Background
Ahmed Shaikh, proceeding pro se, sued five media companies alleging violations of the federal Electronic Communications Privacy Act and Florida state laws. He claimed the companies hacked his devices, installed hidden cameras, and used artificial intelligence to read his thoughts. The district court dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, agreeing with the defendants that the claims were frivolous.
The court’s reasoning
The court reviewed the dismissal de novo, noting that federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. While factual attacks on jurisdiction generally require courts to find jurisdiction exists, an exception applies where a claim is wholly insubstantial and frivolous. The court found Shaikh’s allegations that media companies were reading his thoughts via clandestine technology were utterly divorced from reality and had no plausible foundation. Consequently, there was no federal question jurisdiction. The court also treated the diversity jurisdiction claim as abandoned.
What it means going forward
The ruling reinforces that federal courts will dismiss cases where the underlying claims are so insubstantial that they lack a plausible foundation, thereby preventing the court from exercising jurisdiction.