John Doe v. Nestle, S.A. ( 2019 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    JOHN DOE, I; JOHN DOE, II; JOHN           No. 17-55435
    DOE, III; JOHN DOE, IV; JOHN DOE,
    V; and JOHN DOE, VI, each                    D.C. No.
    individually and on behalf of             2:05-cv-05133-
    proposed class members,                    SVW-MRW
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                      ORDER AND
    AMENDED
    NESTLE, S.A.; NESTLE USA, INC.;             OPINION
    NESTLE IVORY COAST; CARGILL
    INCORPORATED COMPANY; CARGILL
    COCOA; CARGILL WEST AFRICA,
    S. A.; ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND
    COMPANY,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Stephen V. Wilson, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted June 7, 2018
    Pasadena, California
    Filed October 23, 2018
    Amended July 5, 2019
    2                          DOE V. NESTLE
    Before: Dorothy W. Nelson and Morgan Christen, Circuit
    Judges, and Edward F. Shea,* District Judge.
    Order;
    Dissent to Order by Judge Bennett;
    Opinion by Judge D.W. Nelson;
    Concurrence by Judge Shea
    SUMMARY**
    Alien Tort Statute
    The panel filed (1) an order amending its opinion,
    denying a petition for panel rehearing, and denying on behalf
    of the court a petition for rehearing en banc; and (2) an
    amended opinion reversing the district court’s dismissal of
    claims of aiding and abetting slave labor in violation of the
    Alien Tort Statute.
    In its amended opinion, the panel reversed the district
    court’s dismissal, which was based on the district court’s
    conclusion that the complaint, brought by former child slaves
    who were forced to work on cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast
    against manufacturers, purchasers, and retail sellers of cocoa
    beans, sought an impermissible extraterritorial application of
    the Alien Tort Statute. In a two-step analysis, the panel
    *
    The Honorable Edward F. Shea, United States District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Washington, sitting by designation.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    DOE V. NESTLE                         3
    concluded that the ATS is not extraterritorial, but, looking to
    the statute’s focus, the complaint alleged a domestic
    application of the statute in defendants’ funding of child
    slavery practices. The panel concluded that plaintiffs’
    allegations painted a picture of overseas slave labor that
    defendants perpetuated from headquarters in the United
    States, and this narrow set of domestic conduct was relevant
    to the ATS’s focus. The panel remanded to allow plaintiffs
    to amend their complaint to specify, in light of Jesner v. Arab
    Bank, 
    138 S. Ct. 1386
     (2018), whether aiding and abetting
    conduct that took place in the United States was relevant to
    the domestic corporations named as defendants. The panel
    held that plaintiffs had Article III standing to bring their
    claims because they alleged concrete and redressable injury
    that was fairly traceable to the challenged conduct of one
    defendant, and their allegations against another defendant
    were sufficient to allow a final opportunity to replead.
    District Judge Shea concurred in the result.
    Judge Bennett, joined by Judges Bybee, Callahan, Bea,
    Ikuta, and R. Nelson; and joined by Judges M. Smith and
    Bade as to Part II, dissented from the denial of rehearing en
    banc. In Part I, Judge Bennett wrote that, after Jesner,
    corporations, foreign or domestic, are not proper ATS
    defendants. In Part II, Judge Bennett wrote that plaintiffs’
    claims were impermissibly exterritorial because the
    allegations in the complaint were clear that all the relevant
    misconduct took place in Côte d’Ivoire, not the United States.
    4                     DOE V. NESTLE
    COUNSEL
    Paul L. Hoffman (argued), John Washington, and Catherine
    Sweetser, Schonbrun Seplow Harris & Hoffman LLP, Los
    Angeles, California; Terrence P. Collingsworth, International
    Human Rights Advocates, Washington, D.C.; for Plaintiffs-
    Appellants.
    Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr. (argued), Abbey Hudson, Matthew
    A. Hoffman, and Perlette Michèle Jura, Gibson Dunn &
    Crutcher LLP, Los Angeles, California; Christopher B. Leach
    and Theodore B. Olson, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP,
    Washington, D.C.; Colleen Sinzdak, David M. Foster, Craig
    A. Hoover, and Neal Kumar Katyal, Hogan Lovells US LLP,
    Washington, D.C.; for Defendant-Appellee Nestlé USA, Inc.
    Andrew John Pincus (argued) and Kevin S. Ranlett, Mayer
    Brown LLP, Washington, D.C.; Lee H. Rubin, Mayer Brown
    LLP, Mayer Brown LLP, Palo Alto, California; for
    Defendant-Appellee Cargill Incorporated.
    Marc B. Robertson and Richard A. Stamp, Washington Legal
    Foundation, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae
    Washington Legal Foundation.
    DOE V. NESTLE                       5
    ORDER
    The Opinion filed on October 23, 2018, is amended as
    follows:
    IV.    Plaintiffs Have Standing to Bring Their Claims
    Defendants argue that plaintiffs lack
    Article III standing to bring their claims. To
    have standing, plaintiffs must allege “[(1)] a
    concrete and particularized injury [(2)] that is
    fairly traceable to the challenged conduct,
    [(3)] and is likely to be redressed by a
    favorable judicial decision.” Consumer Fin.
    Prot. Bureau v. Gordon, 
    819 F.3d 1179
    , 1187
    (9th Cir. 2016), cert. denied, (quoting
    Hollingsworth v. Perry, 
    570 U.S. 693
    , 704
    (2013)).
    Plaintiffs easily satisfy the first and third
    requirements. Defendants do not dispute that
    plaintiffs suffered concrete injury by being
    abused and held as child slaves. In addition,
    plaintiffs’ injuries are redressable because
    when “one private party is injured by another,
    the injury can be redressed in at least two
    ways: by awarding compensatory damages or
    by imposing a sanction on the wrongdoer that
    will minimize the risk that the harm-causing
    conduct will be repeated.” Steel Co. v.
    Citizens for a Better Env’t, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 127
    (1998).
    6                      DOE V. NESTLE
    Plaintiffs also satisfy the traceability
    requirement as to Cargill because they raise
    sufficiently specific allegations regarding
    Cargill’s involvement in farms that rely on
    child slavery. Baloco ex rel. Tapia v.
    Drummond Co., 
    640 F.3d 1338
    , 1343 (11th
    Cir. 2011); Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
    ,
    169 (1997) (Article III traceability
    requirement “does not exclude injury
    produced by determinative or coercive effect
    upon the action of someone else.”). Plaintiffs’
    allegations against Nestle are far less clear,
    though part of the difficulty is plaintiffs’
    reliance on collective allegations against all or
    at least multiple defendants. Notwithstanding
    this deficiency, the allegations are sufficient
    to at least allow plaintiffs a final opportunity
    to replead. On remand, plaintiffs must
    eliminate the allegations against foreign
    defendants and specifically identify the
    culpable conduct attributable to individual
    domestic defendants.
    With the Amended Opinion, a majority of the panel voted
    to deny the petition for panel rehearing. Judges D. Nelson
    and Christen voted to deny the petition for panel rehearing,
    and Judge Shea voted to grant the petition for panel
    rehearing.
    Judge Christen voted to deny the petition for rehearing en
    banc, and Judge D. Nelson so recommended. Judge Shea
    recommended granting the petition for rehearing en banc.
    The full court was advised of the petition for rehearing en
    banc. A judge of the court requested a vote on whether to
    DOE V. NESTLE                        7
    rehear the matter en banc. The matter failed to receive a
    majority of the votes of non-recused active judges in favor of
    en banc consideration. Fed. R. App. P. 35. No further
    petitions for rehearing will be entertained.
    The petition for rehearing and petition for rehearing en
    banc are DENIED. Judge Bennett’s dissent from the denial
    of rehearing en banc is filed concurrently herewith. Judges
    Wardlaw, Watford, Owens, Friedland, Miller, and Collins did
    not participate in the deliberations or vote in this case.
    BENNETT, Circuit Judge, with whom BYBEE,
    CALLAHAN, BEA, IKUTA, and R. NELSON, Circuit
    Judges, join, and with whom M. SMITH and BADE, Circuit
    Judges, join as to Part II, dissenting from the denial of
    rehearing en banc:
    The Supreme Court has told us that the Alien Tort Statute
    (“ATS”) must be narrowly construed and sparingly applied,
    in line with its original purpose: “to help the United States
    avoid diplomatic friction” by providing “a forum for
    adjudicating that ‘narrow set of violations of the law of
    nations’ that, if left unaddressed, ‘threaten[ed] serious
    consequences’ for the United States.” Jesner v. Arab Bank,
    PLC, 
    138 S. Ct. 1386
    , 1410 (2018) (Alito, J., concurring)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain,
    
    542 U.S. 692
    , 715 (2004)). The Court has given us a roadmap
    to determine whether artificial entities like corporations can
    be liable for ATS violations. And the Court has made it
    equally clear that the ATS reaches only domestic
    conduct—where a claim “seek[s] relief for violations of the
    law of nations occurring outside the United States,” the claim
    8                       DOE V. NESTLE
    is “barred.” Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (Kiobel II),
    
    569 U.S. 108
    , 124 (2013). Violations of the law of
    nations—like genocide, slavery, and piracy—are horrific. But
    in its zeal to sanction alleged violators, the panel majority has
    ignored the Court’s ATS roadmap. First, the panel majority
    has failed to properly analyze under Jesner whether a claim
    against these corporate defendants may proceed. And second,
    the panel majority has compounded that error by allowing
    this case to move forward notwithstanding that Defendants’
    alleged actionable conduct took place almost entirely abroad,
    turning the presumption against extraterritoriality on its head.
    Jesner changed the standard by which we evaluate
    whether a class of defendants is amenable to suit under the
    ATS. Corporations are no longer viable ATS defendants
    under either step one or step two of the two-step approach the
    Court announced in Sosa, as applied in Jesner. The panel
    majority, however, fails to apply Jesner’s controlling analysis
    and applies an incorrect theory of ATS corporate liability
    even as the Supreme Court suggests that we reach the
    opposite conclusion.
    The panel majority also all but ignores the Court’s
    instruction that an ATS claim must “touch and concern the
    territory of the United States . . . with sufficient force to
    displace the presumption against extraterritorial application”
    of the ATS. Kiobel II, 
    569 U.S. at
    124–25. Plaintiffs’
    allegations—based almost entirely on violations of the law of
    nations that allegedly occurred in Africa—are wholly
    insufficient to state a claim.
    The Supreme Court has instructed that we must “exercise
    ‘great caution’ before recognizing new forms of liability
    under the ATS.” Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1403
     (quoting Sosa,
    DOE V. NESTLE                                 9
    
    542 U.S. at 728
    ). We should have heeded this instruction and
    taken this case en banc to hold that these corporations may
    not be sued under the ATS and to make clear that the
    presumption against extraterritoriality still applies in the
    Ninth Circuit.1 Thus, I respectfully dissent from the denial of
    rehearing en banc.
    1
    Although not within the scope of Defendants’ petitions for rehearing
    en banc, I believe that it was error for this court to conclude in Doe I v.
    Nestle USA, Inc. (Nestle I), 
    766 F.3d 1013
     (9th Cir. 2014) that aiding-and-
    abetting liability is available under the ATS. As the government
    previously argued in another ATS case, “the adoption of aiding and
    abetting liability is a ‘vast expansion of federal law’ that federal courts
    must eschew in the absence ‘of congressional direction to do so.’” Brief
    for the United States as Amicus Curiae in Support of Petitioners, at 8, Am.
    Isuzu Motors, Inc. v. Ntsebeza, 
    553 U.S. 1028
     (2008) (No. 07-919), 
    2008 WL 408389
    , at *8 (hereinafter “Br. for the U.S. as Amicus Curiae”)
    (quoting Cent. Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver,
    N.A., 
    511 U.S. 464
    , 183 (1994)). Thus, the fact that the ATS provides for
    primary liability does not, in the absence of further congressional action,
    create secondary liability. See Cent. Bank, 511 U.S. at 182 (“[W]hen
    Congress enacts a statute under which a person may sue or recover
    damages from a private defendant for the defendant’s violation of some
    statutory norm, there is no general presumption that the plaintiff may also
    sue aiders and abettors.”).
    Just as Congress has not extended the ATS to corporations (and, in
    fact, expressly limited the Torture Victim Protection Act to individual
    liability, see infra Part I.C), it has not created ATS aiding-and-abetting
    liability either. Courts, including our own, that have permitted plaintiffs
    to bring claims for aiding-and-abetting ATS violations have, in the words
    of the Solicitor General, “veered far off course under the ATS.” Br. for the
    U.S. as Amicus Curiae at 10.
    10                     DOE V. NESTLE
    I. After Jesner, Corporations Are Not Proper ATS
    Defendants.
    Just last term, the Supreme Court held in Jesner that the
    ATS’s jurisdictional grant does not extend to foreign
    corporations. 
    138 S. Ct. at 1407
    . This appeal presents the
    question that the Supreme Court expressly left open in
    Jesner: can corporations ever be proper ATS defendants? The
    panel majority avoided this issue by relying on discredited
    circuit precedent. Applying the correct standard post-Jesner,
    corporations (foreign or not) are clearly not proper ATS
    defendants. It was error for the panel majority to hold
    otherwise, and we should have corrected that error en banc.
    To determine whether to recognize a cause of action
    under the ATS, we look to Sosa, which involves a “two-step
    process.” Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1409
     (Alito, J., concurring).
    “First, a court must determine whether the particular
    international-law norm alleged to have been violated is
    ‘accepted by the civilized world and defined with a
    specificity comparable to the features of the 18th-century
    paradigms.’” 
    Id. at 1419
     (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (quoting
    Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at 725
    ). “Second, if that threshold hurdle is
    satisfied, a court should consider whether allowing a
    particular case to proceed is an appropriate exercise of
    judicial discretion.” Id. at 1420. Corporate liability fails at
    both steps.
    In Sarei v. Rio Tinto, PLC, 
    671 F.3d 736
    , 760 (9th Cir.
    2011) (en banc), vacated and remanded, 
    569 U.S. 945
     (2013),
    we held that if a norm of conduct is sufficiently established
    to give rise to ATS liability, the only relevant liability
    question is whether the defendant is capable of violating the
    norm. Although the Supreme Court vacated Sarei in light of
    DOE V. NESTLE                         11
    Kiobel II, we doubled down on Sarei’s erroneous reasoning
    in Doe I v. Nestle USA, Inc. (Nestle I), 
    766 F.3d 1013
     (9th
    Cir. 2014), when we held that where there exists a “universal
    and absolute” norm of conduct that is “applicable to ‘all
    actors,’” any accused violator is subject to jurisdiction of the
    United States courts under the ATS. Id. at 1022 (quoting
    Sarei, 
    671 F.3d at 760
    ). As far as I am aware, we have never
    analyzed the corporate liability issue under Sosa step two.
    The panel majority has neglected to do so here.
    Judge Bea persuasively explained why the Sarei/Nestle I
    approach to corporate liability was inconsistent with
    established Supreme Court precedent, see Doe I v. Nestle
    USA, Inc., 
    788 F.3d 946
     (9th Cir. 2015) (Bea, J., dissenting
    from the denial of rehearing en banc) (“Nestle I Dissental”),
    and I do not repeat those arguments here. After Jesner,
    though, there should be no serious doubt that our court’s
    approach to this issue is incomplete, and the en banc court
    should have stepped in to correct the panel majority’s failing.
    A. Nestle I is no longer good law on the corporate-
    liability issue.
    In holding that foreign corporate defendants are
    categorically not amenable to suit under the ATS, Jesner was
    explicit that federal courts can and must—contrary to
    Nestle I—determine whether certain categories of defendant
    are beyond the reach of an ATS claim. See Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at
    1402–03. The panel majority’s application of Nestle I to
    the corporate defendants here, post-Jesner, was at best
    incomplete and at worst simply wrong. In addition, while
    Jesner’s holding was limited by its terms to foreign
    corporations, five justices in Jesner authored or joined
    12                     DOE V. NESTLE
    opinions that called into serious doubt the validity of ATS
    claims against domestic corporations.
    1. We should have taken this case en banc to
    expressly reject Nestle I’s approach to
    corporate liability questions.
    First, Jesner directly conflicts with the Nestle I
    approach—in particular, our holding that “there is no
    categorical rule of corporate immunity or liability” under the
    ATS. Nestle I, 766 F.3d at 1022 (citing Sarei, 
    671 F.3d at 747
    ). In Jesner, the Court explained that its “general
    reluctance to extend judicially created private rights of action
    . . . extends to the question whether the courts should exercise
    the judicial authority to mandate a rule that imposes liability
    upon artificial entities like corporations.” Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at
    1402–03. Justice Kennedy’s opinion for the Court
    answered that question in the negative for foreign
    corporations, and in the process invited the lower courts to
    consider whether the question should be answered similarly
    as to domestic corporations. See 
    id. at 1402
    .
    Here, the panel majority correctly acknowledged that
    Jesner abrogated Nestle I to the extent that Nestle I permitted
    an ATS suit against foreign corporate defendants. Doe v.
    Nestle, S.A. (Nestle II), 
    906 F.3d 1120
    , 1124 (9th Cir. 2018).
    But the panel majority’s subsequent conclusion that Jesner
    left undisturbed this court’s treatment of domestic
    corporations under the ATS, 
    id.,
     was incorrect. Jesner’s
    holding, to be sure, was limited to foreign corporations, but
    by acknowledging the existence of categorical rules
    restricting the ATS liability of certain classes of corporate
    actors, Jesner requires us to discard the approach we adopted
    in Sarei (and re-embraced in Nestle I), which focused entirely
    DOE V. NESTLE                        13
    on the question whether a norm of conduct is sufficiently
    universal to support an ATS claim. Jesner thus confirmed
    Judge Bea’s dissental’s conclusion in Nestle I: “there must be
    a meaningful inquiry—not a mere labeling of norms as
    ‘categorical’”—into whether the ATS supports liability
    against a given defendant. Nestle I Dissental, 788 F.3d at 955.
    Not only did the panel majority fail to conduct a meaningful
    inquiry into corporate liability, it inexplicably failed to
    conduct any inquiry at all: “Jesner did not eliminate all
    corporate liability under the ATS, and we therefore continue
    to follow Nestle I’s holding as applied to domestic
    corporations.” Nestle II, 906 F.3d at 1124. The en banc court
    should have corrected that very clear error.
    2. Five justices in Jesner strongly suggested
    that the ATS forecloses corporate liability.
    Although Jesner did not explicitly rule out domestic
    corporate ATS liability, there is no basis for the panel
    majority’s conclusion that Jesner preserved our court’s status
    quo. Justice Kennedy’s three-justice plurality opinion does
    not mince words in arguing that “[t]he international
    community’s conscious decision to limit the authority of . . .
    international tribunals to natural persons counsels against a
    broad holding that there is a specific, universal, and
    obligatory norm of corporate liability under currently
    prevailing international law.” 
    138 S. Ct. at 1401
     (plurality
    op.).
    Justice Alito’s view is similar:
    Federal courts should decline to create federal
    common law causes of action under Sosa’s
    second step whenever doing so would not
    14                         DOE V. NESTLE
    materially advance the ATS’s objective of
    avoiding diplomatic strife. . . . All parties
    agree that customary international law does
    not require corporate liability as a general
    matter. But if customary international law
    does not require corporate liability, then
    declining to create it under the ATS cannot
    give other nations just cause for complaint
    against the United States.
    
    Id. at 1410
     (Alito, J., concurring) (citation omitted).
    Corporate liability would “not materially advance the ATS’s
    objective of avoiding diplomatic strife.” 
    Id.
    Finally, Justice Gorsuch would have gone even further
    than the plurality and held that the courts lack authority to
    create any new causes of action under the ATS other than
    those recognized by the First Congress, which would not
    include the claims that Plaintiffs here raise. 
    Id.
     at 1412–13
    (Gorsuch, J., concurring).
    In short, five justices signaled in Jesner that they would
    hold that corporations are not subject to the ATS. We should
    have revisited en banc the panel majority’s holding that
    Jesner had no impact at all on this issue.2
    2
    The panel majority’s application of Nestle I in this case was based
    on Miller v. Gammie, 
    335 F.3d 889
    , 893 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc), in
    which we held that “where the reasoning or theory of our prior circuit
    authority is clearly irreconcilable with the reasoning or theory of
    intervening higher authority, a three-judge panel should consider itself
    bound by the later and controlling authority.” 
    Id.
     Because Jesner is
    “clearly irreconcilable” with Nestle I, Miller provides an additional
    compelling reason for us to have taken this case up en banc to conduct the
    analysis required by “higher authority.”
    DOE V. NESTLE                              15
    B. No specific, universal, and obligatory norm of
    international law extends liability to corporate
    defendants, and such claims are not cognizable
    under the ATS.
    Because no sufficiently established norm of international
    law subjects corporations to liability, an ATS claim cannot lie
    against corporations.
    1. International law, not federal common law,
    supplies the rule of decision on corporate
    liability.
    As I explained above, the Court in Sosa directed lower
    courts to consider “whether international law extends the
    scope of liability for a violation of a given norm to the
    perpetrator being sued, if the defendant is a private actor such
    as a corporation or individual.” 
    542 U.S. at
    732 n.20; see also
    
    id. at 760
     (Breyer, J., concurring) (restating the Court’s
    holding that “[t]he norm must extend liability to the type of
    perpetrator . . . the plaintiff seeks to sue”). Properly
    understood, Sosa forecloses any argument that the ATS
    provides authority for the creation of new causes of action
    under federal common law.3 See Kiobel v. Royal Dutch
    Petroleum Co. (Kiobel I), 
    621 F.3d 111
    , 127 (2d Cir. 2010)
    (Sosa “requires that we look to international law to determine
    our jurisdiction over ATS claims against a particular class of
    defendant, such as corporations”).
    3
    This view is consistent with Judge Edwards’s concurrence in Tel-
    Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic, 
    726 F.2d 774
     (D.C. Cir. 1984), which
    looked to the lack of “consensus on non-official torture” to conclude that
    the ATS did not “cover torture by non-state actors.” 
    Id. at 795
     (Edwards,
    J., concurring).
    16                     DOE V. NESTLE
    Some courts have concluded that corporate liability is
    permitted by the ATS, reasoning that while customary
    international law supplies the cause of action (in this case, a
    claim for redress of child slavery), “the technical
    accoutrements to the ATS cause of action, such as corporate
    liability[,] . . . are to be drawn from federal common law[.]”
    Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 
    654 F.3d 11
    , 51 (D.C. Cir. 2011),
    vacated, 527 F. App’x 7 (D.C. Cir. 2013); see also Flomo v.
    Firestone Nat. Rubber Co., 
    643 F.3d 1013
    , 1020 (7th Cir.
    2011) (“International law imposes substantive obligations and
    the individual nations decide how to enforce them.”).
    These views are flatly inconsistent with Sosa, which
    requires that courts evaluate the potential liability under
    international law for certain classes of defendants. And
    following Jesner, these views are even less tenable. Indeed,
    Justice Sotomayor’s Jesner dissent specifically invokes the
    distinction between norms of “substantive conduct,” which
    she argues are determined by international law, and “rules of
    how to enforce international-law norms,” which she argues
    are left to the individual states. Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1420
    (Sotomayor, J., dissenting). That contention, however, only
    garnered the support of four justices, and was characterized
    by the plurality as “far from obvious,” 
    id. at 1402
     (plurality
    op.). In any event, Sosa defines our inquiry and requires us to
    determine questions of corporate liability by reference to
    international law.
    DOE V. NESTLE                         17
    2. An ATS claim does not lie against
    corporations because there is no
    universally accepted international law
    norm of corporate liability.
    Applying Sosa’s step one to the question of corporate
    liability under the ATS, I agree with Justice Kennedy’s
    plurality opinion in Jesner, Judge Cabranes’s opinion for the
    Second Circuit in Kiobel I, and then-Judge Kavanaugh’s
    dissent in Exxon Mobil, that allowing an ATS claim against
    a corporation does not “rest on a norm of international
    character accepted by the civilized world and defined with a
    specificity comparable to the features of the 18th-century
    paradigms” on which the ATS was based. Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at 725
    ; see also Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1401
     (plurality op.)
    (“The international community’s conscious decision to limit
    the authority of these international tribunals to natural
    persons counsels against a broad holding that there is a
    specific, universal, and obligatory norm of corporate liability
    under currently prevailing international law.”); Kiobel I,
    
    621 F.3d at 141
     (“[T]here is nothing to demonstrate that
    corporate liability has yet been recognized as a norm of the
    customary international law of human rights.”); Exxon Mobil,
    
    654 F.3d at 81
     (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting) (“[C]laims under
    the ATS are defined and limited by customary international
    law, and customary international law does not extend liability
    to corporations.”).
    As Judge Leval’s concurrence in Kiobel I recognized,
    “international law, of its own force, imposes no liabilities on
    corporations or other private juridical entities.” Kiobel I, 
    621 F.3d at 186
     (Leval, J., concurring). That conclusion is
    dispositive—in the absence of a clearly defined, universal
    norm of corporate liability under customary international law,
    18                     DOE V. NESTLE
    the remaining domestic corporate defendants are entitled to
    dismissal.
    I note finally that only a few courts have argued that there
    is, in fact, a specific, universal, and obligatory norm of
    corporate liability under international law (Flomo, 
    643 F.3d at 1016
    , for example, makes this argument). This view is the
    minority and seems to be contrary to fact. Even Justice
    Sotomayor’s Jesner dissent does not argue that such a norm
    exists. Rather, Justice Sotomayor argues, echoing Judge
    Leval and others, that there is no international-law reason to
    distinguish between corporations and natural persons, and
    thus federal common law (which recognizes corporate
    liability) should supply the rule of decision. See Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1425
     (Sotomayor, J., dissenting).
    Looking to federal common law to fill the gaps where
    international law is silent is problematic for several reasons.
    First, it ignores Sosa’s requirement that we look to a given
    defendant’s potential liability under international law to
    determine whether an ATS claim lies. 
    542 U.S. at
    732 n.20.
    If there is no international law liability, the ATS does not
    permit courts to impute liability from another body of
    substantive law. Second, it simply ignores “the fact that no
    international tribunal has ever been accorded jurisdiction over
    corporations.” Kiobel I, 
    621 F.3d at 145
    . Third, it is a
    completely backwards application of Sosa step one. Rather
    than asking whether the norm of corporate liability “is
    sufficiently definite” under international law, Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at 732
    , it purports to derive a new type of ATS liability from
    the absence of an international law norm distinguishing
    between individual and corporate actors. See Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1425
     (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (quoting Judge Leval’s
    concurrence in Kiobel I, 
    621 F.3d at 175
    , for the proposition
    DOE V. NESTLE                         19
    that “international law . . . takes no position on the question”
    whether international law distinguishes between a corporation
    and natural person). But the ATS does not give federal courts
    the “power to mold substantive law.” Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at 713
    .
    In the absence of a clear norm of corporate liability under
    international law, we cannot extend the ATS to reach
    corporate actors. See Kiobel I, 
    621 F.3d at
    120–21 (“[T]he
    responsibility of establishing a norm of customary
    international law lies with those wishing to invoke it, and in
    the absence of sources of international law endorsing (or
    refuting) a norm, the norm simply cannot be applied in a suit
    grounded on customary international law under the ATS.”).
    C. The caution urged by the Court in ATS cases
    counsels heavily against permitting an ATS
    claim against corporations.
    The inquiry should end at Sosa step one. But were we to
    move to Sosa step two, dismissal would still be appropriate
    because only Congress, not the courts, may extend the ATS’s
    reach to corporate actors. Sosa step two, as the Supreme
    Court applied it in Jesner, compels a holding that corporate
    liability simply does not lie under the ATS absent express
    congressional approval.
    The appropriate inquiry here is “whether allowing [a] case
    to proceed under the ATS is a proper exercise of judicial
    discretion, or instead whether caution requires the political
    branches to grant specific authority before corporate liability
    can be imposed.” Jesner, 
    138 S. Ct. at 1399
     (plurality op.).
    Since Sosa, the Court has consistently urged lower federal
    courts to exercise “great caution” before extending the ATS
    to cover new forms of liability not contemplated by the First
    Congress. Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at 728
    . In Kiobel II, for example,
    20                     DOE V. NESTLE
    the Court observed that foreign policy concerns “are
    implicated in any case arising under the ATS,” and reiterated
    the need for deference to the political branches before
    fashioning new ATS causes of action. 
    569 U.S. at 117
    .
    In Jesner, the Court relied on this judicial reluctance in
    declining to extend ATS liability to foreign corporations.
    Highlighting foreign policy and separation-of-powers
    concerns, the Jesner majority reiterated that the responsibility
    for creating new causes of action—particularly in areas that
    touch foreign policy (as any ATS case does)—lies with
    Congress and the President. 
    138 S. Ct. at
    1402–03, 1407.
    The panel majority has failed to exercise the caution that
    the Supreme Court demands in ATS cases. Following the
    Court’s lead in Jesner, we should have held that corporate
    ATS liability fails Sosa step two for two reasons: the
    Congressional enactment of the Torture Victim Protection
    Act of 1991 (“TVPA”), and the Court’s Bivens jurisprudence.
    First, we have some “congressional guidance in
    exercising jurisdiction.” Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at 731
    . The
    TVPA—the only ATS cause of action created by Congress,
    see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1350
     note—expressly limits liability to
    “individuals.” As the Jesner plurality explained, the fact that
    corporations cannot be sued under the TVPA “reflects
    Congress’ considered judgment of the proper structure for a
    right of action under the ATS. Absent a compelling
    justification, courts should not deviate from that model.”
    
    138 S. Ct. at 1403
     (plurality op.). The TVPA is “all but
    dispositive” of the issue of corporate liability under the ATS.
    
    Id. at 1404
     (plurality op.). On the sole occasion it has
    implemented the ATS for a specific class of conduct,
    DOE V. NESTLE                         21
    Congress specifically chose to exempt corporations from
    liability.
    Second, insofar as the Court has expressed considerable
    skepticism of expanding the breadth of the ATS in the
    absence of Congressional guidance, its Bivens jurisprudence
    (which “provides . . . the closest analogy” to the ATS, Sosa,
    
    542 U.S. at 743
     (Scalia, J., concurring in part)) is highly
    instructive. In Jesner, the Court cited a Bivens case,
    Correctional Services Corp. v. Malesko, 
    534 U.S. 61
    , 74
    (2001), for the proposition that “[a]llowing corporate liability
    would have been a ‘marked extension’ of Bivens that was
    unnecessary to advance its purpose.” 
    138 S. Ct. at 1403
    . As
    the Jesner Court then explained, “[w]hether corporate
    defendants should be subject to suit was ‘a question for
    Congress, not us, to decide.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Malesko, 
    534 U.S. at 72
    ). The Court then immediately observed that “[n]either
    the language of the ATS nor the precedents interpreting it
    support an exception to these general principals in this
    context.” Id. at 1403.
    Jesner’s discussion of Bivens and Malesko should dictate
    the outcome here. In Malesko, the Court reasoned that
    corporations are immune from Bivens actions because, “if a
    corporate defendant is available for suit, claimants will focus
    their collection efforts on it, and not the individual directly
    responsible for the alleged injury.” 
    534 U.S. at 71
    . “[T]he
    deterrent effects of the Bivens remedy would be lost.” 
    Id. at 69
     (quoting FDIC v. Meyer, 
    510 U.S. 471
    , 485 (1994)).
    The same principle applies with equal force here.
    International criminal law is chiefly concerned with
    punishing those natural persons directly responsible for
    affronts to the law of nations. See The Nürnberg (Nuremberg)
    22                     DOE V. NESTLE
    Trial (United States v. Goering), 
    6 F.R.D. 69
    , 110 (Int’l
    Military Trib. 1946) (“Crimes against international law are
    committed by men, not by abstract entities, and only by
    punishing individuals who commit such crimes can the
    provisions of international law be enforced.”). The complaint
    here amply demonstrates that if given the choice between
    pursuing a corporate defendant or the individuals responsible
    for violating international law, plaintiffs will choose the
    former. But, in the end, whether sound policy would counsel
    for or against extending ATS liability to corporations, the
    Supreme Court has clearly stated that such a policy
    determination is for Congress and not the courts. Under
    Malesko and Jesner, ATS liability does not attach to
    corporate defendants, and we should have corrected the panel
    majority’s opposite conclusion en banc.
    II. Plaintiffs’ Claims          Are     Impermissibly
    Extraterritorial.
    In Kiobel II, the Court held “the presumption against
    extraterritoriality applies to claims under the ATS.” 
    569 U.S. at 124
    . To sustain an ATS action, therefore, the allegations
    underlying the plaintiff’s claim must “touch and concern the
    territory of the United States, [and] they must do so with
    sufficient force to displace the presumption against
    extraterritorial application.” 
    Id.
     at 124–25. When we seek to
    apply the ATS to aiding-and-abetting claims, the locus of the
    actual law-of-nations violation becomes even more
    significant. See Doe v. Drummond Co., 
    782 F.3d 576
    , 592–93
    (11th Cir. 2015) (Where, as here, “the [ATS] claim is for
    secondary responsibility, we must . . . consider the location of
    any underlying conduct, such as where the actual injuries
    were inflicted.”).
    DOE V. NESTLE                          23
    To determine whether a given “case involves a domestic
    application of the statute . . . [courts] look[] to the statute’s
    ‘focus.’” RJR Nabisco v. European Cmty., 
    136 S. Ct. 2090
    ,
    2101 (2016). “[I]f the conduct relevant to the focus occurred
    in a foreign country, then the case involves an impermissible
    extraterritorial application regardless of any other conduct
    that occurred in U.S. territory.” 
    Id.
     Put another way, if “all the
    relevant conduct occurred abroad, that is simply the end of
    the matter.” Mujica v. AirScan Inc., 
    771 F.3d 580
    , 594 (9th
    Cir. 2014) (quoting Balintulo v. Daimler AG, 
    727 F.3d 174
    ,
    190 (2d Cir. 2013)).
    Because all relevant conduct took place abroad, we
    should have corrected the panel majority’s decision to permit
    this case to proceed.
    A. Allegations of solely foreign misconduct cannot
    sustain an ATS claim.
    Plaintiffs allege that they were victims of child slavery in
    Côte d’Ivoire. They allege that the perpetrators (who are not
    named defendants) are slavers and cocoa farmers abroad.
    They do not allege that any of the named defendants engaged
    in slavery or are associated with any of the actual perpetrators
    beyond their status as buyers of cocoa. “[T]he ATS’s focus is
    . . . conduct that violates international law, which the ATS
    ‘seeks to “regulate”’ by giving federal courts jurisdiction over
    such claims.” Adhikari v. Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc.,
    
    845 F.3d 184
    , 197 (5th Cir.), cert. denied 
    138 S. Ct. 134
    (2017) (quoting Morrison v. Nat’l Australia Bank, Ltd.,
    
    561 U.S. 247
    , 267 (2010)); see also Kiobel II, 
    569 U.S. at 127
    (Alito, J., concurring) (“[A] putative ATS cause of action will
    fall within the scope of the presumption against
    extraterritoriality—and will therefore be barred—unless the
    24                         DOE V. NESTLE
    domestic conduct is sufficient to violate an international law
    norm that satisfies Sosa’s requirements of definiteness and
    acceptance among civilized nations.”). Here, that
    conduct—Plaintiffs’ enslavement on cocoa plantations—took
    place abroad, and thus their ATS claims must be dismissed.
    The majority opinion identifies three examples of conduct
    that, in its view, are sufficiently forceful to displace the
    presumption against extraterritoriality: allegations that
    1) “[D]efendants funded child slavery practices in the Ivory
    Coast” in the form of “personal spending money to maintain
    the farmers’ and/or the cooperatives’ loyalty as an exclusive
    supplier,” which the panel majority characterizes as
    “kickbacks”; 2) Defendants’ employees “inspect operations
    in the Ivory Coast”; and 3) Defendants made “financing
    decisions” in the United States. Nestle II, 906 F.3d at 1126.
    The first two sets of allegations (provision of spending money
    and inspections) relate solely to foreign conduct. The third,
    which involves domestic corporate decision-making, cannot
    sustain an ATS claim, even if we assume aiding and abetting
    liability under the ATS.
    Even if payments to cocoa farmers could be properly
    characterized as “kickbacks” (though they were never
    described in the complaint as such), the payments, like the
    slavery, all took place in Africa. The complaint does not even
    allege that the funds originated in the U.S., only that they
    were paid to “local farmers.”4 Alleged “inspections” of cocoa
    4
    As to Defendant Nestle, the complaint does not even allege that any
    Nestle entity made any payments to any farmer that used child slaves, only
    that Nestle “was directly involved in the purchasing and processing of
    cocoa beans from Côte d’Ivoire.” With respect to Defendant Cargill, the
    complaint alleges that “19 Malian child slaves were rescued” from one of
    DOE V. NESTLE                                25
    farms likewise took place in Africa. The panel majority fails
    to identify any domestic conduct alleged in the complaint that
    is “connect[ed] [to] the alleged international law violations.”
    Adhikari, 845 F.3d at 198. Consistent with Kiobel II, alleged
    misconduct that took place entirely abroad cannot sustain an
    ATS claim.
    B. Domestic corporate presence cannot support
    an otherwise extraterritorial ATS claim.
    The complaint does allege some domestic activity.
    Indeed, “it is a rare case . . . that lacks all contact with the
    territory of the United States.” Morrison, 
    561 U.S. at 266
    .
    “But the presumption against extraterritorial application
    would be a craven watchdog indeed if it retreated to its
    kennel whenever some domestic activity is involved in the
    case.” 
    Id.
     To the extent that the complaint alleges relevant
    domestic conduct at all, it simply alleges corporate presence
    and decision-making. That cannot form the basis for an
    ATS/aiding-and-abetting claim.
    To begin, no court has held that the mere fact that a
    defendant is American is sufficient, on its own, to displace
    the presumption against extraterritoriality. At most, the
    domestic status of a corporation “may well be . . . one factor
    that, in conjunction with other factors,” could establish a
    the farms with which Cargill had an exclusive supplier relationship, but
    does not allege that Cargill had any relationship with the farm in question
    at a time it used slave labor, or that Cargill was specifically aware that the
    farm used slaves.
    26                          DOE V. NESTLE
    sufficient connection.5 Mujica, 771 F.3d at 594 (emphasis
    added). But, as we explained, “the [Supreme] Court has
    repeatedly applied the presumption against extraterritoriality
    to bar suits” where the defendant was a U.S. corporation. Id.
    (compiling cases).
    The panel majority concludes that Defendants making
    “financing decisions” in the United States is conduct
    sufficient to displace the presumption against
    extraterritoriality. But Mujica teaches us that vague
    allegations of domestic “decisions furthering the []
    conspiracy” will not imbue an otherwise entirely foreign
    claim with the territorial connection that the ATS absolutely
    requires. 771 F.3d at 591; see also Baloco v. Drummond Co.,
    
    767 F.3d 1229
    , 1236 (11th Cir. 2014) (presumption not
    displaced despite allegations of domestic decision-making).
    Our holding here also conflicts with two other circuits
    that have considered the question. In Doe v. Drummond, the
    Eleventh Circuit held that the making of “funding and policy
    decisions in the United States” does not displace the
    presumption where the unlawful conduct itself took place in
    Colombia. 782 F.3d at 598; see also Baloco, 767 F.3d at 1236
    (holding that domestic decision-making does not displace the
    presumption in the absence of allegations of “an express
    agreement between Defendants” and actual perpetrators of
    human rights abuses, which is not alleged here); Cardona v.
    5
    The Second Circuit, though, views the citizenship of the defendant
    as an “irrelevant factual distinction[]” for purposes of the rule against
    extraterritoriality. Balintulo, 727 F.3d at 190; see also Mastafa v. Chevron
    Corp., 
    770 F.3d 170
    , 189 (2d Cir. 2014) (“We disagree with the
    contention that a defendant’s U.S. citizenship has any relevance to the
    jurisdictional analysis.”).
    DOE V. NESTLE                              27
    Chiquita Brands Int’l, Inc., 
    760 F.3d 1185
    , 1191 (11th Cir.
    2014) (holding that ATS claim against domestic defendant
    must be dismissed because alleged acts of torture all took
    place abroad); see also 
    id. at 1192
     (Martin, J., dissenting)
    (faulting the majority for ordering dismissal notwithstanding
    allegations that domestic defendant “review[ed], approv[ed],
    and conceal[ed]” the scheme in the United States). And in
    Adhikari, the Fifth Circuit held that domestic payments from
    a U.S. corporation to a foreign subcontractor that was
    allegedly involved in “human trafficking” did not displace the
    presumption. 845 F.3d at 197.6 Had Plaintiffs filed in the
    Fifth or Eleventh Circuit, their allegations would have been
    dismissed for want of adequate allegations of domestic
    conduct.
    The only circuit court decisions that the panel majority
    identifies to support its view are both Second Circuit cases,
    Mastafa v. Chevron Corp., 
    770 F.3d 170
     (2d Cir. 2014), and
    Licci by Licci v. Lebanese Canadian Bank, SAL, 
    834 F.3d 201
    (2d Cir. 2016). Mastafa is clearly distinguishable. There,
    plaintiffs alleged “multiple domestic purchases and financing
    transactions” as well as “New York-based payments and
    ‘financing arrangements’ conducted exclusively through a
    New York bank account”—allegations of “specific and
    domestic” conduct altogether lacking here. 770 F.3d at 191.
    Indeed, Mastafa supports dismissal of the claims here, as the
    Second Circuit found the plaintiffs’ allegations that “much of
    the decisionmaking to participate in the . . . scheme” took
    6
    The fact that Adhikari involved a claim for primary, rather than
    secondary, liability is immaterial. Plaintiffs there sought to amend their
    complaint to add an aiding-and-abetting claim, and the Fifth Circuit held
    that such an amendment would be futile because the relevant facts alleged
    did not displace the presumption. 845 F.3d at 199.
    28                         DOE V. NESTLE
    place in the United States, “conclusory” and inadequate.
    770 F.3d at 190.
    Licci fares no better. The plaintiffs alleged that the
    defendant’s domestic conduct “violated various terrorist
    financing and money laundering laws.” 834 F.3d at 215.
    Plaintiffs here do not allege that Defendants made payments
    to Ivorian farmers to perpetuate law-of-nations violations, but
    rather to “maintain the farmers’ . . . loyalty as an exclusive
    supplier.” Nestle II, 906 F.3d at 1126. By permitting
    Plaintiffs’ claims to go forward based on the allegations made
    here, we essentially read out the presumption against
    extraterritoriality.
    Perhaps recognizing that the complaint alleges only
    normal business conduct in the United States, the panel
    majority asserts that Defendants paid “kickbacks” to the
    farmers in the form of “spending money” (though again,
    those payments were made in Africa, not the United States).
    Those “kickbacks,”7 in the panel majority’s view, are far
    more than normal corporate activity: Instead, Defendants are
    “maintain[ing] ongoing relations with the farms so that
    defendants could continue receiving cocoa at a price that
    would not be obtainable without employing child slave
    7
    I understand “kickbacks” differently than the majority. For example,
    The Anti-Kickback Enforcement Act of 1986 essentially defines a
    kickback in the contract procurement sphere as providing money or
    something else of value (to a contractor, subcontractor, or employee of
    either) for the purpose of improperly obtaining or rewarding favorable
    treatment. See 
    41 U.S.C. § 8701
    (2). Providing a farmer money (even extra
    money) to keep supplying a product is not what I would ever have thought
    of as a kickback (versus bribing the farmer’s plantation manager to steer
    business, for example).
    DOE V. NESTLE                              29
    labor.” Nestle II, 906 F.3d at 1126. This somehow pushes the
    needle over the line.
    But the complaint itself, which never uses the word
    “kickback,” is devoid of any allegation that the provision of
    “spending money” was improper or illegal, and on the facts
    actually alleged, Plaintiffs could not plausibly make such an
    assertion.8 The factual allegations in the complaint show only
    that Defendants sought to stabilize their supply lines and
    minimize costs by entering into exclusive-dealing
    arrangements. We have recognized that such agreements
    “provide ‘well-recognized economic benefits.’” Aerotec Int’l,
    Inc. v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc., 
    836 F.3d 1171
    , 1180 n.2 (9th
    Cir. 2016) (quoting Omega Envtl., Inc. v. Gilbarco, Inc.,
    
    127 F.3d 1157
    , 1162 (9th Cir. 1997)). Indeed, the complaint
    merely alleges that “spending money” is meant to “maintain
    the farmers’ and/or the cooperatives’ loyalty as exclusive
    suppliers.” Because the complaint lacks an allegation that
    Defendants provided anything to the farmers for an illegal
    purpose, the panel majority was flatly wrong to “infer”
    “kickbacks” from the facts alleged.
    The complaint here alleges clear, egregious, and terrible
    violations of Plaintiffs’ basic human rights. But the
    allegations are equally clear that all the relevant misconduct
    took place in Côte d’Ivoire, not the United States. The panel
    majority’s conclusion to the contrary is based on a
    reconstruction and/or rewriting of the allegations in the
    complaint in a way that essentially eliminates the
    presumption against extraterritoriality. But, no matter how the
    8
    Tellingly, Plaintiffs’ response to the rehearing petitions does not
    defend the panel majority’s use of the “kickback” label, except to repeat
    that “all reasonable inferences are made in Plaintiffs’ favor.”
    30                           DOE V. NESTLE
    complaint is viewed, it still alleges horrific conduct that took
    place outside the United States.9
    III.     Conclusion.
    The Supreme Court directs us to proceed cautiously when
    interpreting the ATS. Instead, we have adopted a broad and
    expansive view of the statute that largely disregards recent
    Supreme Court precedent. I thus respectfully dissent from our
    decision not to rehear this case en banc.
    9
    The panel majority also erred in allowing Plaintiffs the opportunity
    to file yet another complaint in this action, which has been pending for
    almost fifteen years—it will make their fourth overall. Rather than address
    the complaint’s obvious pleading deficiencies, the panel majority asserts
    that “Jesner changed the legal landscape on which plaintiffs constructed
    their case,” and as a result, Plaintiffs must be allowed to “amend their
    complaint to specify whether aiding and abetting conduct that took place
    in the United States is attributable to the domestic corporations in this
    case.” Nestle II, 906 F.3d at 1126–27.
    Plaintiffs already had the opportunity to replead to allege domestic
    aiding and abetting after Kiobel II. See Nestle I, 766 F.3d at 1028. Rather
    than doing so, Plaintiffs lumped together foreign and domestic entities in
    their complaint, see Nestle II, 906 F.3d at 1126, muddying, rather than
    clearing up, questions surrounding the locus of the tortious conduct
    alleged. Nothing in Jesner changes the requirement that domestic conduct
    sufficient to displace the presumption against extraterritoriality is required
    and Jesner is no reason to allow yet another amendment to Plaintiffs’
    complaint as the total unallocated domestic conduct alleged here is clearly
    insufficient.
    DOE V. NESTLE                      31
    OPINION
    D.W. NELSON, Circuit Judge:
    OVERVIEW
    Plaintiffs-Appellants (“Plaintiffs”), former child slaves
    who were forced to work on cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast,
    filed a class action lawsuit against Defendants-Appellees
    Nestle, SA, Nestle USA, Nestle Ivory Coast, Archer Daniels
    Midland Co. (“ADM”),1 Cargill Incorporated Company, and
    Cargill West Africa, SA (“Defendants”). In their Second
    Amended Complaint, plaintiffs alleged claims for aiding and
    abetting slave labor that took place in the United States under
    the Alien Tort Statute, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1350
     (“ATS”). The
    district court dismissed the claims below based on its
    conclusion that plaintiffs sought an impermissible
    extraterritorial application of the ATS. We reverse and
    remand. In light of an intervening change in controlling law,
    we think it unnecessary to consider the other issues this case
    presents at this juncture.
    BACKGROUND
    I. Factual Background
    We discussed much of the factual background of this case
    in Doe I v. Nestle USA, Inc., 
    766 F.3d 1013
     (9th Cir. 2014)
    (“Nestle I”). Child slavery on cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast,
    where seventy percent of the world’s cocoa is produced, is a
    pervasive humanitarian tragedy.
    1
    Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed ADM from this case.
    32                     DOE V. NESTLE
    Plaintiffs are former child slaves who were kidnapped and
    forced to work on cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast for up to
    fourteen hours a day without pay. While being forced to
    work on the cocoa farms, plaintiffs witnessed the beating and
    torture of other child slaves who attempted to escape.
    Defendants are large manufacturers, purchasers,
    processors, and retail sellers of cocoa beans. Several of them
    are foreign corporations that are not subject to suit under the
    ATS. Jesner v. Arab Bank, 
    138 S. Ct. 1386
    , 1407 (2018).
    The effect of Jesner in tandem with plaintiffs’ habit of
    describing defendants en masse presents a challenge we
    address below. For now, we describe the case as plaintiffs
    present it. We take their plausible allegations as true and
    draw all reasonable inferences in their favor. See Nestle I,
    766 F.3d at 1018.
    Because of their economic leverage over the cocoa
    market, defendants effectively control cocoa production in the
    Ivory Coast. Defendant Nestle, USA is headquartered in
    Virginia and coordinates the major operations of its parent
    corporation, Nestle, SA, selling Nestle-brand products in the
    United States. Every major operational decision regarding
    Nestle’s United States market is made in or approved in the
    United States. Defendant Cargill, Inc. is headquartered in
    Minneapolis. The business is centralized in Minneapolis and
    decisions about buying and selling commodities are made at
    its Minneapolis headquarters.
    Defendants operate with the unilateral goal of finding the
    cheapest source of cocoa in the Ivory Coast. Not content to
    rely on market forces to keep costs low, defendants have
    taken steps to perpetuate a system built on child slavery to
    depress labor costs. To maintain their supply of cocoa,
    DOE V. NESTLE                         33
    defendants have exclusive buyer/seller relationships with
    Ivory Coast farmers, and provide those farmers with financial
    support, such as advance payments and personal spending
    money. 19 Malian child slaves were rescued from a farm
    with whom Cargill has an exclusive buyer/seller relationship.
    Defendants also provide tools, equipment, and technical
    support to farmers, including training in farming techniques
    and farm maintenance. In connection with providing this
    training and support, defendants visit their supplier farms
    several times per year.
    Defendants were well aware that child slave labor is a
    pervasive problem in the Ivory Coast. Nonetheless,
    defendants continued to provide financial support and
    technical farming aid, even though they knew their acts
    would assist farmers who were using forced child labor, and
    knew their assistance would facilitate child slavery. Indeed,
    the gravamen of the complaint is that defendants depended
    on—and orchestrated—a slave-based supply chain.
    II. Procedural History
    Plaintiffs began this lawsuit over a decade ago, and we
    had occasion to consider it once before in Nestle I. On
    remand after Nestle I, defendants moved to dismiss the
    operative complaint and the district court granted the motion.
    In its order, the district concluded that the complaint seeks an
    impermissible extraterritorial application of the ATS because
    defendants engaged domestically only in ordinary business
    conduct. The district court did not decide whether plaintiffs
    stated a claim for aiding and abetting child slavery.
    Plaintiffs timely appealed.
    34                     DOE V. NESTLE
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction de novo.
    Corrie v. Caterpillar, Inc., 
    503 F.3d 974
    , 979 (9th Cir. 2007)
    (citing Arakaki v. Lingie, 
    477 F.3d 1048
    , 1056 (9th Cir.
    2007)). “A dismissal for failure to state a claim is reviewed
    de novo. All factual allegations in the complaint are accepted
    as true, and the pleadings construed in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party.” Nestle I, 766 F.3d at
    1018 (quoting Abagninin v. AMVAC Chem. Corp., 
    545 F.3d 733
    , 737 (9th Cir. 2008) (internal citations omitted)).
    DISCUSSION
    The legal landscape has shifted since we last considered
    this case, including during the pendency of this appeal. The
    Supreme Court’s decisions in Jesner and RJR Nabisco, Inc.
    v. European Community,
    136 S. Ct. 2090
     (2016), require us to
    revisit parts of Nestle I.
    I. Corporate Liability Post-Jesner
    In Nestle I, we held that corporations are liable for aiding
    and abetting slavery after applying three principles from our
    en banc decision in Sarei v. Rio Tinto, PLC, 
    671 F.3d 736
    ,
    746 (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc), vacated on other grounds by
    Rio Tinto PLC v. Sarei, 
    133 S. Ct. 1995
     (2013). Nestle I,
    766 F.3d at 1022. Our court in Sarei adopted a norm-specific
    analysis that determines “‘whether international law extends
    the scope of liability for a violation of a given norm to the
    perpetrator being sued.’” Sarei, 
    671 F.3d at 760
     (quoting
    Sosa, 
    542 U.S. at
    732 n.20). “First, the analysis proceeds
    norm-by-norm; there is no categorical rule of corporate
    immunity or liability.” Nestle I, 766 F.3d at 1022 (citing
    DOE V. NESTLE                        35
    Sarei, 
    671 F.3d at
    747–48). Under the second principle,
    “corporate liability under an ATS claim does not depend on
    the existence of international precedent enforcing legal norms
    against corporations.” 
    Id.
     (citing Sarei, 
    671 F.3d at
    760–61).
    “Third, norms that are ‘universal and absolute,’ or applicable
    to ‘all actors,’ can provide the basis for an ATS claim against
    a corporation.” 
    Id.
     (citing Sarei, 
    671 F.3d at
    764–65). We
    reaffirmed these principles in Nestle I and held that since the
    prohibition of slavery is “universal,” it is applicable to all
    actors, including corporations. Id. at 1022.
    As we have noted, the Supreme Court in Jesner held that
    foreign corporations cannot be sued under the ATS. Jesner,
    
    138 S. Ct. at 1407
    . Jesner thus abrogates Nestle I insofar as
    it applies to foreign corporations. But Jesner did not
    eliminate all corporate liability under the ATS, and we
    therefore continue to follow Nestle I’s holding as applied to
    domestic corporations. See Miller v. Gammie, 
    335 F.3d 889
    ,
    893 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
    II. Extraterritorial ATS Claim
    In Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. (Kiobel II), the
    Supreme Court held that the ATS does not have
    extraterritorial reach after applying a canon of statutory
    interpretation known as the presumption against
    extraterritorial application, which counsels that “[w]hen a
    statute gives no clear indication of an extraterritorial
    application, it has none.” 
    569 U.S. 108
    , 115 (2013) (citing
    Morrison v. National Australia Bank Ltd., 
    561 U.S. 247
    , 248
    (2010)). The Court acknowledged that the canon is not
    directly on point given that the ATS “does not directly
    regulate conduct or afford relief.” 
    Id.
     But given the foreign
    policy concerns the ATS poses, the Court stated that “the
    36                     DOE V. NESTLE
    principles underlying the canon of interpretation similarly
    constrain courts considering causes of action that may be
    brought under the ATS.” 
    Id.
    The Court in Kiobel II left the door open to the
    extraterritorial application of the ATS for claims made under
    the statute which “touch and concern the territory of the
    United States . . . with sufficient force to displace the
    presumption.” 
    Id.
     at 123 (citing Morrison, 
    561 U.S. at
    264–73). Because “all the relevant conduct” in Kiobel II took
    place abroad, the Court did not need to delve into the
    contours of the touch and concern test. 
    Id.
     The only
    guidance the Court provided about the “touch and concern”
    test was that “mere corporate presence” would not suffice to
    meet it. 
    Id.
    In announcing the “touch and concern” test, the Supreme
    Court cited to its decision in Morrison v. National Australia
    Bank Lt. In Morrison, the Supreme Court undertook a two-
    step analysis, known as the “focus” test, to determine whether
    Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 applies
    extraterritorially. Morrison, 
    561 U.S. at 262
    . Under the first
    analytical step, the Court asked if there is any indication that
    the statute is meant to apply extraterritorially, and concluded
    there is not. 
    Id. at 265
    . Under the second step, the Court
    asked what the “‘focus’ of congressional concern” was in
    passing Section 10(b). 
    Id.
     The Court found that the “focus
    is not on the place where the deception originated, but on
    purchases and sales of securities in the United States. Section
    10(b) [therefore] applies only to transactions in securities
    listed on domestic exchanges and domestic transactions in
    other securities.” 
    Id. at 249
    .
    DOE V. NESTLE                         37
    In the first appeal of this case, we reasoned that
    “Morrison may be informative precedent for discerning the
    content of the touch and concern standard, but the opinion in
    Kiobel II did not incorporate Morrison’s focus test. Kiobel II
    did not explicitly adopt Morrison’s focus test, and chose to
    use the phrase ‘touch and concern’ rather than the term
    ‘focus’ when articulating the legal standard it did adopt.”
    Nestle I, 766 F.3d at 1028.
    Defendants argue that the Supreme Court’s recent
    decision in RJR Nabisco requires us to apply the focus test to
    claims under the ATS. In RJR Nabisco, the Court applied the
    Morrison focus test to the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
    Organizations Act (“RICO”) and reiterated that Morrison
    reflects a two-step inquiry regarding extraterritoriality. Id. at
    2103. The Court further stated that “Morrison and Kiobel
    [also] reflect a two-step framework for analyzing
    extraterritoriality issues.” Id. at 2101.
    Because RJR Nabisco has indicated that the two-step
    framework is required in the context of ATS claims, we apply
    it here. See Miller v. Gammie, 
    335 F.3d at 893
    . First, we
    determine “whether the [ATS] gives a clear, affirmative
    indication that it applies extraterritorially.” RJR Nabisco,
    136 S. Ct. at 2101. The Court in Kiobel II already answered
    that the “presumption against extraterritoriality applies to
    claims under the ATS, and that nothing in the statute rebuts
    that presumption.” Kiobel II, 
    569 U.S. at 185
    .
    Because the ATS is not extraterritorial, then at the second
    step, we must ask whether this case involves “a domestic
    application of the statute, by looking to the statute’s ‘focus.’”
    RJR Nabisco, 136 S. Ct. at 2101. Defendants insist that any
    acts of assistance that took place in the United States are
    38                     DOE V. NESTLE
    irrelevant because the extraterritoriality analysis should focus
    on the location where the principal offense took place or the
    location the injury occurred, rather than the location where
    the alleged aiding and abetting took place. We disagree.
    The focus of the ATS is not limited to principal offenses.
    In Mastafa v. Chevron Corp., the Second Circuit held that
    “the ‘focus’ of the ATS is on . . . conduct of the defendant
    which is alleged by plaintiff to be either a direct violation of
    the law of nations or . . . conduct that constitutes aiding and
    abetting another’s violation of the law of nations.” 770 F.3d
    at 185 (emphasis added); see also Adhikari v. Kellogg Brown
    & Root, Inc., 
    845 F.3d 184
    , 199 (5th Cir. 2017) (stating that
    aiding and abetting conduct comes within the focus of the
    ATS). We also hold that aiding and abetting comes within
    the ATS’s focus on “tort[s] . . . committed in violation of the
    law of nations.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1350
    .
    As part of the step two analysis, we then determine
    “whether there is any domestic conduct relevant to plaintiffs’
    claims under the ATS.” Adhikari, 845 F.3d at 195. Under
    RJR Nabisco, “if the conduct relevant to the statute’s focus
    occurred in the United States, then the case involves a
    permissible domestic application even if other conduct
    occurred abroad.” RJR Nabisco, 136 S. Ct. at 2101
    (emphasis added).
    In Mastafa, the Second Circuit held that the following
    constituted “specific, domestic conduct”: “Chevron’s [Iraqi]
    oil purchases, financing of [Iraqi] oil purchases, and delivery
    of oil to another U.S. company, all within the United States,
    as well as the use of a New York escrow account and New
    York-based ‘financing arrangements’ to systematically enable
    illicit payments to the Saddam Hussein regime that allegedly
    DOE V. NESTLE                         39
    facilitated that regime’s violations of the law of nations.”
    Mastafa, 770 F.3d at 195.
    In Licci by Licci v. Lebanese Canadian Bank, SAL, the
    Second Circuit again held that the Lebanese Canadian
    Bank’s (“LCB”) “provision of wire transfers between
    Hezbollah accounts” through a United States bank constituted
    domestic conduct which rebutted the presumption against
    extraterritoriality. 
    834 F.3d 201
    , 214–15, 219 (2d Cir. 2016).
    There, LCB made “numerous New York-based payments and
    ‘financing arrangements’ conducted exclusively through a
    New York bank account.” 
    Id.
     at 217 (citing Mastafa,
    700 F.3d at 191).
    Like in Mastafa and Licci, plaintiffs have alleged that
    defendants funded child slavery practices in the Ivory Coast.
    Specifically, plaintiffs allege that defendants provided
    “personal spending money to maintain the farmers’ and/or the
    cooperatives’ loyalty as an exclusive supplier.” Because we
    are required to “draw all reasonable inferences in favor” of
    plaintiffs, Mujica v. Airscan, Inc., 
    771 F.3d 580
    , 589 (9th Cir.
    2014), we infer that the personal spending money was
    outside the ordinary business contract and given with the
    purpose to maintain ongoing relations with the farms so that
    defendants could continue receiving cocoa at a price that
    would not be obtainable without employing child slave labor.
    Contrary to the district court’s reasoning, providing personal
    spending money to maintain relationship above the contract
    price for cocoa is not ordinary business conduct, and is more
    akin to “kickbacks.” Mastafa, 770 F.3d at 175. Defendants
    also had employees from their United States headquarters
    regularly inspect operations in the Ivory Coast and report
    back to the United States offices, where these financing
    decisions, or “financing arrangements,” originated. Licci by
    40                     DOE V. NESTLE
    Licci, 834 F.3d at 217 (citing Mastafa, 770 F.3d at 191). In
    sum, the allegations paint a picture of overseas slave labor
    that defendants perpetuated from headquarters in the United
    States. “This particular combination of conduct in the United
    States . . . is both specific and domestic.” Id. at 191. We thus
    hold that foregoing narrow set of domestic conduct is relevant
    to the ATS’s focus.
    III.    Aiding And Abetting Claim
    Defendants invite us to rule in the alternative that
    plaintiffs have not sufficiently alleged the elements of aiding
    and abetting. We think it unnecessary to reach that issue at
    this time. As we have explained, Jesner changed the legal
    landscape on which plaintiffs constructed their case. The
    operative complaint names several foreign corporations as
    defendants, and plaintiffs concede those defendants must be
    dismissed on remand. The operative complaint also discusses
    defendants as if they are a single bloc—a problematic
    approach that plaintiffs would do well to avoid. In light of
    Jesner, it is not possible on the current record to connect
    culpable conduct to defendants that may be sued under the
    ATS.
    As we observed in Nestle I, “[i]t is common practice to
    allow plaintiffs to amend their pleadings to accommodate
    changes in the law, unless it is clear that amendment would
    be futile.” See Nestle I, 766 F.3d at 1028 (citations omitted).
    We are mindful that this case has lingered for over a decade,
    and that delay does not serve the interests of any party. But
    we cannot conclude that amendment would be futile, so we
    remand with instructions that plaintiffs be given an
    opportunity to amend their complaint. On remand, plaintiffs
    must remove those defendants who are no longer amenable
    DOE V. NESTLE                           41
    to suit under the ATS, and specify which potentially liable
    party is responsible for what culpable conduct.
    IV.     Plaintiffs Have Standing to Bring Their Claims
    Defendants argue that plaintiffs lack Article III standing
    to bring their claims. To have standing, plaintiffs must allege
    “[(1)] a concrete and particularized injury [(2)] that is fairly
    traceable to the challenged conduct, [(3)] and is likely to be
    redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” Consumer Fin.
    Prot. Bureau v. Gordon, 
    819 F.3d 1179
    , 1187 (9th Cir. 2016),
    cert. denied, (quoting Hollingsworth v. Perry, 
    570 U.S. 693
    ,
    704 (2013)).
    Plaintiffs easily satisfy the first and third requirements.
    Defendants do not dispute that plaintiffs suffered concrete
    injury by being abused and held as child slaves. In addition,
    plaintiffs’ injuries are redressable because when “one private
    party is injured by another, the injury can be redressed in at
    least two ways: by awarding compensatory damages or by
    imposing a sanction on the wrongdoer that will minimize the
    risk that the harm-causing conduct will be repeated.” Steel
    Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 127 (1998).
    Plaintiffs also satisfy the traceability requirement as to
    Cargill because they raise sufficiently specific allegations
    regarding Cargill’s involvement in farms that rely on child
    slavery. Baloco ex rel. Tapia v. Drummond Co., 
    640 F.3d 1338
    , 1343 (11th Cir. 2011); Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
    ,
    169 (1997) (Article III traceability requirement “does not
    exclude injury produced by determinative or coercive effect
    upon the action of someone else.”). Plaintiffs’ allegations
    against Nestle are far less clear, though part of the difficulty
    is plaintiffs’ reliance on collective allegations against all or at
    42                       DOE V. NESTLE
    least multiple defendants. Notwithstanding this deficiency,
    the allegations are sufficient to at least allow plaintiffs a final
    opportunity to replead. On remand, plaintiffs must eliminate
    the allegations against foreign defendants and specifically
    identify the culpable conduct attributable to individual
    domestic defendants.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we REVERSE the
    district court and REMAND to allow plaintiffs to amend
    their complaint to specify whether aiding and abetting
    conduct that took place in the United States is attributable to
    the domestic corporations in this case.
    SHEA, District Judge:
    I concur in the result.