Scienter is a legal term derived from the Latin word meaning "knowingly," referring to a culpable mental state that encompasses a defendant's knowledge of the wrongfulness of their conduct, intent to deceive, or reckless disregard for the truth.[1][2] In legal proceedings, scienter serves as an essential element to establish liability in various claims, particularly those involving fraud, where mere negligence is insufficient to impose responsibility.[3]Historically rooted in English common law, scienter emerged as a core requirement in actions for deceit, demanding proof that the defendant knew their representation was false or acted with reckless indifference to its veracity.[4] This principle differentiated intentional misconduct from innocent errors, ensuring that civil liability for misrepresentation aligned with moral culpability in tort law.[5] Over time, the doctrine extended beyond torts to statutory contexts, adapting to modern regulatory frameworks while retaining its focus on intentional or highly culpable behavior.In securities law, scienter plays a pivotal role under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and SEC Rule 10b-5, where it requires evidence of intent to defraud rather than mere carelessness.[6] The U.S. Supreme Court clarified this in Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder (1976), ruling that private civil actions cannot succeed without alleging and proving scienter, defined as "a mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud."[6] This standard raises the bar for plaintiffs in fraud litigation, often making scienter the most challenging element to demonstrate through circumstantial evidence like motive, opportunity, or inconsistent statements.[7]Beyond securities, scienter appears in diverse areas, including the False Claims Act, where it denotes actual knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or reckless disregard of a claim's falsity.[8] In tort actions for fraud or misrepresentation, it remains indispensable, as courts demand proof of the defendant's awareness of falsity to award damages.[9] Certain statutes, such as some environmental laws, may dispense with scienter for strict liability offenses, but its presence generally signals a heightened threshold for culpability across civil and criminal domains.[1]
Etymology and Definition
Historical Origin
The term scienter derives from Latin, where it functions as an adverb meaning "knowingly," rooted in the verb scire, "to know."[10] In medieval legal contexts, it came to signify awareness of facts that render an act culpable, particularly in pleadings alleging intentional misconduct.[11]The word first appeared in English common law during the 14th century, notably in the Year Books, collections of reported cases from royal courts that served as early precedents.[12] There, scienter was invoked in writs of trespass and actions for deceit to plead the defendant's prior knowledge of harmful circumstances, distinguishing willful violations from accidental ones in disputes over property or contracts.[13]Early common law usage of scienter was shaped by Roman law principles, especially dolus, which denoted intentional deceit or wrongdoing as a basis for civil liability in delicts.[14] This continental influence, transmitted through canon law and scholarly texts, informed the requirement of proven knowledge in English actions for fraud and misrepresentation, adapting dolus malus (evil deceit) into a mental element for tortious responsibility.[15]In the early 16th century, during the reign of Henry VII, scienter featured prominently in precedents involving property damage by animals, as recorded in the Year Books. For instance, in cases like Year Book 21 Hen. VII, courts held owners liable for harm caused by livestock such as horses or bulls only if they had prior knowledge of the animal's vicious propensities, thereby differentiating culpable negligence from innocent mishaps in trespass claims. These rulings established scienter as a foundational element in strict liability for known dangerous beasts, influencing subsequent doctrinal developments.[16]
Modern Legal Meaning
In contemporary legal doctrine, scienter refers to a culpable mental state involving a defendant's knowledge that their conduct is wrongful or their reckless disregard for the truth of a representation.[2] This mental element encompasses intentional deception, actual awareness of falsity, deliberate ignorance of material facts, or extreme recklessness that approximates intent.[3] Courts interpret scienter as requiring more than mere error or oversight, focusing instead on the actor's subjective appreciation of the impropriety involved.[1]Unlike negligence, which arises from a failure to exercise reasonable care without any intent to harm, scienter demands proof of actual knowledge or a conscious choice to ignore obvious risks, thereby imposing a higher threshold for liability.[17] Negligence suffices for many ordinary torts, but scienter elevates the standard to ensure that only morally blameworthy conduct triggers heightened consequences, such as punitive damages or regulatory sanctions.[18] This distinction underscores scienter's role in filtering out inadvertent mistakes from deliberate or willfully blind actions.[19]Scienter serves as a critical element of liability in civil fraud claims and regulatory enforcement, where it establishes the defendant's moral culpability beyond simple breach or error.[20] By requiring evidence of this mental state, the law aims to deter intentional misconduct and reserve severe remedies for cases involving bad faith, thereby balancing accountability with fairness in non-criminal proceedings.[21] In practice, proving scienter often involves circumstantial evidence, such as internal documents revealing awareness of falsity, to demonstrate the requisite intent or recklessness.[22]Statutes frequently incorporate scienter through terms like "knowingly," which courts construe to include actual knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or reckless disregard of truth. For instance, the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. § 3729) imposes liability on anyone who "knowingly" presents a false claim to the government, defining the term to capture these forms of culpable awareness without extending to honest mistakes or reasonable compliance efforts.[23] Similarly, provisions in the U.S. Code addressing false statements (18 U.S.C. § 1001) use "knowingly and willfully" to denote scienter, requiring proof that the actor understood the wrongfulness of their submission. These phrasings ensure that liability attaches only to conduct reflecting a deliberate embrace of illegality.[24]
General Legal Principles
Relation to Mens Rea
Mens rea, Latin for "guilty mind," constitutes the mental element required for criminal liability, distinguishing culpable conduct from accidental or involuntary acts. It is broadly categorized into general intent, which involves the voluntary performance of a prohibited act without regard to further consequences, and specific intent, which demands not only the intent to act but also awareness of the circumstances or knowledge of the results that render the conduct unlawful. Scienter aligns closely with specific intent, as it emphasizes the defendant's conscious awareness of the facts that establish wrongdoing, rather than mere volition.[25][26]In doctrinal terms, scienter functions as the "knowing" form of mens rea, particularly as articulated in the Model Penal Code § 2.02(2)(b), which defines acting knowingly as being aware of the nature of one's conduct or the attendant circumstances when those elements involve factual awareness, or aware that one's conduct is practically certain to cause a prohibited result. This standard requires the defendant to possess actual knowledge of the elements that make the action culpable, thereby ensuring liability attaches only to deliberate violations rather than inadvertence.[27][28]Scienter occupies a position among the hierarchical levels of mens rea outlined in the Model Penal Code, which include purpose (the conscious objective to cause a result), knowledge (awareness of practical certainty), recklessness (conscious disregard of a substantial and unjustifiable risk), and negligence (failure to perceive such a risk that a reasonable person would notice). While purpose represents the highest culpability, scienter primarily embodies knowledge but frequently extends to recklessness in legal applications, distinguishing it from negligence by requiring subjective awareness rather than objective fault alone.[29][30]The application of scienter varies by procedural context, with criminal proceedings demanding proof beyond a reasonable doubt to establish this mental state, thereby protecting against erroneous convictions for unknowing acts. In civil litigation, such as fraud claims, the threshold lowers to a preponderance of the evidence, yet scienter still necessitates demonstrating knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or recklessness—elevating it above simple negligence to impose liability for intentional or severely culpable misconduct.[30][31]
Degrees of Scienter
Scienter encompasses varying levels of culpability regarding a defendant's awareness of the falsity or wrongfulness of their conduct, distinguishing it from broader mens rea categories by emphasizing intentional or near-intentional states of mind.[4] These degrees range from direct personal knowledge to imputed awareness through severe disregard, allowing courts to attribute liability without requiring explicit admission of guilt.[8]Actual scienter refers to a defendant's direct and personal knowledge of the falsity or wrongfulness of their actions, often manifesting as deliberate deception or intent to defraud.[32] This highest degree requires proof that the individual subjectively understood the deceptive nature of their conduct at the time it occurred, aligning with common law traditions where scienter denotes a "mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud."[4] For instance, a party who knowingly submits fabricated information to induce reliance demonstrates actual scienter through their conscious choice to mislead.[21]Constructive scienter, in contrast, imputes knowledge to a defendant based on their recklessness or deliberate ignorance, rather than direct awareness, effectively treating severe negligence as equivalent to intent in high-stakes contexts.[8] This occurs when a person acts with "reckless disregard" for the truth, such as in "head in the sand" scenarios where they consciously avoid verifying facts that would reveal wrongdoing.[21] Under statutes like the False Claims Act, constructive scienter includes deliberate ignorance of falsity, where the defendant purposefully refrains from obtaining confirming information despite suspicions.[33]The willful blindness doctrine further bridges actual and constructive scienter by equating deliberate avoidance of confirmation with knowledge itself.[34] It applies when a defendant subjectively suspects a high probability of wrongdoing but takes affirmative steps to remain ignorant, such as ignoring red flags or refusing to investigate. Courts recognize this as a culpable substitute for actual knowledge, as "persons who know enough to blind themselves to direct proof of critical facts in effect have actual knowledge," thereby expanding liability without diluting the intent requirement.Post-2024 judicial trends have refined these standards, particularly in regulatory enforcement under the False Claims Act, by emphasizing subjective recklessness over objective interpretations and recognizing heightened culpability in cases of ambiguous legal obligations.[35] Following the Supreme Court's 2023 rulings in United States ex rel. Schutte v. SuperValu Inc. and United States ex rel. Proctor v. Safeway Inc., lower courts in 2024 and 2025 have increasingly dismissed claims lacking evidence of subjective awareness of substantial risk, while clarifying that recklessness demands proof of the defendant's actual belief in falsity despite any regulatory ambiguity.[36] For example, decisions like United States ex rel. Brooks v. Stevens-Henager College, Inc. (2024) underscore that juries must focus on the defendant's internal understanding, potentially elevating the threshold for imputing recklessness in complex compliance scenarios.[36] In 2025, further developments included a May memorandum from the Department of Justice clarifying that scienter requires intent or reckless disregard, not mere negligence; a March jury verdict in the SuperValu retrial finding scienter based on subjective beliefs; and the Ninth Circuit's June decision in Island Industries, Inc. v. Sigma Corp. upholding scienter standards requiring evidence of specific intent or knowledge of falsity.[37] This evolution prioritizes documented subjective intent, reducing reliance on post-hoc objective analyses following the 2024 Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo overturning of Chevron deference.[35]
Scienter in Tort Law
Scienter Actions
A scienter action in tort law is a form of strict liability imposed on the keeper or owner of an animal for harm caused by the animal, provided the defendant had knowledge of its vicious or mischievous propensity likely to cause the type of injury sustained.[38] This doctrine distinguishes between wild animals (ferae naturae), for which liability attaches without proof of specific knowledge due to their inherently dangerousnature, and domestic animals (mansuetae naturae), where the plaintiff must demonstrate the animal's abnormal propensity and the defendant's awareness of it.[38] Unlike negligence-based claims, the scienter action does not require proof of careless conduct but focuses on the defendant's prior notice of the risk.[39]The scienter action traces its origins to early common law, with roots in the 17th century or earlier under the writ of scienter retinuit, which addressed the knowing retention of dangerous animals.[40] By the 19th century, it had evolved alongside broader strict liability principles, such as those articulated in Rylands v. Fletcher (1868), which extended non-negligent liability to escapes of hazardous substances from land, influencing the doctrinal emphasis on foreseeable risks from controlled dangers without fault.[38] English courts refined the action to require that the harm arise from the specific propensity known to the keeper, as seen in cases like May v. Burdett (1846), solidifying its role in compensating victims of animal-inflicted injuries.[40]To establish liability in a scienter action, three core elements must be proven: (1) the defendant's ownership, possession, or control of the animal; (2) the animal's vicious propensity, demonstrated by prior incidents of similar behavior, of which the defendant had actual or constructive knowledge; and (3) the plaintiff's injury directly resulting from that propensity.[38] For domestic animals, the propensity must be abnormal to the species, such as a dog with a history of unprovoked bites, whereas wild animals trigger liability presumptively.[39] This framework, as codified in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 509, holds a possessor liable if they have reason to know of the domestic animal's dangerous traits likely to cause harm.[41]In modern U.S. law, scienter actions persist primarily as remnants of common law, often manifesting as the "one-bite rule" for domestic animals like dogs, where owners are strictly liable after knowledge of a prior incident.[39] However, they have been largely superseded by negligence doctrines and statutory strict liability schemes, particularly for dog bites in many states, rendering pure scienter claims rare except in cases involving livestock or exotic animals with proven dangerous histories.[40] For instance, some jurisdictions retain scienter for livestock injuries, such as bites from known-aggressive bulls, but courts increasingly favor negligence to address evolving animal control standards.
Application to Specific Torts
In the tort of deceit, also known as fraudulent misrepresentation, scienter is a core element requiring the defendant to have made a false representation of material fact with knowledge of its falsity or reckless disregard for its truth, intending to induce the plaintiff's reliance that results in harm.[42] This standard is codified in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 526, which defines a fraudulent misrepresentation as one where the maker (a) knows or believes the matter is not as represented, (b) lacks the confidence in its accuracy that is stated or implied, or knows they lack the normal basis for such confidence, or (c) knows they lack the basis for the professed knowledge or belief.[42] Courts apply this to business transactions and other dealings where the defendant's awareness elevates the misrepresentation from mere negligence to intentional wrongdoing, allowing recovery for pecuniary losses and potentially emotional distress.[43]Scienter plays a role in trespass to land and chattels when the interference is willful, meaning the defendant acts with knowledge of the plaintiff's possessory rights or reckless indifference to them, distinguishing it from inadvertent intrusions that may only warrant nominal damages.[44] Under the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 158 for land and § 217 for chattels, basic liability arises from any intentional entry, use, or intermeddling—defined as purposeful conduct or substantial certainty of the act—without requiring awareness of the wrongfulness; however, for enhanced remedies like punitive damages, courts demand proof of scienter through willful violation of known rights.[45][46] For instance, a defendant who knowingly diverts water onto another's property despite awareness of the boundary demonstrates the requisite scienter for full compensatory and punitive relief.[47]In defamation actions involving public figures, scienter manifests through the "actual malice" standard, where the defendant publishes a false statement with knowledge of its falsity or reckless disregard for the truth, serving as a constitutional safeguard under the First Amendment.[48] This doctrine originated in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), holding that public officials must prove actual malice—defined as subjective awareness of probable falsity—to recover damages and avoid chilling free speech.[49] The standard extends to public figures and matters of public concern, requiring clear and convincing evidence of the defendant's culpable state of mind, which aligns with traditional scienter by emphasizing intentional or reckless fault over mere negligence.[50]Unlike negligence-based torts, which focus on failure to exercise reasonable care and typically limit recovery to compensatory damages, the presence of scienter in these intentional torts signals egregious conduct that justifies punitive damages to deter and punish the wrongdoer.[51] This elevation occurs because scienter evidences malice or reckless indifference to others' rights, as outlined in Restatement (Second) of Torts § 908, allowing juries to award additional sums beyond actual harm when the defendant's knowledge amplifies the moral culpability.[52]
Scienter in Contract Law
Fraud and Misrepresentation
Fraudulent misrepresentation in contract law constitutes a basis for avoiding or rescinding a contract when one party induces another to enter into it through deceit. The essential elements include a false representation of a material fact, the maker's knowledge of its falsity (scienter), an intention that the recipient rely on the representation, justifiable reliance by the recipient, and resulting damages to the recipient.[53] The Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 162 defines a misrepresentation as fraudulent if the maker (a) knows or believes that the assertion is not in accord with the facts, (b) does not have the confidence in the accuracy of the assertion that they state or imply, or (c) knows that they do not have the basis for evaluation of the fact that they state or imply.[54] Materiality under this provision exists if the misrepresentation would likely induce a reasonable person to assent to the contract or if the maker knows it would induce the specific recipient to do so.[54]Scienter serves as the critical element that elevates a misrepresentation from an innocent mistake or negligence to actionable fraud, requiring evidence of the maker's actual knowledge of falsity or reckless indifference to its truth, thereby establishing an intent to deceive.[55] Without scienter, a party may only seek remedies for non-fraudulent breach, but its presence allows the defrauded party to treat the contract as voidable from the outset.[56] Courts often infer scienter from circumstantial evidence, such as the maker's prior access to contradictory information, failure to investigate known risks, or patterns of similar misrepresentations indicating deliberate deception.[57]Upon establishing fraudulent misrepresentation, the aggrieved party may elect remedies including rescission, which restores the parties to their pre-contract positions by canceling the agreement and returning any benefits exchanged, or damages to compensate for losses proximately caused by the reliance.[58]Damages for fraud extend beyond expectation interest to include all foreseeable harms from the deceit, such as consequential losses, and may be pursued alongside rescission in appropriate cases.[59]A seminal common law case illustrating scienter's role is Derry v. Peek (1889), where the House of Lords held that directors of a tramway company were not liable for a false prospectus statement promising steam power usage, as they honestly believed it despite lacking reasonable grounds; the court ruled that fraud demands proof of a false statement made knowingly, without belief in its truth, or recklessly without caring whether it is true or false, thereby confirming recklessness as sufficient for scienter.[60]
Implied Warranties
In the context of contract law, implied warranties arise automatically under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) without requiring proof of the seller's knowledge or intent, establishing a form of strict liability for breaches. Specifically, UCC § 2-314 imposes an implied warranty of merchantability on merchants selling goods, guaranteeing that the goods are fit for their ordinary purpose, while UCC § 2-315 creates an implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose when the seller knows of the buyer's specific needs and the buyer's reliance on the seller's judgment. Liability for breaching these warranties does not demand scienter, as the focus is solely on whether the goods failed to meet the warranted standards, allowing buyers to recover damages without demonstrating the seller's fault or awareness of defects.[61]However, the presence of scienter can transform a mere breach of implied warranty into a claim of fraud, enabling broader remedies such as rescission or punitive damages beyond standard contract relief. For instance, if a seller knowingly sells defective goods despite the implied warranties, courts may find fraudulent inducement, voiding contractual limitations on liability under UCC § 2-719(3), which deems such limitations unconscionable when they fail their essential purpose due to the seller's bad faith. This elevation occurs because fraud requires intentional misrepresentation or concealment of material facts, distinguishing it from the no-fault nature of warranty breaches.[62]Scienter also plays a key role in challenging warranty disclaimers, where a seller's knowledge of defects or risks can render the disclaimer unenforceable as fraudulent or unconscionable. Under UCC § 2-316, disclaimers of implied warranties must be conspicuous and specific, but if the seller disclaims coverage while aware of falsity—such as known product hazards—courts may void the provision to prevent public policy violations, as seen in cases where deliberate nondisclosure undermines the disclaimer's validity. This ensures that sellers cannot shield themselves from accountability through boilerplate language when they possess culpable knowledge.[62][63]In contrast to implied warranties, breaches of express warranties under UCC § 2-313 generally do not require scienter for contract-based claims, as they stem from affirmative representations about the goods' quality or performance. However, if a buyer pursues a parallel fraud or misrepresentation claim arising from the same express statements, scienter becomes essential, demanding proof that the seller made the warranty with knowledge of its falsity or reckless disregard for the truth, thereby invoking tort remedies unavailable in pure warranty actions.[64][65]Modern consumer protection statutes build on these principles by incorporating scienter to penalize willful warranty violations, enhancing remedies for deliberate misconduct. For example, California's Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (Civil Code § 1790 et seq.) allows prevailing buyers to recover civil penalties up to twice actual damages for willful breaches of express or implied warranties on consumer goods, where "willful" is interpreted as intentional violation or reckless indifference, reflecting the seller's culpable mental state. Similar provisions in other state laws, such as treble damages under deceptive trade practices acts for knowing warranty failures, underscore scienter's role in deterring bad-faith conduct in consumer transactions.[66]
Scienter in Securities Law
Requirement under Section 10(b)
The requirement for scienter under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 stems from the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, which held that a private cause of action for damages cannot be maintained under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 absent an allegation of scienter, defined as a mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud, thereby excluding mere negligence as a basis for liability.[6] This ruling established that violations of Rule 10b-5, which prohibits material misstatements or omissions in connection with the purchase or sale of securities, necessitate proof of deliberate or highly culpable conduct to sustain private securities fraud claims.[6]In the context of securities law, scienter encompasses not only intentional deception but also recklessness—a severe disregard for the truth amounting to an extreme departure from standards of ordinary care—regarding material misstatements or omissions that render disclosures misleading.[4] This standard applies to fraudulent practices under Rule 10b-5, ensuring that liability targets conduct involving knowing falsehoods or a conscious avoidance of the truth, rather than innocent errors or simple oversights.[67]For corporate defendants, scienter may be imputed based on the knowledge and intent of key officers or agents acting within the scope of their authority, with some federal circuits permitting a "collective knowledge" doctrine where the corporation's scienter arises from the combined awareness of multiple employees, provided it supports a strong inference of corporate intent to defraud.[68] This imputation aligns with agency principles, allowing plaintiffs to attribute fraudulent intent to the entity when individual actors' culpable states aggregate to demonstrate organizational deceit in public disclosures.[69]Recent trends from 2024 to 2025 reflect heightened judicial scrutiny of scienter in securities fraud claims involving artificial intelligence (AI) disclosures, with courts increasingly rejecting boilerplate or speculative inferences in favor of concrete, particularized evidence of intent or recklessness.[70] For instance, in cases alleging "AI washing"—overstated claims about AI capabilities—federal courts have dismissed complaints for failing to link specific internal knowledge to misleading statements, as seen in Lamontagne v. Tesla Inc. (N.D. Cal. 2024), where vague confidential witness allegations were deemed insufficient to infer scienter regarding autonomous driving technology representations.[70] Similarly, in In re Vicor Securities Litigation (N.D. Cal. 2025), the court rejected scienter claims tied to forward-looking AI partnership assurances absent contemporaneous evidence of falsity, underscoring a judicial emphasis on factual specificity amid the surge in AI-related filings.[70]
Pleading and Proving Scienter
The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA) established stringent pleading standards for private securities fraud actions under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, requiring plaintiffs to specify each allegedly misleading statement and the reason it is misleading, while also pleading facts giving rise to a strong inference of scienter. This heightened threshold aims to deter frivolous lawsuits by mandating particularized allegations that demonstrate the defendant's intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud, or severe recklessness equivalent to intent. In Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., the Supreme Court interpreted the PSLRA's "strong inference" requirement to mean that a reasonable person must view the alleged facts as at least as compelling as any nonculpable explanation for the defendant's conduct, conducting a holistic assessment rather than isolating individual allegations.[71] Courts thus evaluate the complaint in its entirety, considering competing inferences from all pleaded facts, to determine if scienter is plausibly inferred.[71]To establish a strong inference of scienter at the pleading stage, plaintiffs commonly rely on methods such as the core operations doctrine, which posits that false statements about a company's core business activities—where executives are presumed to have intimate knowledge—naturally suggest scienter. Another approach involves alleging motive and opportunity to commit fraud, such as executives' financial incentives tied to stock performance, though this alone is insufficient post-Tellabs without supporting facts.[72] Courts ultimately apply a holistic review, weighing all allegations—including circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness—against innocent explanations to ascertain if scienter cogently emerges.[73] These methods ensure that mere negligence or optimistic projections do not suffice, as scienter demands more than corporate optimism or isolated errors.[74]At trial, proving scienter shifts to a preponderance-of-the-evidence standard, where plaintiffs bear the burden of demonstrating intent or recklessness through admissible evidence, often circumstantial due to the rarity of direct admissions like smoking-gun emails.[75]Circumstantial evidence may include patterns of insider trading, access to contradictory internal reports, or deliberate omissions of material risks, but courts scrutinize such proof to distinguish recklessness from mere negligence. For instance, unusual executive stock sales timed with misleading disclosures can support scienter if they indicate awareness of falsity, though routine sales or broad-based plans weaken the inference.Recent developments underscore the evidentiary hurdles in pleading scienter, particularly in emerging technologies like AI. Recent Ninth Circuit rulings in cases involving AI companies have dismissed claims where plaintiffs failed to allege specific facts showing executives' reckless disregard for material misstatements about AI capabilities or risks, emphasizing that generalized hype or market speculation does not create a strong inference.[76] For example, in E. Ohman J:or Fonder AB v. NVIDIA Corp. (9th Cir. 2023), an AI chip leader, the court dismissed scienter claims against certain executives for insufficient allegations of personal knowledge or recklessness regarding undisclosed revenue dependencies, illustrating how PSLRA standards filter weak AI-related fraud assertions.[77] The Supreme Court's 2024 grant and subsequent dismissal of certiorari in the NVIDIA appeal further affirmed the Ninth Circuit's application of these rigorous pleading requirements without altering the framework. As of September 2025, AI-related securities class action filings reached 12 for the year, continuing the upward trajectory from 14 in 2024.[78]
Scienter in Other Contexts
False Claims Act
The False Claims Act (FCA), 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(A), imposes civil liability on any person who "knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval" to the United States government, with penalties including treble damages and civil fines adjusted for inflation.[79] The statute defines "knowing" and "knowingly" to encompass actual knowledge of the information's falsity, deliberate ignorance of the truth or falsity, or reckless disregard of the truth or falsity, without requiring proof of specific intent to defraud.[79] This scienter standard establishes a lower threshold than criminal fraud requirements, focusing on the defendant's awareness or avoidance of the claim's falsity to deter fraudulent submissions in government programs like Medicare and defense contracts.[79]In Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 579 U.S. 176 (2016), the Supreme Court clarified that scienter under the FCA extends to implied false certification claims, where liability arises from knowing violations of material statutory, regulatory, or contractual requirements, even if compliance is not expressly certified.[80] The Court emphasized that a defendant must know, or act with deliberate ignorance or reckless disregard toward, the falsity stemming from underlying statutory violations, such as failure to comply with Medicaid provider qualifications, to trigger liability; mere negligence or innocent mistakes do not suffice.[80] This ruling reinforced the FCA's role in addressing systemic fraud through qui tam actions, where relators can pursue claims on behalf of the government.A key defense against FCA scienter allegations is a defendant's good-faith belief in the claim's compliance and accuracy, which negates actual knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or reckless disregard.[81] For instance, if a defendant subjectively interprets ambiguous regulations reasonably and without awareness of falsity, courts have held that scienter is absent, even if the government's later interpretation differs.[81] This subjective standard, affirmed in United States ex rel. Schutte v. SuperValu Inc., 598 U.S. 739 (2023), protects entities acting in honest reliance on prevailing understandings of the law.[81]Recent Second Circuit rulings have further shaped FCA scienter in healthcare fraud cases involving the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b. In United States ex rel. Hart v. McKesson Corp., 96 F.4th 145 (2d Cir. 2024), the court held that AKS "willfulness"—which renders resulting claims false under the FCA—requires the defendant to act with knowledge that the conduct is unlawful, though not necessarily specific awareness of the AKS itself.[82] This decision affirmed dismissal of federal FCA claims for lack of plausible scienter allegations, emphasizing that good-faith reliance on legal interpretations precludes liability and impacts prosecutions of pharmaceutical distribution practices.[82] Subsequent 2025 rulings have extended this by upholding dismissals where defendants relied on favorable HHS Office of Inspector General advisory opinions, reinforcing that such reliance demonstrates absence of scienter in AKS-linked FCA cases.[83]
Criminal Law Applications
In criminal law, scienter functions as a critical mens rea element, often manifested through terms like "knowingly" or "willfully" in federal statutes, requiring proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant acted with awareness of the illegality or high probability of wrongdoing.[84] This distinguishes criminal applications from civil contexts by demanding a higher evidentiary threshold and emphasizing intentional culpability to justify punishment.Under the federal criminal code, 18 U.S.C. § 2(a) imposes principal liability on those who aid, abet, counsel, command, induce, or procure the commission of an offense against the United States, provided they act with knowledge of the principal's unlawful purpose and intent to facilitate it.[84] Similarly, wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1343 prohibits transmitting interstate wire communications in furtherance of a scheme to defraud, requiring the defendant to knowingly devise or intend to devise the scheme with specific intent to deceive or cheat victims of money or property.[85] In both provisions, scienter ensures that mere negligence or unknowing assistance does not trigger criminal liability, focusing instead on deliberate participation.[86]The distinction between "willfulness" and broader scienter arises prominently in tax evasion cases, where 26 U.S.C. § 7201 criminalizes willful attempts to evade taxes, but the Supreme Court in Cheek v. United States (1991) clarified that willfulness demands not only knowledge of the facts triggering the duty but also awareness that the tax laws require compliance, rejecting a good-faith misunderstanding of the law as a defense.[87] This elevated standard protects against criminalizing inadvertent errors while upholding scienter as subjective knowledge of legal duty, differing from "knowingly" in statutes like wire fraud that emphasize factual awareness over legal interpretation.[88]Federal model jury instructions further define scienter to guide deliberations, instructing that "knowingly" means acting with actual awareness of the conduct's nature or circumstances, while "willfully" requires intentionally performing an act that the defendant knows violates a known legal duty, often including recognition of a high probability of illegality.[89][90] These definitions, drawn from circuits like the Ninth, emphasize deliberate intent to avoid convicting based on recklessness alone unless specified by the offense.For RICO prosecutions under 18 U.S.C. § 1962, scienter derives from the predicate racketeering acts (e.g., mail fraud), requiring knowing conduct of an enterprise's affairs through a pattern of such acts.