Court Refuses To Permit Plaintiffs To Pursue the “New” Cause of Action under Section 1605A of the FSIA

Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
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Avinesh Kumar v. Republic of Sudan, Civil Action no. 2:10cv171 (E.D. Vir. 2011), presents an interesting case of judicial resistance to the resurrection of prior claims in the context of an international litigation, even where Congress has sought to enlarge plaintiffs’ rights arguably to embrace such resuscitation.

In earlier litigation, the Court addressed the terrorist bombing of the American navy vessel U.S.S. Cole on October 12, 2000. The Court found that “Sudan had actively provided Al Queda with material support”, that the support was “critical” to carrying out the attack, and that the material support “led to the murders of the seventeen American servicemen and women”. The Court also entered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $7,956,344.

While an appeal was pending from the judgment (which also dismissed claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress), Congress enacted Section 1605A of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, which “creates a new cause of action against state sponsors of terrorism” and expressly allows recovery for “solartium, pain and suffering, and punitive damages”, unlike the Death on the High Seas Act, which the Court had earlier found provided the only remedy to the plaintiffs. The Court of Appeals remanded the appeal to the District Court to determine the effect, if any, of the enactment of Section 1605A. Other procedural issues aside, the Court was finally faced with a new suit by 59 (0f 61) plaintiffs who were also plaintiffs in the prior suit. Sudan refused to defend the second suit, and the question before the Court was whether a default judgment was warranted.

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