Financial Oversight Board v. Centro de Periodismo
Case Overview
Puerto Rico's Financial Oversight and Management Board, created by Congress under PROMESA to manage the island's fiscal crisis, resisted a records request from an investigative journalism nonprofit by asserting sovereign immunity. The Supreme Court ruled that PROMESA's judicial review provisions did not clearly abrogate the Board's sovereign immunity, shielding the restructuring process from public-records accountability.
The Facts
Centro de Periodismo Investigativo, a nonprofit news organization, sought access to Board records concerning Puerto Rico's debt restructuring negotiations. The Board refused, claiming sovereign immunity as a federal instrumentality. The First Circuit held the Board was not immune and allowed the suit to proceed. The Board petitioned for Supreme Court review.
The Application
The Court examined PROMESA's judicial review provisions and found that they contained no clear and unambiguous language explicitly waiving the Board's sovereign immunity from suit. Applying the strict-construction requirement for sovereign immunity waivers, the Court determined that general statutory language authorizing judicial review was insufficient, leaving Centro de Periodismo unable to compel disclosure of Board records through federal court despite the Board's substantial public authority over Puerto Rico's debt restructuring. Because PROMESA lacked the explicit waiver required by sovereign immunity doctrine, the Board's federal-instrumentality status insulated it from the journalism nonprofit's transparency demand.
The Conclusion
**The Supreme Court reversed the First Circuit, holding that PROMESA did not clearly waive the Board's sovereign immunity.** The journalism nonprofit's suit was barred, insulating the Board from compelled disclosure of its records through the federal courts.
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