)
(“change” means “the act, process, or result of changing:
such as (a) alteration, (b) transformation, [or]
(c) substitution”); Update, Britannica.com Dictionary,
https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/update (last visited
July 22, 2024) (“update” means “to change (something) by
including the most recent information [as in] I need to update
my address book”). 4 Just as we have recognized that a
“change” can be clarifying, so too can an update be
clarifying. Therefore, I strongly disagree with the majority
opinion’s suggestion that the title to Section 102 of the
amendment suggests a “forward-looking change.” Op. at 42.
3. The ATRA Took Immediate Effect
Finally, as noted above, the ATRA took immediate effect
when the President signed it in January 2023. There was no
notation that the ATRA would take effect on a later date, so
the general rule that acts take effect immediately once
enacted applies. See Gozlon-Peretz v. United States, 498
U.S. 395, 404 (1991) (“It is well established that, absent a
clear direction by Congress to the contrary, a law takes effect
3
The majority opinion dismisses my reliance on Donaghe because it was
a sentencing guidelines case. Op. at 40 n.13. But ABCKO Music, a
copyright case, adopted the formulation of the test from Donaghe.
4
As another practical example, I may “update” my address book with
numerous entries that have languished on my desk for months; they may
be new to the address book, but they are not “forward-looking.” In other
words, the “update” can simply confirm or compile information already
possessed.
56 RATHA V. RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC
on the date of its enactment.”). Despite the amendment’s
silence on the issue of retroactivity, there was no delay
between the ATRA’s enactment and its “effective date,” as
was the circumstance in Beaver. See Beaver, 816 F.3d at
1187 (noting 180-day lapse between enactment and effective
date).
In sum, considering the time and circumstances of the
ATRA’s enactment, Congress clearly enacted the
amendment in response to, and to correct our understanding
of, the TVPRA. That clarifying intent gives the ATRA
retroactive effect. ABKCO Music, 217 F.3d at 689–90.
Accordingly, I would reverse and remand for further
proceedings. 5 I therefore respectfully dissent.
5
The district court held, in the alternative, that Plaintiffs’ claims failed
on the merits. I would reverse those holdings, too. The district court
failed to view all facts and inferences in favor of the non-moving party.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986) (“The
evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable
inferences are to be drawn in [their] favor.”). Viewing the facts in the
light most favorable to Plaintiffs, a reasonable jury could conclude that:
(1) Rubicon participated in a venture and benefitted from human
trafficking, and (2) Rubicon knew or should have known of the human
trafficking and forced labor.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT KEO RATHA; SEM KOSAL; No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT KEO RATHA; SEM KOSAL; No.
03Walter, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted March 27, 2024 Pasadena, California Filed July 31, 2024 Before: Susan P.
04RUBICON RESOURCES, LLC SUMMARY * Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act The panel affirmed the district court’s denial of plaintiffs’ motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6) for relief from judgment in an action un
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FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT KEO RATHA; SEM KOSAL; No.
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