By: Mark Glennon
How sadly ironic that White Castle became the latest victim of the Illinois General Assembly’s malfeasance. Its stores are modeled after the Chicago Water Tower, which survived the Chicago Fire and stands as a monument to the spirit of tenacity and resilience that once prevailed to rebuild the city.

Today, Mrs. O’Leary’s cow is the state’s own government. It set off what the law firm Mayer Brown rightly calls a “six-alarm fire for businesses with customers or employees in Illinois.”
BIPA, the Biometric Information Privacy Act, arises from a legitimate concern, as most laws do. In this case, it’s privacy of personal biometric information such as fingerprints, DNA and distinctive elements of things like face and retina features. Some of that data is used widely in the business world for things like time management, security, wellness programs and worker safety. The law requires informed consent prior to collecting the data, mandates protection and retention guidelines and bans profiting from selling the data.
That’s fine, but the problem is that the law imposes penalties wildly out of proportion to the seriousness of noncompliance or amount of harm done by a violation.
It can be a death penalty for violators. And the law allows anybody affected to sue for those fines.
That’s a firebomb recipe for personal injury lawyers. Nearly 2,000 lawsuits alleging violations of BIPA have been filed since 2017, “yielding a series of massive settlements and judgments,” as Reuters reported. Defendants have included Facebook, which paid $650 million to settle a BIPA class action and BNSF Railway Co, which a jury ordered to pay $228 million to truck drivers. Anybody thinking about suing enjoys a very generous five-year statute of limitations.
Then came last week’s decision on White Castle from the Illinois Supreme Court, pouring accelerant on the fire.
Separate BIPA violations occurred every time an employee used White Castle’s system that required its employees to scan their fingerprints to access their pay stubs and computers, the court ruled. And BIPA authorizes statutory damages of $1,000 for “each violation” of the statute, or $5,000 if the violation is intentional or reckless.
The top court’s decision therefore could mean a $17 billion liability for White Castle since some 9,500 current and past employees had used the system for years, as a dissenting opinion says, citing White Castle’s estimate. The court’s decision “could easily lead to annihilative liability for businesses,” says the dissent.
That’s what makes the decision terrifying for many other businesses that use biometrics. Every instance of use could mean a penalty of $1,000 or $5,000.
The decision “leaves the plaintiffs’ bar with an all-you-can-eat biometric café,” wrote the law firm Winston & Strawn in its newsletter.
A liability that big would destroy White Castle many times over. It’s not that big a company compared to many publicly owned food chains and is privately owned.
Sorry, said the majority of the court said in their opinion, the plain language of the statute required that result. If this needs to be fixed it’s up to the General Assembly. “Ultimately,” the majority opinion says, “we continue to believe that policy-based concerns about potentially excessive damage awards under the Act are best addressed by the legislature.”
That’s the real takeaway – the General Assembly should have fixed this long ago. The liabilities being imposed under BIPA have been burning out of control for several years, and the ruling making each instance subject to a penalty has long been feared, having percolated up through the courts for several years. Bills to fix it have languished.
The dissent argued that only one violation should be recognized for any employee for the first time fingerprints are collected, and that the law must have been intended that way.
Right or wrong, that’s now water under the bridge. The top court has ruled. Only the General Assembly can fix the statute.
One next potential victim of BIPA may be the cannabis industry, an increasingly important revenue force for the state, according to lawyers at Dentons U.S. “BIPA damages could be a death knell to cannabis operators,” they wrote, explaining,
The cannabis industry has placed a strong emphasis on security for grow facilities and dispensaries. These enhanced security measures are a must to protect employees handling largely cash transactions and customers purchasing a heavily regulated product. But, in taking these reasonable security measures, the cannabis industry has opened itself up to litigation surrounding BIPA’s stringent requirements.
The majority opinion in White Castle’s case says, “We respectfully suggest that the legislature review these policy concerns and make clear its intent regarding the assessment of damages under the Act.”
That’s being too nice. Nobody should be “respectfully suggesting” anything to legislature about this. They should have fixed BIPA long ago. Fix it now.
In the meantime, any business touching Illinoisans in any way that uses biometrics should follow the advice of many lawyers: At least mitigate your exposure by immediately reviewing policies and practices related to biometric information to ensure BIPA compliance, including biometric use for employee timekeeping.
*Mark Glennon is found of Wirepoints.
Audio and summary
If this bill passes, say goodbye to local control over all Illinois parks and expect to see open drug and alcohol use, needles, no sanitation and fire hazards, but no ordinary park users.
This is the most anti-business regulation I have ever read about. It’s no wonder why so many businesses are leaving Illinois because of over-regulation by the Democrats.
White Castle knew exactly what they were doing and I am pretty sure they knew what the law was and yet they did it anyhow and I’m sure they sold people’s information. They did something illegal and they got caught if it puts him out of business then that’s their problem
Precedent will be set when the General Assembly finally jumps in to protect the “tax cash cow” cannibas business. The state can’t afford to have cannibas shops leave Illinois. If the General Assembly carves out an exception for cannibas dispensares, their fate and business exits will be even worse. Seems like this is going to BACKFIRE on Illinois BIG TIME. Once again, it proves you really need a high quality education and brains to serve in the General Assembly.
Cannabis in Illinois is a racket. Cannabis is 1/12th the cost in Oklahoma. Legal retail cannabis 1/12 the price in Oklahoma. Wake up Illinois!
Anybody know what the current street price is in Illinois compared to the legal store price?
And Pritzker wants to seduce Stellantis to rejuvenate its Belvedere IL plant for EV manufacturing. If the company is even considering this it’s CEO and Board needs their collective heads examined.
Only a moron would open a business in Illinois now.
This is just another nail in the coffin of Illinois Kiss of Death.
Get ready for a stampede of business fleeing the sorry state of Illinois.
Many Illinois counties are labeled as “Judicial Hellholes” these days. Companies from across the nation can and are being sued in these venues. One particular one was the Phillip Morris case in Madison County. A long story short is that the humongous award almost caused Morris to declare bankruptcy just to post a bond just to appeal the case into higher courts where Morris prevailed. Morris in the aftermath made considerable corporate restructuring changing the face of the company causing loss of good jobs nationwide. Illinois trial lawyers have considerable strength that hurts us all as a Country…not just Illinois.
What company in their right mind is going to locate in Illinois that has to inevitably have to payoff all the legalized shakedown rakets in Illinois of endless taxes, union labor/ Amend 1, Trial Lawyer Acc/ BIPA, etc,,,and on and on? In reality, is JBs new taxpayer funded $400 mil closing deal fund anything more than a pass thru payoff to all these legalized racketers so that JB can claim he’s for working schmucks in his run for the white house?
If White Castle loses in the end, don’t be surprised to see more businesses leave the state. Illinois can forget trying to attract new businesses too. Who wants to come to such a business unfriendly state?
White Castle already lost. The only place left is the US Supreme Court or have the legislature rewrite the law retroactively. Chances of those happening are non-existent.
Just think what it’s costing White Castle in legal expenses just to defend itself. They need to look to see it it’s worth it. Its Board may find that there’s more value in closing its Illinois stores and opening up in more business friendly states. Think Indiana Wisconsin Kentucky Tennessee, etc.
A long time ago a video was published discussing how Illinois used the Worker’s Compensation law suits to basically bankrupt small manufacturing businesses. When I say Illinois I mean lawyers took advantage of stupid laws that allows companies to be sued. A ladder maker in Illinois was sued and basically destroyed financially and did leave the state or went under. What caused this was ambulance chaser laws.
Our workers compensation system is broken. God forbid you are injured at work, there’s a high chance your case will linger in the court systems for years and years and years.
Absolutely correct. My wife paid her way through her PhD in part by providing expert witness testimony in Illinois Industrial Commission hearings.
Illinois encourages so many fraudulent employee injury claims that people with a truly legitimate case are lost in a system that’s almost hopelessly adversarial, at vast expense of money and/or time, to everyone involved.
The Illinois legislature would do well to do less original law writing. Look to other states for statutes that have been tested in the real world and have had the intended results. Unintended side effects are deadly!
I’m no lawyer but I believe BIPA claims where originally supposed to apply nation wide and include incidents outside Illinois? But since then courts in other states have overturned BIPA claims, here’s a legal piece from 11/22
https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/washington-court-finds-illinois-bipa-7447606/
dose any Illinois state or municiple gov use BIPA?
I answered my own question. I read BIPA applies to “private entities”.
Naturally, they exempted themselves — and their own contractors: Nothing in this Act shall be construed to apply to a contractor, subcontractor, or agent of a State agency or local unit of government when working for that State agency or local unit of government. https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=3004&ChapterID=57.
This wouldn’t be an ACTUAL case of “Rules for thee but not for me.” would it? I”ll be damned, finally!
Democrats in charge and doing what they do best, ruining everything with their backwards, inept, and inane policies.
The KISS OF DEATH for Illinois businesses. DOOMED to go bankrupt and move out of state.
Best thing is to take all the money out of the business and then go bankrupt tagging as many vendors and the state tax man as you can. Give the 1 finger salute as you cross the state line out of this unfriendly business state.
To the down-voters, this is exactly what the state wants. Build back better requires a total destruction of the economic system. Total economic devastation IS the plan. Wake up