Kimberly Bennett at 10:47 AM ET
Saturday, June 22, 2013
Federal appeals court reinstates USS Cole bombing lawsuit
Federal appeals court reinstates USS Cole bombing lawsuit
Kimberly Bennett at 10:47 AM ET
[JURIST] The US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit [official website] ruled
[opinion, PDF] Thursday that families of 17 sailors killed in the 2000
bombing of the USS Cole may file a second suit to collect $282 million
in damages. The court reversed the ruling by the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia [official website] that the previous judgment [JURIST report] under the Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA) precluded an action against the Republic of Sudan under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) [texts]. The court reasoned that because the plaintiffs filed a new action directly under 28 USC § 1605A [text], the various provisions of the National Defense Authorization Act
(NDAA) [text] governing how to apply § 1605A retroactively to pending
and previous actions were inapplicable to the case. Moreover, both the
change in statutory law between the plaintiffs' initial complaint in Rux v. Republic of Sudan and their complaint in Kumar et al. v. The Republic of Sudan [opinions, PDF] and the substantial foreign and domestic policy concerns at issue justified an exception to the res judicata doctrine.
US District Judge Robert Doumar ruled in 2005 that there was sufficient evidence for the families to pursue the lawsuit after the first suit
[JURIST reports] was filed against Sudan in 2004. The families allege
that Sudan helped finance the attack and allowed an al Qaeda operative
to ship explosives to Yemen. To overcome the sovereign immunity
[Cornell LII backgrounder] typically accorded a foreign country in US
courts under the FSIA, the plaintiffs invoked that statute's exception
for state sponsors of terrorism. On October 12, 2000, the USS Cole
exploded, killing 17 Navy sailors and injuring 42 others.
Kimberly Bennett at 10:47 AM ET
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