Since Congress first passed the FTCA in 1946, federal courts have developed a strong precedent that interprets the law.332 However, in recent decades, the Supreme Court has declined several invitations from litigants to change its longstanding doctrines on FTCA enforcement.333 In doing so, the Court has expressed reluctance to re-examine the FTCA`s established precedents. if Congress has done nothing.334 If Congress disapproves of some or all of the legal principles currently governing FTCA cases, legislative action may be required to amend the applicable standards.335 See, for example, Tort, Black`s Law Dictionary (10th Edition 2014) (definition of “tort” as “civil injustice, except for breaches of contract for which recourse can be obtained, generally in the form of [pecuniary] damages”). See CRS In Focus IF11291, Introduction to Tort Law, by Kevin M. Lewis (describes tort law, its objectives, and its relevance to Congress). See also Helen Hershkoff, Early Warnings, Thirteenth Chimes: Dismissed Federal-Tort Suits, Public Accountability, and Congressional Oversight, 2015 Mich. St. L. Rev. 183, 187 (describes the significant burden of “reviewing the thousands of tort claims submitted to [Congress] for payment each year and passing laws for each plaintiff that Congress has compensated”). As the name suggests, the FTCA`s “foreign country exception”258 preserves the sovereign immunity of the United States from “any claim that arises in a foreign country.” 259 The Oberster Gerichtshof interpreted that exception as meaning that `all claims based on damage suffered abroad are excluded, irrespective of where the offence or omission took place`. 260 The exception “ensures that the United States is not subject to excessive liability under the laws of a foreign country over which it has no control,” as could be the case if the United States held itself responsible to the same extent as any private citizen committing a crime in that country.261 “While the FTCA`s waiver of sovereign immunity is important and extensive, it is not complete.” 55 To “Concerns. on the integrity and solvency of the public tax authorities and the impact that large litigation could have on the ability of government officials to focus on and accomplish their other tasks,” the FTCA provides the United States with “significant guarantees and benefits. the other defendants are not entitled to tort.”56, which are explained in detail below.57 To limit the forums in which a plaintiff can legitimately hear a tort action against the United States, Congress has conferred exclusive jurisdiction over FTCA cases on the district federal courts (as well as a small number of territorial courts).58 In addition, because Congress felt that:”that jurors would find it difficult to view the United States as an accused without being affected by the fact that they have a deeper pocket than any other defendant.”59 FtCA cases that go to court are typically “heard by the court without a jury.” 60 In such cases, the United States `remains in the federal defendant`s action, unless and until the strict [C]ourt finds that the employee ….