MEMORANDUM AND OPINION
This suit аrises out of terrorist attacks in Israel between 2000 and 2003. The plaintiffs are Americans injured in the attacks and their relatives. The defendants are companies and individuals involved in the oil and gas business. The plaintiffs allege that these defendants purchased oil from Iraq and made payments that violated the United Nations Oil for Food Program. The Program required anyone buying oil from Iraq to place the purchase money into an escrow account monitored by the United Nations. Funds from this account could only be used for humanitarian purposes. The plaintiffs allege that the defendants were involved in buying Iraqi oil with payments that included illegal kickbacks to a secret bank account in Jordan controlled by Saddam Hussein. The plaintiffs allege that Hussein used funds from this account to provide money and services to Palestinian terrorist organizations and to make payments to the families of suicide bombers and others killed in carrying out the terrorist attacks. According to the plaintiffs, such payments were important in recruiting terrorists.
The original complaint included 193 plaintiffs, all of whom alleged violations of the Torture Victims Protection Act (“TVPA”).
1
Most of these plaintiffs were aliens who also asserted claims arising under the Alien Tort Statute (“ATS”),
2
which permits aliens to sue for some violations of customary international law. Those plaintiffs who were United States nationals and their estates, survivors, and heirs alleged that the defendants violated what is commonly referred to as the Antiterrorism Act (“ATA”)
3
by providing material support to terrorist organizations and by engaging in illegal financial transactions with Iraq. (Docket Entry No. 3). On March 31, 2010, this court granted motions to dismiss filed by all the defendants. The claims other than the ATA claim were dismissed both
On April 23, 2010, the plaintiffs filed an amended ATA complaint. The remaining plaintiffs are eight United States nationals or citizens and twelve of their relatives. (Docket Entry No. 121). The plaintiffs alleged that the defendants violated the ATA by providing material support to terrorist organizations and by engaging in financial transactions with Iraq during Hussein’s rule. The plaintiffs also alleged that El Paso Corporation and NuCoastal Corporation are liable for the actions of El Paso’s predecessor, Coastal Corporation, and its president, Oscar Wyatt, on the basis of successor liability. This claim appeared in the original complaint. The plaintiffs have added a claim that El Paso is liable for Wyatt’s actions under respondeat superior.
The defendants have all filed motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). The defendants argue that the plaintiffs have not sufficiently alleged knowledge of Hussein’s use of OFP kickbacks to fund terrorism targeting Americans or a causal connection between the defendants and the terrorist attacks. The defendants also argue that the plaintiffs’ ATA claim is barred by limitations. El Paso contends that the plaintiffs have served the wrong El Paso corporate entity and also seeks dismissal on that basis. (Docket Entry Nos. 127, 128, 130, 133, 134). The plaintiffs have responded to each motion, (Docket Entry Nos. 141, 142, 143), and the defendants have replied. (Docket Entry Nos. 145, 146, 147, 148).
Based on the motions and responses, the allegations in the amended complaint, and the applicable law, the motions to dismiss the amended complaint are denied except as to: (1) the conspiracy allegations; (2) the allegations against Bayoil Supply & Trading and NuCoastal Panama based on violations of 18 U.S.C. § 2332(d); and (3) limitations. The motions to dismiss based on limitations are converted to motions for summary judgment. A status conference is set for April 18, 2011 at 4:00 PM in Courtroom 11-B to discuss a time line for additional discovery and briefing. The basis for this court’s opinion is set out in detail below.
I. The Allegations in the Amended Complaint
A. The Iraq Oil for Food Program
Less than a week after Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait on August 6, 1990, the United Nations issued economic sanctions precluding member states from buying Iraqi oil. (Docket Entry No. 121, ¶ 145). On April 14, 1995, the U.N. Security Council adopted Resolution 986, lifting the embargo but restricting Iraq’s ability to sell its oil. Iraq’s government and the U.N. negotiated the details of the restrictions, resulting in a written agreement some time in May 1996. This agreement led to the U.N. Oil For Food Program (“OFP”). Under the OFP, a new U.N. office was created to oversee Iraq’s sale of oil and purchase of humanitarian goods. An escrow account was established at the New York branch of the Banque Nationale de Paris (“BNP”). The proceeds of Iraqi oil sales were to be deposited into the escrow account, which the U.N. monitored. Iraq could use the funds only to purchase food and other humanitarian goods for the country.
(Id.,
¶¶ 153-55). The United States government allowed American individuals and companies to enter into executory contracts with Iraq to purchase oil or sell humanitarian goods, including food and medical supplies. Before they could perform these contracts, the American entities were required to obtain a license
In December 1996, Iraq began selling oil through the OFP. Under the OFP, although buyers would send the purchase money to the BNP account in New York, Saddam Hussein’s government retained the right to choose the buyers. Those selected had to purchase the oil at the Official Selling Price (“OSP”), which was determined by a U.N. committee made up of representatives of the Security Council member states. The plaintiffs allege that the U.N. “sought to set a price for Iraqi oil at the highest rate bearable by the market in order to maximize the revenue generated,” which “would increase the amount of humanitarian goods that could be purchased” and “minimize the potential for illegal kickbacks” to Saddam Hussein. Presumably, buyers already paying full market price would be unable or unwilling to pay more in kickbacks. (Id., ¶¶ 161-62).
The plaintiffs allege that many of the companies and individuals Iraq chose to receive “allocations” of Iraqi oil “were not otherwise involved in the oil industry [and] were able to reap large profits by selling their allocations of Iraqi oil to brokers and/or companies capable of transporting the oil to a refinery.” (Id., ¶ 162). Beginning in 2000, the plaintiffs allege, Iraqi officials conditioned oil allocations on the buyer’s willingness to pay a “surcharge” to Hussein’s government. These surcharges, calculated as a percentage of the total contract price, were not permitted under OFP. The buyers allegedly paid these surcharges through “front companies” to bank accounts Hussein controlled. The plaintiffs also allege that Hussein charged “port fees” before allowing tankers to receive oil at Iraqi ports. Like the surcharges, the port fees were paid to Hussein instead of the OFP bank account. The plaintiffs allege that these surcharges and port fees were kickbacks made possible by lobbying efforts persuading the U.N. to select a below-market OSP. The plaintiffs also allege that at least some of the cost of these kickbacks was passed on by the direct purchasers to the next purchaser down the line. (Id., ¶¶ 163-68).
B. The Defendants’ Actions
Oscar Wyatt, a Texas oil trader, was the chairman and sole shareholder of Coastal Corporation. Wyatt later formed NuCoastal Corporation, a Houston energy company, and NuCoastal Trading, S.A., a Panama corporation. Both NuCoastal entities are also defendants. The plaintiffs allege that on the day Iraq invaded Kuwait, Wyatt owed Iraq $90 million. After the U.N. sanctions froze Iraq’s bank accounts, Wyatt began repaying the money directly to the Hussein government and not to the U.N.-controlled accounts. (Id., ¶¶ 139-43). Wyatt maintained a close relationship with Hussein while the U.N. embargo was in place, hoping that he would be rewarded with Iraqi oil-purchase contracts once the sanctions were lifted. This relationship extended to providing Hussein communications equipment and GPS devices in the mid-1990s, including an INMAR satellite, which Wyatt allegedly gave to the ministry of oil and paid to operate. 4 (Id., ¶ 143).
Wyatt was prosecuted for conduct related to the OFP and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud on October 1, 2007. (Id., ¶ 228). According to the complaint in this case, Wyatt has testified that he caused surcharge payments to be deposited in a bank account in Jordan controlled by Hussein. Wyatt acknowledged knowing that the payments violated the OFP and stated that he had intended to defraud the U.N. (Id.). The plaintiffs also allege that Wyatt committed treason by giving Hussein information about American war plans. (Id., ¶ 146).
Similar allegations are made against David Chalmers, an American businessman involved in oil and gas; Bayoil (USA), Inc., a Delaware company based in Houston that Chalmers owned; and Bayoil Supply & Trading Limited, a Bahamas affiliate of Bayoil USA, of which Chalmers was the sole director and shareholder. (Id., ¶¶ 28-29). On August 17, 2007, Chalmers and the Bayoil companies also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud. According to the allegations in this suit, Chalmers admitted that he had made payments that he “both expected and intended” would go to Hussein, and that he had concealed those payments from the U.N. Chalmers stated that he knew the payments violated the OFP. (Id., ¶ 227). Chalmers told an El Paso trader to oppose U.N.-proposed pricing policies designed to eliminate kickbacks. (Id., ¶ 185). Chalmers and Bayoil did not receive allocations of Iraqi oil. Instead, they purchased the oil from a third party who did receive allocations. The amended complaint alleges that the third party receiving the allocation was controlled by Chalmers and Bayoil, referring to it as the “Bayoil Foreign Company.” The plaintiffs allege that Bayoil transferred the purchase money through a Bahamas account to accounts in the Middle East and paid it to the party who had received the allocation. That party then transferred a large portion of the money to accounts controlled by Hussein. One of the accounts was held by Al Wasel and Babel General Trading, a United Arab Emirates company allegedly “secretly owned and controlled” by Hussein. (Id., ¶ 190). Bayoil and Chalmers were allegedly closely involved in the payments to Hussein. The complaint alleges that a Bayoil representative delivered a letter to Iraqi officials in 2002 proposing “a payment plan for certain illegal surcharges owed by another Oil for Food participant.” (Id., ¶ 200).
In January 2001, the El Paso Corporation acquired Coastal.
5
El Paso is a large oil and gas company incorporated in Delaware and based in Houston. Wyatt was no longer Coastal’s Chairman when the acquisition occurred, and his contract as a consultant to Coastal was terminated when Coastal became an El Paso subsidiary. The plaintiffs allege that El Paso knew
In the original complaint, the plaintiffs alleged 16 transactions involving El Paso. One was a direct allocation of oil purchased by Coastal before it was acquired by El Paso, for which Wyatt allegedly paid Hussein a kickback. One was an oil purchase by Coastal from a third party that had received an allocation. The rest were purchases by El Paso from third parties that had received direct allocations and had passed “kickbacks” to El Paso in the form of higher prices after El Paso acquired Coastal. In the amended complaint, the plaintiffs allege that the third parties from whom El Paso purchased oil were front companies Wyatt controlled. The plaintiffs allege that these front companies “lacked the resources to pay hundreds of millions of dollars for crude oil,” meaning that “[a]ll payments, including illegal surcharge payments were cleared in advance by El Paso and funded by El Paso.” {Id., ¶ 169). They also allege that El Paso had some control over, and interest in, these front companies. The plaintiffs allege that, on January 6, 2001, Wyatt traveled to Iraq to propose a scheme under which he would establish four front companies located outside the United States. These companies would purchase oil from Iraq at low prices and “pre-sell the oil at inflated prices to Oil Companies in order to cover the kickbacks and launder the money.” {Id., ¶ 172). Under this system, in which the front companies collected the surplus on behalf of Hussein, the “majority of the profit would be laundered to the Saddam Regime with the minority portion paid to Wyatt, the Coastal Group and El Paso.” {Id., ¶ 174).
The complaint states that at the January 6, 2001 meeting, Wyatt’s front company, Nafta Petroleum, received a 4.5 million barrel allocation, for which Wyatt agreed to pay a 40-cent per-barrel surcharge to Hussein within one month of the oil being loaded “even if it resulted in a loss.” {Id., ¶ 175). This is consistent with the scheme described. The complaint also alleges that in December 2001, Wyatt asked El Paso to reimburse Sarenco, S.A., another of his front companies, for a $200,000 outstanding balance on a kickback to Hussein. {Id., ¶¶ 188, 196). In the original complaint, there was no allegation that El Paso had agreed to the rеimbursement. The amended complaint alleges: “Upon information and belief, El Paso reimbursed Wyatt the money that Wyatt had sent to the Saddam Regime in order to repay the amount of debt from the failure to pay surcharge payments.” {Id., ¶ 196).
As in the original complaint, the plaintiffs allege in the amended complaint that El Paso traders were recorded recounting conversations with Iraqi officials “in which ‘they told us-blatantly-that we would have to pay,’ ” and in which a competitor showed an El Paso trader an account number and contact given to him by an Iraqi official for paying kickbacks, an action that both traders regarded as “blatant.”
{Id.,
¶ 220). The plaintiffs allege that, on May 31, 2001, Doris Simmons, an El Paso employee, e-mailed Iraqi oil officials asking that an allocation contract between Iraq and Mednafta, one of Wyatt’s front companies, be amended to change the destination of an oil tanker to a location in Central America.
{Id.,
¶ 183). The plaintiffs allege that two sale negotiations took place over the phone in July 2001 among an El
On February 7, 2007, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil action against El Paso in the Southern District of New York, alleging that El Paso had knowingly and illegally paid $5.5 million to Iraq. The same day, El Paso entered into a nonprosecution agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s office, agreeing to pay $5,482,363 to the United States. The money was to be paid to the people of Iraq as the OFP’s intended beneficiaries. One week later, on February 14, 2007, the district court entered a consent judgment in the S.E.C. lawsuit. The judgment incorporated the $5,482,363 payment arranged with the U.S. Attorney’s office and included a separate $2.25 million fine to the S.E.C. (Id., ¶¶ 224-26). The plaintiffs have not alleged that the consent judgment or nonprosecution agreement included any admission of wrongdoing by El Paso.
C. Hussein’s Actions
The amended complaint exhaustively catalogs the human rights abuses directed by Saddam Hussein during his rule. More so than in the original complaint, the plaintiffs focus on Hussein’s relationship with Palestinian terrorist organizations, particularly terrorism directed against Israel and the West. The allegations describe Hussein’s reign in Iraq and his role in terrorist activities. After the Ba’ath Party came to power in Iraq in 1968, Hussein was named head of intelligence. In 1969, Hussein founded the Arab Liberation Front (“ALF”), an Iraqi army affiliate that carried out suicide bombings and other terrorists attacks, including attacks on Israeli and American civilians in Israel. He allegedly served as head of the ALF from 1969 until 1980 and “continued to control and direct the ALF until his demise in 2003.” (Id., ¶ 47). The plaintiffs allege that during the first Gulf War, Hussein launched 39 Scud missiles at major Israeli cities, causing deaths, injuries, and property damage. (Id., ¶ 55). In 2000, Hussein gave a speech urging “the people’s masses to work relentlessly to expel the U.S. embassies and centers from the Arab countries as well as to uproot and expel any Zionist presence in these countries.” (Id., ¶ 54).
The plaintiffs also allege that Hussein “provided offices, training camps, safe haven, financing and operational and logistical support” for other organizations that have carried out terrorist attacks, including the Abu Nidal Organization (“ANO”), the Palestine Liberation Front (“PLF”), Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad (“PIJ”), and the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade (“AAMB”). (Id., ¶¶ 66-70). The plaintiffs focus on the ALF, Hamas, PIJ, and the AAMB, all designated by the United States as terrorist groups. Beginning in 1990, the State Department designated Iraq as a state sponsor of terrorism. (Id., ¶ 54).
After the second intifada broke out in September 2000, Hussein gave a speech
D. The Plaintiffs’ Injuries and this Lawsuit
The amended complaint is based on three terrorist attacks in Israel during the second intifada. The plaintiffs are eight United States nationals who were injured in the attacks and two of their family members. The plaintiffs allege that Hussein made reward payments to the families of the terrorists who carried out each attack. The following attacks are alleged:
• On November 4, 2001, a PIJ terrorist named Hatem Shweikeh, opened fire with automatic weapons in a bus in Jerusalem. He killed two people and injured 40, including plaintiffs Yissachar Zvi Lebowitz (the son of plaintiffs Rosalyn Shoshanna Pearl and Shimon Lebowitz), Shifra Markowitz (the daughter of plaintiffs Ester Devora Markowitz and Gerald Markowitz), Sarah Mordechai (the daughter of plaintiff Shirin Mordechai), Ora Rubinoff (the daughter of Aviva Rubinoff and Mitchell Jay Rubinoff, and the sister of plaintiffs Eliezer Rubinoff, Yosef Rubinoff, and Shoshanna Rubinoff) and Gila Schnall (the daughter of plaintiffs Frances Schnall and Ira Schnall). The terrorist’s mother received a payment on behalf of Saddam Hussein. (Id., ¶ 234).
• On December 1, 2001, two Hamas suicide bombers named Osama Baher and Nabil Halbiyeh detonated explosives on their persons and rigged to a car on Ben Yehudah Street in Jerusalem. The attack killed 11 and wounded 170, including plaintiff Baruch Yehuda Ziv Brill. On January 22, 2002, the father of one attacker and the mother of the other each received a $15,000 check on behalf of Hussein. Both were signed by Rakad Salem, “the head of the ALF.” (Id., ¶ 233).
• On March 9, 2002, a Hamas suicide bomber named Fuad Hurani detonated
The plaintiffs seek compensation for the injuries suffered in these attacks from El Paso, Wyatt, the NuCoastal Companies, Chalmers, and the Bayoil Companies. The plaintiffs allege that Hussein used money obtained from the defendants, either directly or through intermediaries, in violation of the OFP’s restrictions, to fund terrorism in Israel primarily by paying “rewards” to the families of the terrorists who killed and injured the plaintiffs and their family members. This suit was filed on January 2, 2009 in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. (Docket Entry No. 3). The defendants’ motion to transfer venue was granted and the case transferred to this court on December 3, 2009. (Docket Entry No. 60).
On March 31, 2010, this court dismissed claims filed by the plaintiffs who were not American nationals or citizens and who sued under the Alien Tort Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1350. This court held that these plaintiffs lacked standing and that they had failed to state a claim. (Docket Entry No. 118). This court also dismissed claims brought by all the plaintiffs — those that were United States nationals or citizens and those that were not — under the Torture Victim Protection Act, Pub.L. 102-256, Mar. 12, 1992, 106 Stat. 73, reprinted as a note to 28 U.S.C. § 1350, and claims based on imputed successor liability against El Paso (for Coastal’s liability) and alter ego liability against the NuCoastal Companies (for Wyatt’s and Coastal’s liabilities), all for lack of standing and failure to state a claim. Because there was no standing to pursue any of these claims, the plaintiffs were not given leave to replead. On June 30, 2010, this court denied a motion to certify the ATS claims only for interlocutory , appeal. (Docket Entry No. 144).
The March 31, 2010 opinion also dismissed the claims brought by United States nationals and citizens injured by the attacks (or their estates, survivors, or heirs) under the Antiterrorism Act of 2001, 18 U.S.C. § 2333. These claims were for providing material support to terrorist organizations and, engaging in illegal business dealings with Iraq. (Docket Entry No. 116). But this court dismissed only on the basis of failure to state a claim. Because standing was proper, these plaintiffs were given leave to replead. On April 23, 2010, they did so. (Docket Entry No. 121). The defendants have all filed motions to dismiss the amended complaint under Rule 12(b)(6). The plaintiffs have responded to each motion and the defendants have reрlied. These motions are considered below.
II. The Applicable Law
A. Rule 12(b)(6)
Rule 12(b)(6) allows dismissal if a plaintiff fails “to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Fed. R. Crv. P. 12(b)(6). In
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
550
In
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
Iqbal
also rejected the theory that Rule 9(b)’s endorsement of pleading generally in certain circumstances permits a complaint to survive based on only conclusory allegations. The Court acknowledged that while Rule 9 requires pleading with particularity “when pleading ‘fraud or mistake,’ ” it allows “ ‘[m]alice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of a person’s mind [to] be alleged generally.’ ”
Id.
at 1954 (alterations in original) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b)). But the Court explained that the term “generally,” as used in Rule 9, “is a relative term.”
Id.
The Court stated that “[i]n the context of Rule 9, [‘generally’] is to be compared to the particularity requirement applicable to fraud or mistake,” that “Rule 9 merely excuses a party from pleading discriminatory intent under an elevated pleading standard,” and that Rule 9 “does not give [a party] license to evade the less rigid — though still operative— strictures of Rule 8.”
Iqbal,
“ ‘Rule 8(a)(2) ... requires a showing, rather than a blanket assertion, of entitlement to relief. Without some factual allegation in the complaint, it is
When a plaintiffs complaint fails to state a claim, the court should generally give the plaintiff at least one chance to amend the complaint under Rule 15(a) before dismissing the action with prejudice.
See Great Plains Trust Co. v. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co.,
B. The Antiterrorism Act
The ATA provides a civil action for treble dаmages to “[ajny national of the United States injured in his or her person, property, or business by reason of an act of international terrorism, or his or her estate, survivors, or heirs.” 18 U.S.C. § 2333(a) (emphasis added). 7 International terrorism is defined in the statute as “activities that”:
(A) involve violent acts or acts dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United Statesor of any State, or that would be a criminal violation if committed within the jurisdiction of the United States or of any State;
(B) appear to be intended—
(i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population;
(ii) to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or
(iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping; and
(C) occur primarily outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, or transcend national boundaries in terms of the means by which they are accomplished, the persons they appear intended to intimidate or coerce, or the locale in which their perpetrators operate or seek asylum;
18 U.S.C. § 2331(1) (emphasis added). Subsection (A) requires an underlying violation of criminal law. Five criminal provisions are relevant.
First, it is a crime to kill, attempt to kill, conspire to kill, or intentionally cause serious bodily injury to a United States national outside the United States. 18 U.S.C. § 2332.
The second statute, 18 U.S.C. § 2339A, makes it a federal crime to “provide[] material support or resources ... knowing or intending that they are to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out, a violation of [various federal criminal statutes]” or to attempt to or conspire to do such an act. 18 U.S.C. § 2339A(a). One of the criminal statutes listed in § 2339A is § 2332, which, as stated, criminalizes killing, attempting to kill, conspiring to kill, or intentionally causing serious bodily injury to a United States national outside the United States.
The third relevant criminal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 2339B, states that “[w]hoever knowingly provides material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization, or attempts or conspires to do so” is guilty of a crime. Under both § 2339A and § 2339B, “material support or resources” includes “any property, tangible or intangible, or service, including currency or monetary instruments or financial securities, financial services, lodging, training, expert advice or assistance, safehouses, false documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities, weapons, lethal substances, explosives, personnel (1 or more individuals who may be or include oneself), and transportation, except medicine or religious materials.” 18 U.S.C. §§ 2339A(b)(l), 2339B(g)(4). A “terrorist organization” is a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization under 8 U.S.C. § 1189.
8
A 2004 amendment to the statute clarified that “[t]o violate this paragraph, a person must have knowledge that the organization is a designated terrorist organization (as defined in subsection (g)(6)), that the organization has engaged or engages in terrorist activity (as defined in section 212(a)(3)(B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act), or that the organization has engaged or engages in terrorism (as defined in section 140(d)(2) of the Foreign Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Years 1988 and 1989).” 18 U.S.C. § 2339B. Because this language was not in place when the events at issue in this case occurred, it does not apply. The Supreme Court recently upheld the current version § 2339B against First Amendment and vagueness challenges.
See Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project,
561 U.S. -,
Whoever, [subject to jurisdictional requirements in] subsection (b), by any means, directly or indirectly, unlawfully and willfully provides or collects funds with the intention that such funds be used, or with the knowledge that such funds are to be used, in full or in part, in order to carry out—
(A) an act which constitutes an offense within the scope of a treaty specified in subsection (e)(7), as implemented by the United States, or
(B) any other act intended to cause death or serious bodily injury to a civilian, or to any other person not taking an active part in the hostilities in a situation of armed conflict, when the purpose of such act, by its nature or context, is to intimidate a population, or to compel a government or an international organization to do or to abstain from doing any act[.]
18 U.S.C. § 2339C(a)(l). Conspiracy and attempt are also punishable. 18 U.S.C. § 2339C(a)(2). There is no requirement that the funds provided or collected “were actually used to carry out” an act of international terrorism. 18 U.S.C. § 2339C(a)(3).
Finally, the plaintiffs have now stated that they also rely on 18 U.S.C. § 2332d, which prevents a “United States person” from “engaging] in a financial transaction” with the government of a country that he knows or reasonably should know to be designated under section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 as a country supporting international terrorism. “Financial transaction” is defined to include “a transaction which in any way or degree affects interstate or foreign commerce [] involving the movement of funds by wire or other means.” 18 U.S.C. §§ 2332d(b)(l), 1956(c)(4). Iraq had been designated as a state sponsor of terrorism when the transactions and attacks in this case occurred.
III. Analysis
A. The ATA Claims
This court found that in the original complaint, the plaintiffs had failed to state an ATA claim for two reasons. First, there were insufficient allegations of scienter. Other than conclusory statements, there were “no allegations that, if proven, would show that the defendants had information that Hussein was using OFP kickback money to fund terrorism targeting Americans.” And, to the extent the plaintiffs alleged a conspiracy claim, it failed because there were “no factual allegations of an agreement or common plan to fund or otherwise support terrorism targeting Americans.” (Docket Entry No. 118 at 68-69). Second, although “[t]he lack of sufficient factual allegations of scienter [was] a sufficient basis on which to dismiss the ATA claims,” the attenuation in the causal chain between the defendants’ actions and the plaintiffs’ injuries provided “further support for dismissal.” {Id,, at 69). The present motions to dismiss argue that the plaintiffs’ efforts to address these deficiencies in their amended complaint were insufficient.
Much of the dispute in the initial round of motions to dismiss was over the proper causation and scienter standards applicable to an ATA claim. This court’s opinion addressed those issues at length, comparing the various cases, statutes, and arguments before settling on the appropriate standards and applying them to the allegations. A complete analysis of the issues presented by this second round of motions to dismiss requires a renewed examination of the legal standards in detail and in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project,
561 U.S. -,
The major lower court case leading up to
Humanitarian Law Project
was
Boim v. Holy Land Foundation (Boim
III),
In
Boim III,
the plaintiffs’ ATA claim for giving money to Hamas was “international terrorism” for which the defendants could be primarily liable based on the incorporation of § 2333. The court emphasized, however, that “[pjrimary liability in the form of material support to terrorism has the character of secondary liability.”
Id.
at 691. Congress had “expressly imposed liability on a class of aiders and
Analyzing the hybrid nature of a primary liability claim that has “the character of secondary liability” in light of the “sui generis” nature of terrorism, the court crafted a standard of liability for civil claims under the ATA resting on an underlying violation of § 2339A. 10 Under the Seventh Circuit’s approach, it appears that such a claim by an American injured by a terrorist attack in Israel has the following elements: 11
(1) the defendant provided a material benefit of any value to a terrorist organization, either directly or indirectly (“the fact of contributing to a terrorist organization rather than the amount of the contribution is the keystone of liability”);
(2) the defendant, in providing the benefit, gave an outward appearance that its acts are intended to: “(i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population; (ii) to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; [or] (iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping,” see 18 U.S.C. § 2331(1), which is satisfied by giving a benefit to a terrorist organization when it is a “foreseeable consequence” that, given more money, the organization will kill or wound, or attempt to kill, or conspire to kill more people in Israel; and
(3)the defendant knew or was deliberately indifferent to the character of the organization as one that engages in terrorism.
See Boim III,
No additional showing of causation was required. Id. at 696-700; see also id. at 709 (Rovner, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“[T]he majority relieves the plaintiffs of any obligation to demonstrate a causal link between whatever support the defendants provided to Ha-mas and Hamas’s terrorist activities (let alone David Boim’s murder in particular).”); id. at 722-24 (Wood, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“The en banc majority freely concedes that there are no limits at all to its rule, and that a donor who gave funds to an organization affiliated with Hamas in 1995 might still be liable under § 2333 half a century later, in 2045.”).
[A]s the temporal chain lengthens, the likelihood that a donor has or should know of the donee’s connection to terrorism shrinks. But to set the knowlеdge and causal requirement higher than we have done in this opinion would be to invite money laundering, the proliferation of affiliated organizations, and two-track terrorism (killing plus welfare). Donor liability would be eviscerated, and the statute would be a dead letter.
Id. at 702. The length of the temporal chain was relevant to whether the plaintiffs could show that the defendants had the requisite scienter. But the court did not require a showing that the defendants intended or even knew that their contributions would be used for terrorist activities. Id. at 698. A defendant could “earmark” its contribution for humanitarian purposes and nonetheless be liable if it knew that the organization’s activities included terrorism. Id. 12 As an example, the Boim majority stated:
So consider an organization solely involved in committing terrorist acts and a hundred people all of whom know the character of the organization and each of whom contributes $1,000 to it, for a total of $100,000. The organization has additional resources from other, unknown contributors of $200,000 and it uses its total resources of $300,000 to recruit, train, equip, and deploy terrorists who commit a variety of terrorist acts one of which kills an American citizen. His estate brings a suit under section 2333 against one of the knowing contributors of $1,000. The tort principles that we have reviewed would make the defendant jointly and severally liable with all those other contributors. The fact that the death could not be traced to any ofthe contributors ... and that some of them may have been ignorant of the mission of the organization (and therefore not liable under a statute requiring proof of intentional or reckless misconduct) would be irrelevant. The knowing contributors as a whole would have significantly enhanced the risk of terrorist acts and thus the probability that the plaintiffs decedent would be a victim, and this would be true even if Hamas had incurred a cost of more than $1,000 to kill the American, so that no defendant’s contribution was a sufficient condition of his death.
Id. at 698.
It did not affect the result that Hamas, in addition to carrying out terrorist operations, provided health, educational, and social welfare services. Nor did it matter that the defendants had directed their donations exclusively to those services. Id. As the majority saw it, “if you give money to an organization that you know to be engaged in terrorism, the fact that you earmark it for the organization’s nonterrorist activities does not get you off the liability hook.” Id. Because money is fungible, Hamas could reallоcate other social services money to terrorism. And “Ha-mas’s social welfare activities reinforce its terrorist activities both directly by providing economic assistance to the families of killed, wounded, and captured Hamas fighters and making it more costly for them to defect ... and indirectly by enhancing Hamas’s popularity among the Palestinian population and providing funds for indoctrinating schoolchildren.” Id.
The Supreme Court picked up on these themes in
Humanitarian Law Project,
The Court observed that “[wjhether foreign terrorist organizations meaningfully segregate support of their legitimate activities from support of terrorism is an empirical question.”
Id.
at 2724. It was a question that Congress had already addressed in the statute. When it passed § 2339B, Congress included a statement of findings and purposes. The findings included that “foreign organizations that engage in terrorist activities are so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.” Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”) § 301(a)(7), 110 Stat. 1247,
reprinted as note following
18 U.S.C. § 2339B. According to the Court, this
Congress’s use of the term “contribution” is best read to reflect a determination that any form of material support furnished “to” a foreign terrorist organization should be barred, which is precisely what the material-support statute does. Indeed, when Congress enacted § 2339B, Congress simultaneously removed an exception that had existed in § 2339A(a) (1994 ed.) for the provision of material support in the form of “humanitarian assistance to persons not directly involved in” terrorist activity. AEDPA § 323, 110 Stat. 1255;205 F.3d at 1136 . That repeal demonstrates that Congress considered and rejected the view that ostensibly peaceful aid would have no harmful effects.
Id. at 2725.
And the Court held that “Congress was justified in rejecting that view.” Id. The terrorist groups at issue were responsible for numerous deaths and injuries in both targeted and indiscriminate attacks. For three broad reasons, the Court found support for Congress’s factual findings. First, because “[mjoney is fungible,” material support for nonviolent activities “frees up other resources within the organization that may be put to violent ends.” Id. The Court cited evidence that terrorist groups in fact commingle their funds between nonviolent and violent functions. Id. at 2725-26. Second, material support to the groups’ nonviolent functions “importantly helps lend legitimacy to foreign terrorist groups — legitimacy that makes it easier for those groups to persist, to recruit members, and to raise funds — all of which facilitate more terrorist attacks.” Id. at 2725. Finally, the Court noted that United States “allies would react sharply to Americans furnishing material support to foreign groups like the [terrorist groups involved in the case], and would hardly be mollified by the explanation that the support was meant only to further those groups’ ‘legitimate’ activities.” Id. at 2726. As further support for all three arguments, the Court pointed to an affidavit from a State Department consistent with Congress’ findings. The Court found no basis for substituting its own judgment for that of the two political branches, particularly given the national security and foreign policy concerns. Id. at 2727-30. As applied to the specific forms of material support the plaintiffs sought to provide, the statute did not violate the First Amendment. Id. at 2730.
Because it does not deal with civil liability under § 2333,
Humanitarian Law Project
does not discuss what it means to be injured “by reason of’ material support to terrorism.
Boim III
required a minimal showing of causation. The cases before
Boim III
generally required plaintiffs to show that the defendants’ actions were a proximate cause of their injuries.
See, e.g., Boim I,
Humanitanan Law Project,
Justice Breyer, in a dissenting opinion, agreed that intent to further an organization’s terrorist activities was not required. But he stated that a “fairly possible” reading of the statute was that it criminalized “First-Amendment-protected pure speech and association only when the defendant knows or intends that those activities will assist the organization’s unlawful terrorist actions.”
Id.
at 2740 (Breyer, J., dissenting). Under such a reading, a defendant’s activity would violate the statute “where a defendant purposefully intends it to help terrorism or where a defendant knows (or wilfully blinds himself to the fact) that the activity is significantly likely to assist terrorism.”
Id.
Justice Breyer reached this interpretation by construing the scienter requirement in § 2339B — “knowingly”—as applying to all elements of the crime, which he stated that the Court “normally” does,
id.
(citing
Flores-Figueroa v. United States,
The majority took issue with this reading, stating that “Congress explained what ‘knowingly’ means in § 2339B, and it did not choose the dissent’s interpretation of that term.”
Id.
at 2718 n. 3. Although the Court engaged with the dissent on this point in a brief footnote, it is clear that the Court’s objections are to Justice Breyer’s reading of the word “material,” his requiring knowledge of materiality, and his re
The majority did not hold that there is no knowledge requirement for the remaining element of the statute, that the defendant provided support “to” a group that is designated as a foreign terrorist organization. See id. at 2722 (“The use of the word ‘to’ indicates a connection between the service and the foreign group.”). Regardless of whether the defendant knows the group is designated as a foreign terrorist organization, he must know that the support he provided was to that group. This was not an issue in Humanitarian Law Project because both relevant groups had been so designated, the defendants knew that fact, and the question was whether benign motive provided a defense. In other cases, reading this requirement out of the statute could lead to absurd results. If a person knows that Hamas is a designated foreign terrorist organization, he does not violate the statute by providing material support to some other group that is not a foreign terrorist organization. Requiring the defendant to have known his support was to the relevant group is particularly appropriate in the present case, which involves acts that occurrеd before the statute was amended to further describe the requisite mental state. The statutory language— “knowingly provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization” — plainly means that at least that the defendant knows that he is providing support to a particular group.
Humanitarian Law Project
informs the analysis of the issues in this case but does not specifically address or resolve those issues. And, as stated in this court’s earlier opinion, in terms of both scienter and causation,
Boim III
stretched civil liability under the ATA more than previous courts had.
See
2 Ved P. Nanda
&
David K. Pansius, Litigation of Int’l Disputes in U.S. Courts § 9.18 (2d ed. 2008
&
Supp. 2010)
(“Boim III
arguably advocates the broadest possible civil liability for third parties providing material assistance to terrorist organizations.”). It is useful to examine other cases adopting different approaches. The case of
Terrorist Attacks I,
The court also required that the plaintiffs “present a sufficient causal connection between [the defendant’s material] support and the injuries suffered by Plaintiffs,” which could be accomplished by pleading a basis for inferring proximate cause.
Id.
at 825-26. The court cited a case describing the proximate cause requirement as limiting liability to those injured persons “ “with respect to whom [the defendants’ acts] were a substаntial factor in the sequence of responsible causation, and whose injury was reasonably foreseeable or anticipated.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
First Nationwide Bank v. Gelt Funding Corp.,
Applying this approach to the defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motions, the court dismissed the claims against a bank alleged to have aided and abetted the attackers by donating to charities that supported terrorism and by serving as the bank for these charities. The court noted the absence of any allegations that the bank knew the charities were involved in terrorist activities. There was “no basis for a bank’s liability for injuries funded by money passing through it on routine banking business.”
Id.
at 831-33. The court was not swayed by the allegations that the bank was connected to Hamas because the plaintiffs had not alleged a relationship between Hamas and al Qaeda or the September 11 attacks.
Id.
at 833. The court reached the same conclusion for a second bank alleged to have provided an account for charities to deposit money raised to support reward payments to suicide bombers’ families. Because there was no allegation that the bank knew “anything relating to terrorism was occurring through the services it provided,” the allegations were of routine banking services, which were not a basis for liability.
Id.
at 833-34. This was true despite allegations of close
In a subsequent opinion,
In re Terrorist Attacks on September 11, 2001 (Terrorist Attacks II),
Another
pre-Boim III
case carefully analyzed liability under the ATA. In
Linde v. Arab Bank,
The
Linde
court read the relevant ATA language somewhat differently than
Boim III.
In applying the statutory definition of “terrorist acts,” the
Linde
court focused on the actual suicide bombings rather than on the defendant’s act of providing money. The bombings were both “violent acts” and “acts dangerous to human life” (either would have been sufficient), and violated criminal statutes.
Id.
at 580-81. The court found that apart from the Arab Bank’s actions, the plaintiffs had been injured “by reason of international terrorism,” as the ATA requires. The issue was whether the Arab Bank could be held liable, either primarily or secondarily, for that injury.
Id.
at 581. Unlike
Boim III,
the court held that the ATA did permit a cause of action for secondary liability and concluded that such liability was available on both conspiracy and aiding and abetting theories.
Id.
at 582-83. The court looked to
Halberstam v. Welch,
The Restatement recognizes three types of secondary civil liability:
For harm resulting to a third person from the tortious conduct of another, one is subject to liability if he
(a) does a tortious act in concert with the other or pursuant to a common design with him, or
(b) knows that the other’s conduct constitutes a breach of duty and gives substantial assistance or encouragement to the other so to conduct himself, or
(c) gives substantial assistance to the other in accomplishing a tortious result and his own conduct, separately considered, constitutes a breach of duty to the third person.
Restatement (Second) op Torts § 876 (1979). In Linde, the court found that the plaintiffs’ allegations supported all three theories. The plaintiffs alleged that the Arab Bank had violated subsection (a) by agreeing tо provide banking services to what it knew was a terrorist organization, leading to an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy that injured the plaintiffs. Id. at 584. The plaintiffs alleged that the Arab Bank had violated subsection (b) by being aware of Hamas’s “role as a part of an overall illegal activity” and providing “knowing and substantial assistance” in the form of financial services and administration of the death benefits. These benefits allegedly encouraged terrorist attacks, which was a form of aiding and abetting. The court found that plaintiffs had also alleged a violation of subsection (c) because they had alleged that the Arab Bank breached independent duties, including by violating the ATA criminal statutes. Id. at 584-85.
As to the mental state required, the court held that a bank may be liable under § 2339B if it “provides material support in the form of financial services to a designated foreign terrorist organization and the bank either knows of the designation or knows that the designated organization has engaged or engages in terrorist activities.” Id. at 587. Section 2339B is the criminal statute forbidding donations to designated terrorist groups. For violations of §§ 2339A and 2339C, the court held that it was necessary to show “knowledge or intent that the resources given to terrorists are to be used in the commission of terrorist acts.” Id. at 586 n. 9. None of the three statutes required “specific intent to commit [the] specific acts of terrorism” that injured the plaintiffs. Id. at 586. 16
As to causation, the court held that “but for” causation is not required to recover against secondary tortfeasors. Id. at 584-85. The court’s discussion indicated that some causal connection had to be alleged, although the limits are not defined. In finding that the allegations against the Arab Bank were sufficient, the court distinguished Terrorist Attacks I, in which the bank defendants were dismissed. The court emphasized the specific allegations that the Arab Bank “plays a central role in a well-publicized plan to reward terrorists killed and injured in Israel and that the Bank knows that the groups to which it provides services are engaged in terrorist activities. The very groups the Bank is alleged to support are the same groups alleged to be responsible for the terrorist attacks that injured the plaintiffs.” Id. at 588 (emphasis added). These were not “innocent business services.”
Linde
and the
Terrorist Attacks
opinions rely heavily on
Boim I,
In
Boim I,
the court first addressed whether funding terrorism was actionable under the ATA.
Boim I,
The court addressed whether violations of §§ 2339A and 2339B fit the definition of “international terrorism,” making them actionable primary torts under the ATA. The court concluded that there was “no textual, structural, or logical justification for construing the civil liability imposed by section 2333 more narrowly than the corresponding criminal provisions.” Id. at 1015. This was consistent with the text; even though giving money to terrorists was not itself violent or dangerous to human life, the statute defined “international terrorism” as “activities that involve violent acts or acts dangerous to human life.” The underlying terrorist attack satisfied the “act” part of the definition, and giving money to terrorists was an activity involving that act. The court address the term “material support” in §§ 2339A and 2339B, stating that the question is whether the aid is of a type listed in the statute, not whether it is “substantial or considerable.” Id. Finally, the court provided thе standard for direct liability suits under these ATA provisions, stating:
For civil liability, section 2333 requires that the plaintiff be injured “by reason of’ the act of international terrorism. Because we believe Congress intended to import standard tort law into section 2333, causation may be demonstrated as it would be in traditional tort law. Congress has made clear, though, throughthe criminal liability imposed in sections 2339A and 2339B, that even small donations made knowingly and intentionally in support of terrorism may meet the standard for civil liability in section 2333. Congress’ goal of cutting off funding for terrorism would be seriously compromised if terrorist organizations could avoid liability by simply pooling together small donations to fund a terrorist act.
Id. (emphasis added). The requirement of a knowing and intentional support of terrorism for a violation of § 2339A or § 2339B alleviates the concern that the ATA will create limitless liability against anyone whose money ends up in the hands of a terrorist organization.
The final liability issue the court addressed was whether the ATA recognized civil aiding and abetting liability. The court noted the Supreme Court’s holding in
Central Bank of Denver N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A.,
If we were to interpret “involve” literally, we would be attributing almost unlimited liability to any act that had some link to a terrorist act. Congress could not have meant to attach unlimited liability to even remote acts; it must have meant something else. As we have seen from the language and legislative history of section 2333, that something else is traditional tort and criminal liability.... Indeed, limiting the term “involve” to the familiar definitions of aiding and abetting (or even conspiracy, for that matter) provides the necessary clarification that saves the statute from vagueness.
Id.
at 1020-21. Finally, the court distinguished
Central Bank
based on the ATA’s policy objectives. “[I]f we failed to impose liability on aiders and abettors who
knowingly and intentionally
funded acts of terrorism, we would be thwarting Congresses] сlearly expressed intent to cut of the flow of money to terrorists at every point along the causal chain of violence.”
Id.
at 1021 (emphasis added). The only effective way to deter terrorism, the court concluded, was to impose aiding and abetting liability because the terrorists were unlikely to have recoverable assets and, more importantly, because the attacks could not go forward without funding.
Id.
To succeed on an aiding and abetting theory, however, the court required that the plaintiff allege and show that the defendant knew of Hamas’s terrorist activity, knew that the money was going to Hamas, and
intended
to help Hamas’s terrorist activities succeed. It was not necessary
Two courts have issued opinions after
Humanitarian Law Project, Rothstein v. UBS AG,
[T]he Iranian Government is a recognized sponsor of terrorism and has funded Hamas and Hezbollah, and other Palestinian organizations; that these terrorist organizations require U.S. cash dollars to carry out their activities; and that UBS’s involvement in banknote transactions with Iranian counterparts had the effect of providing U.S. cash dollars to the Iranian government, which, in turn, supplied the aforementioned terrorist organizations with U.S. cash dollars that were used to facilitate terrorist acts.
Id. at 294. The plaintiffs asserted claims involving both primary and secondary liability under the ATA.
The district court found the plaintiffs’ primary liability allegations too attenuated to confer standing or to state a claim for relief. Noting that standing requires a “proximate ' causal relationship between UBS’s transfer of funds to Iran and Ha-mas’ and Hezbollah’s commission of the terrorist acts,” the court identified three “deficiencies in the causal chain”: (1) the plaintiffs did not allege that UBS was a primary or relatively significant source of U.S. bank notes for the Iranian government; (2) cash dollars have multiple legitimate uses other than funding terrorism; and (3) there were no specific allegations that the terrorist groups in question raised their funds from monies transferred to Iran. The complaint failed to state a claim for the same reasons. The court applied proximate cause as § 2333’s causation standard based on the “by reason of’ language and concluded that “[i]f the allegations here are so speculative and attenuated as to deprive plaintiffs of standing, it follows a fortiori that they fail to adequately plead causation.” Id. at 295.
Addressing the sufficiency of the allegations of secondary liability and assuming that an aiding and abetting theory of liability is viable under the ATA, the court reasoned that “such a theory would require adequate allegations that the defendant not only knew that its funds would be used to sponsor terrorist acts by Hamas and Hezbollah, but also intended to do so.”
Id.
(citing
Boim I,
On remand, the Second Circuit asked the district court to consider the following aspects of
Humanitarian Law Project:
(1) the Court’s rejection of the argument that terrorist and peaceful activities of terrorist organizations can be segregated; (2) the Court’s rejection of the contention that the government was required to offer proof that the defendants’ proposed activities
Congressional policy determinations are likely to be quite different with respect to the two entities, as reflected by the fact that 50 U.S.C.App. § 2405(j)(l) permits certain transactions with state sponsors of terrorism as long as a valid license is obtained. It thus appears highly unlikely that the same stringent prohibitions on providing material support to FTOs apply with equal force to state sponsors of terrorism, with whom lawful contact is permitted.
Id. As to the secondary liability allegations, the court found that Humanitarian Law Project did not support altering “traditional knowledge and intent of for aiding and abetting liability” for § 2333(a) claims. The district court noted that the Supreme Court’s construction of the scienter requirements for § 2339B was expressly limited to that statute and that the Court “explicitly contrasted with the ‘sections immediately surrounding Section 2339B (i.e., Sections 2339A and 2339C), which, like Section 2333(a) expressly require intent.’ ” 18 Id. at 516, at *5. Because Humanitarian Law Project did not change the ATA’s scienter requirement, the district court did not disturb its prior ruling.
Like
Rothstein,
the court addressed causation both in determining whether the plaintiffs had standing and whether the plaintiffs stated a claim for relief. The court distinguished the allegations from those in
Rothstein
on the basis that the plaintiffs alleged that BOC directly provided funding to an FTO. By contrast,
Roth-stein
involved allegations against a defendant who provided United States cash to a state sponsoring terrorism.
Id.
at 22-23. The
Wultz
court also noted that the plaintiffs alleged that BOC knowingly transferred the funds to an FTO because it had notice that transfer to al-Shurafa were in effect transfers to the PIJ. In finding that the plaintiffs’ allegations were sufficient to support standing, the court pointed to the plaintiffs’ allegations that: (1) the PIJ “is subject to strict economic sanctions programs imposed by the United States as the result of its designation [as an FTO] ... the enforcement of which is intended to limit the PIJ’s ‘ability to plan, to prepare, and to carry your terrorist attacks’ (2) “were these sanctions universally enforced by financial institutions, plaintiffs allege that ‘the ability of the PIJ to conduct banking activities would be severely restricted and PIJ’s ability to plan, to prepare, and to carry out terrorist attacks would be significantly limited”; (3) “very few banks and financial institutions do not observe and enforce the U.S. sanctions regime”; and (4) “BOC executed dozens of wire transfеrs totaling several million dollars on behalf of Mr. Al-Shurafa, a BOC account holder and a senior officer and agent both of the PIJ and of the Hamas terrorist organization which were necessary for planning, preparing, and carrying out the attack.”
Id.
at 22 (internal punctuation and quotations omitted). The court also found that the plaintiffs alleged causation. Like
Rothstein,
the court found that § 2333(a)’s “by reason of’ language established proximate cause as the causation standard.
Id.
at 53-54 (citing
Boim III,
In determining the sufficiency of the remaining allegations, the
Wultz
court followed
Boim II’s
“chain of incorporations” approach and evaluated the scienter required at each stage of the chain.
Id.
at 42. Finding that providing funding to terrorist organizations is an “act[ ] dangerous to human life,” the court evaluated the plaintiffs’ allegations that the BOC violated §§ 2339A, 2339B, and 2339C. As to the § 2339A allegations, the court, citing
Linde,
stated that the plaintiffs must allege “that BOC provided financial services knowing or intending that such provision would generally facilitate the terrorist activities of the PIJ,” not that the BOC “had
Following the chain of incorporations, the court then addressed whether the plaintiffs’ allegations met the second part of the definition of “international terrorism,” § 2331(1)(B). Because § 2331(1)(B) rеquires only that the defendant’s acts “appear to be intended ... (i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population ....,” and because the ATA is not concerned with “actual subjective intent,” the court, citing
Boim III,
looked to whether the defendant allegedly “created the objective ‘external appearance’ ... that BOC shared the PIJ’s goals.”
Id.
at 49 (citing
Boim III,
The chain of incorporation complete, the court proceeded to analyze whether the allegations met “the overarching knowledge requirement imposed by § 2333.” The court, like the Seventh Circuit in
Boim III,
concluded that § 2333’s treble-damages provision requires a showing of “ ‘intentional misconduct’ on the part of the tortfeasor.”
Id.
at 50 (citing
Boim III,
Citing
Boim I, Chiquita Brands,
and
Linde,
the court also found a basis to allege secondary liability under the ATA.
Id.
at 56-57. The court distinguished
Central Bank
on the basis that unlike § 10(b) of the Securities and Exchange Act, the ATA expressly created a private right of action. Like
Boim I,
the court also noted that the ATA expressly incorporated “general principles of tort law,” including “all the traditional elements of a traditional tort.” Based on the ATA’s incorporation of tort law and legislative history showing that Congress intended to “bring all of the substantive law of the American tort law system into play,” the court concluded that the ATA was intended to incorporate other principles of tort law, including aiding and abetting liability.
Id.
at 56. The BOC did not argue that the plaintiffs insufficiently
This court has previously characterized the pre-Humanitarian Law Project cases as representing a struggle between this country’s profound commitment to combating terrorism and the traditional strictures of tort law, particularly the risk of imposing liability on actors whose conduct is divorced from terrorism. The opinion stated:
Boim III is so broad that, if taken to its logical extension, it could make any person liable if that person knows that (or is deliberately indifferent to whether) Hamas commits terrorist attacks in Israel, if even $1 of that person’s money ends up in Hamas’s bank account. Could that extend to a man in St. Louis who lacks significant understanding of the OFP or Hussein’s funding of terrorism but who is generally aware that Hamas is a Palestinian terrorist group that targets Israelis, and who fills his car with gasoline that the service station had purchased from a refining company that had purchased it from another company that had paid kickbacks to Hussein to receive its allocation of Iraqi oil? This is clearly not what the Boim III court held, as evidenced by its decisions to carve out exceptions for the Red Cross and Doctors Without Borders. But the limits of liability are unclear under Boim III, which removes a causation requirement and removes an intent, or purpose, or knowledge requirement and only demands awareness that the organization that ends up receiving the funds is a terrorist group.
(Docket Entry No. 118 at 65-66).
The risk of setting the liability bar low must be balanced with Congress’s clear intent to resist terrorism by cutting off the sources of funding to terrorist groups. Cases that require allegations that the defendant have the intent to further terrorist objectives set the bar too high. Allegations of intent are not required under either direct or secondary liability theories, except for a conspiracy claim, for which an agreement must be alleged. Assuming, without deciding, that secondary liability is available under the ATA, it would be governed by the tort principles cited in Linde, which, as to aiding and abetting, require the secondary actor to “know [ ] that the [primary actor’s] conduct constitutes a breach of duty.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 876 (emphasis added). If primary liability is at issue, the criminal material-support statutes apply. Section 2339A criminalizes providing material support “knowing or intending” it will be used for carrying out a terrorist attack. Section 2339B criminalizes “knowingly” providing material support to a terrorist organization. And Section 2339C criminalizes “willfully” providing or collecting funds “with the intention that such funds are to be used, or with the knowledge” that they will be used for terrorism. The defendant must collect funds willfully but the only required knowledge is that the funds will be used for terrorism. Knowledge is sufficient.
When the allegations are for secondary liability as an aider and abettor or for direct liability based on § 2339A or § 2339C, the defendant must know (or intend) that its money is going to a group engaged in terrorist acts or is being used to support terrorist acts. Because civil liability under the ATA is restricted to American victims, the defendant must also know (or intend) that the terrorism or terrorist group it is supporting targets Americans.
See Boim III,
To state a secondary liability claim based on conspiracy, the plaintiffs must also allege an agreement to accomplish an unlawful act or participation in a common plan to do so.
Linde,
The courts agree that “but for” causation is not required. The courts disagree on what causal standard must be alleged and proven. If the defendant’s liability is direct, the “by reason of international terrorism” language in the statute creates a proximate cause requirement.
Boim I,
The opinion on the original complaint also stated that an ATA claim based on § 2339A required allegations that “Hussein was using OFP kickback money to fund terrorism that targeted American nationals.” (Docket Entry No. 118 at 68). The allegations in the original complaint were not sufficient to meet this requirement. It relied on two newspaper articles, one of which was published before the OFP even began and stated that Hussein has used oil money to arm his troops and live in luxury, and the other of which, an August 2002 Washington Post story, was not published until after the last of the attacks at issue. The amended complaint has added a number of other news stories published during the relevant time period. None of these stories states the ultimate conclusion reached later by the Washington Post, that money from OFP kickbacks was being diverted to make reward payments to families of suicide bombers. But, without stating the source of the money, they make clear that Hussein was making reward payments to the families of Palestinian “martyrs.” The amended complaint also includes a long list of allegations about Hussein’s involvement in terrorist activities targeting Israel and his support for Palestinian terrorist organizations doing the same.
These allegations support an inference that the defendants knew that money paid in kickbacks would be used to support terrorist activity in Israel. As the plaintiffs argue, the very object of sidestepping the OFP was to provide money for Hussein to achieve ends other than providing for the welfare of Iraqi civilians. It is true that there were many improper uses for the money other than supporting terrorism. But the plaintiffs have alleged that Hussein’s financial support for terrorist efforts against Israel was extensive and well-known.
Humanitarian Law Project
suggests that a broader approach is appropriate. Just as the “ ‘purposes, organizational structure, and clandestine nature of foreign terrorist organizations’ ” make it “ ‘highly likely that any material support to these organizations will ultimately inure to the benefit of their criminal, terrorist functions,’ ”
Humanitarian Law Project,
In their briefing, thе plaintiffs have also flagged 18 U.S.C. § 2332d as an underlying crime supporting direct liability under the ATA. That statute makes it a crime for a “United States person” to “engage in a financial transaction” with the government of a country that he
knows or reasonably should know
to be designated under section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 as a country supporting international terrorism, “[e]xcept as provided in regulations issued by the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State.” 18 U.S.C. § 2332d(a). “Financial transaction” is defined to include “a transaction which in any way or degree affects interstate of foreign commerce [] involving the movement of funds by wire or other means.” 18 U.S.C. §§ 2332d(b)(l), 1956(e)(4). Iraq was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism at all times relevant to this case. Regulations were issued to permit Americans and American companies to take part in the OFP. The plaintiffs allege that the defendants in this case were issued licenses to do so under those regulations. But the allegations are that the defendants violated the terms of the OFP, and thus the federal regulations insulating them from liability under § 2332d. The plaintiffs allege that because the defendants participated in the OFP and went through the licensing process, they knew that Iraq was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism. Of course, as the defendants argue, the definition of “international terrorism” also requires that the underlying criminal violation is an act “dangerous to human life.” 18 U.S.C. § 2331(1). But like giving a loaded gun to a child, or giving money to Hamas,
see Boim III,
This basis for liability does not extend to Bayoil Supply & Trading or NuCoastal Panama, because they are foreign entities.
See United States v. Chalmers,
As to the conspiracy claims, there are still no factual allegations of an agreement or common plan to fund or otherwise support terrorism targeting Americans. This case is not close to
Linde,
in which
The amended complaint also contains factual allegations that, if proven, would show proximate cause. Although there is only an attenuated connection between the plaintiffs’ injuries and each of the defendants, the alleged facts are sufficient to support an inference that it was foreseeable that Hussein would use the kickbacks to support Palestinian terrorist attacks. As the court noted in
Rothstein,
there are differences between paying money to a state sponsor of terrorism and paying money to a foreign terrorist organization.
The amended complaint sufficiently alleges facts supporting ATA claims based on aiding and abetting liability and primary liability under § 2339A, § 2339B, § 2339C. It also states a claim based on primary liability under § 2332d, except with respect to Bayoil Supply & Trading and NuCoastal Panama. The plaintiffs have not stated an ATA claim for conspiracy liability.
B. Imputed Liability
The plaintiffs have also alleged three additional theories of liаbility. They allege that El Paso has assumed Coastal’s liability under a theory of de factor merger because El Paso continued Coastal’s normal business operations. They also allege that El Paso is liable under respondeat superior for the acts of Wyatt as a “managerial employee of El Paso” beginning in 2000. Finally, the defendants allege that NuCoastal Corporation has assumed Coastal’s liabilities because it is Coastal’s alter ego. El Paso and NuCoastal have moved to dismiss these claims for the reasons they were dismissed in the March 31 opinion. 21
The de facto merger claim against El Paso and the alter ego claim against Nu-Coastal are based on conclusory allegations. The amended complaint simply recites the elements of each claim, which is insufficient to provide fair notice of the
The respondeat superior claim against El Paso for Wyatt’s acts as an employee was not alleged in the original complaint. El Paso has not made a specific argument as to why this claim should be dismissed. “Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, a principal or employer may be vicariously liable for the tortious acts of an agent or employee if the acts are within the course and scope of employment.”
Texas Integrated Conveyor Sys., Inc. v. Innovative Conveyor Sys., Inc.,
C. Proper Party
Relatedly, El Paso has moved to dismiss оn the ground that it is not a proper party to this suit because the alleged acts were taken by a wholly owned subsidiary of El Paso with its own corporate form. This argument is based on an affidavit from Thomas Malone, an Associate General Counsel of El Paso and one of the lawyers who has appeared for El Paso in this suit. Malone described the transaction in which Coastal merged with El Paso. He stated that Coastal continues to operate as El Paso CGP Company L.L.C., a subsidiary wholly owned by El Paso. (Docket Entry No. 26, Ex. 1). El Paso submitted S.E.C. filings and state corporate registration documents to support these statements. The plaintiffs responded by arguing that El Paso assumed responsibility for El Paso GCP’s acts in its settlement with the S.E.C. and that El Paso has since acquired all or substantially all of the assets and liabilities of El Paso GCP. (Docket Entry No. 42 at 8-11). The plaintiffs have attached the S.E.C. complaint and settlement agreement as well an El Paso GCP S.E.C. filing. The plaintiffs argue that these documents support the theory that El Paso has expressly assumed El Paso GCP’s liabilities.
A court generally must limit itself to the contents of the pleadings in considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion but may consult documents attached to the defendant’s motion if “they are referred to in the plaintiffs complaint and are central to [its] claim.”
Collins v. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter,
In the present case, the S.E.C. filings are not offered as proof of notice or proof that certain legally relevant statements were made. Whether the corporate relationship between El Paso and El Paso GCP subjects El Paso to liability for El Paso GCP’s acts depends on the truth of the statements in the S.E.C. filings. Under the Fifth Circuit’s holding in Lovelace, they аre not appropriately considered in deciding a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. As to the corporate registrations, they might fit the Lovelace standard because the fact of having a corporate registration is itself relevant. But they do no more than establish the existence of El Paso GCP and the proper names of El Paso GCP and the parent corporation. These facts are not sufficient for El Paso to prevail on a motion to dismiss based on corporate structure. Similarly, El Paso’s admissions in its S.E.C. settlement might also satisfy Lovelace to the extent the plaintiffs use it as a legally operative document in which El Paso accepted liability for El Paso GCP’s actions. Malone’s affidavit and most of the attached exhibits are not properly part of a Rule 12(b)(6) analysis, and the exhibits submitted by the parties that might be acceptable to consider are not decisive. El Paso’s motion to dismiss based on corporate form cannot be granted at this stage.
D. Limitations
The defendants have also moved to dismiss based on limitations. A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6) is a valid means to raise a statute of limitations defense.
Bush v. United States,
The limitations period on an ATA claim is four years from the date the claim accrues. 18 U.S.C. § 2335(a). The three attacks in this case occurred on November 4, 2001, December 1, 2001, and March 9, 2002. A suit arising out of the third attack would have been timely as of March 2006. This case was not filed until January 2, 2009. It is undisputed that this suit would be untimely under the ordinary limitations
Equitable tolling is “to be applied sparingly.’ ”
Manning v. Chevron Chem. Co., LLC,
Courts have held that “because the question whether a particular party is eligible for equitable tolling generally requires consideration; of evidence beyond the pleadings, such tolling is not generally amenable to resolution on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion.”
In re Cmty. Bank of N. Va.,
While this court does not rule on limitations, it is worth nothing that the amended complaint emphasizes facts showing that the kickback scheme and its connection to funding terrorism, may have been publicly apparent within the limitations period. As discussed, in August 2002, the
Washington Post
reported that Hussein was manipulating the OFP and using the money to pay rewards to families of suicide bombers launching attacks in Israel. The plaintiffs have also alleged that the
New York Post
reported in October 2004 that Hussein “secretly bankrolled a notorious Palestinian terrorist group with $72 million worth of vouchers from the U.N.’s corrupt oil-for-
El Paso has also submitted an excerpt of a November 23, 2004 quarterly report it filed with the S.E.C. The report disclosed the following:
In September 2004, The Coastal Corporation (now known as El Paso CGP Company, which we acquired in January 2001) received a subpoena from the grand jury of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York to produce records regarding the United Nations’ Oil for Food Program governing sales of Iraqi oil. The subpoena seeks various records relating to transactions in oil of Iraqi origin[ ] during the period from 1995 to 2003. In November 2004, we received an order from the S.E.C. to provide a written statement and to produce certain documents in connection with the Oil for Food Program. We have also received an inquiry from the United States Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee [on] Investigations related to a specific transaction in 2000. In September 2004, the Special Advisor to the Director of Central Intelligence issued a report on the Iraqi regime, including the Oil for Food Program. In part, the report found that the Iraqi regime earned kiсk backs or surcharges associated with the Oil for Food Program. The report did not name U.S. companies or individuals for privacy reasons, but according to various news reports congressional sources have identified the Coastal Corporation and the former chairman and CEO of Coastal, among others, as having purchased Iraqi crude during the period when allegedly improper surcharges were assessed by Iraq.
(Id., Ex. H at 26).
This publicly available information undercuts the plaintiffs’ assertion that they
IV. Conclusion
The motions to dismiss the amended complaint are denied except as to: (1) the conspiracy allegations; (2) the allegations against Bayoil Supply & Trading and Nu-Coastal Panama based on violations of 18 U.S.C. § 2332(d); and (3) limitations. The motions to dismiss based on limitations are converted to motions for summary judgment. A status conference is set for April 18, 2011 at 4:00 PM in Courtroom 11-B to discuss a time line for additional discovery and briefing targeted to the threshold limitations issue.
Notes
. Pub. L. 102-256, Mar. 12, 1992, 106 Stat. 73, reprinted as a note to 28 U.S.C. § 1350.
. 28 U.S.C. § 1350. The ATS is sometimes referred to as the Alien Tort Claims Act ("ATCA”).
.18 U.S.C. § 2333.
. The plaintiffs allege that "Wyatt, El Paso, and the Coastal Group continued to pay all operating charges.” (Id.., ¶ 143).
. El Paso states that the proper defendant is not the El Paso Corporation but a wholly owned subsidiary, El Paso CGP Company, LLC. This issue is discussed below.
. Fridman also alleges that he "lost a close friend” in the attack. The defendants have moved to dismiss his claims because there is no cause of action under the ATA to recover for death of a friend.
See Little v. Arab Bank,
. Although most of the provisions at issue in this case were enacted in the 1990s, before Congress passed the Antiterrorism Act of 2001, the civil liability provision is commonly referred to as part of the ATA.
See, e.g., Linde v. Arab Bank,
. The plaintiffs allege that Hamas and PIJ were so designated FTOs during the time the attacks in this case occurred, and that the AAMB was so designated on March 27, 2002. None of the attacks alleged in the amended complaint occurred after March 9, 2002.
. As discussed below, other courts have reached the opposite conclusion.
See Boim v. Quranic Literacy Institute (Boim I),
. The court did not address § 2339B or § 2339C as predicate criminal statutes giving rise to civil liability under the ATA. David Boim was killed on May 13, 1996, before § 2339C was enacted on June 25, 2002. Section 2339B was enacted on April 24, 1996, less than a month before Boim's death, but Hamas was not designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization under the statute until 1997.
See Boim I,
. The
Boim III
court, in equating knowledge of Hamas’s "aims and activities" with a sufficient scienter to harm American victims (the only victims covered by the ATA), stated that Hamas limited its terrorism to Israel. The court noted "that Americans are frequent visitors to and sojourners in Israel," and "that many U.S. citizens live in Israel.”
Boim III,
. The majority stated that defendants assisting organizations outside the ATA definition of "international terrorism” could not be subjected to liability. If a defendant’s assistance did not "appear to be intended ... to intimidate or coerce a civilian population,” "influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion,” or "affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnaping,” that defendant would not be liable under the ATA because the chain of incorporation by reference establishing primary liability would fall apart. The court provided an example of medical aid given to a terrorist by the Red Cross or Doctors Without Borders.
Boim III,
. The statute analyzed in Boim III was § 23 3 9A, which criminalizes providing “material support or resources ... knowing or intending that they are to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out, a violation of' relevant criminal statutes.
. This is confirmed by Justice Breyer’s response to the majority’s argument that Congress had the opportunity to use his definition and decided to choose a different one. As applied to the type of support at issue in
Humanitarian Law Project,
which Justice Breyer saw as pure speech and assembly, there was "grave” doubt about the constitutionality of the statute as written.
. Because the court decided that providing . material support to terrorism under the ATA was a secondary offense, there was no need analyze whether the defendants' actions fit within § 2339A, § 2339B, or § 2339C. To satisfy the underlying crime element of the definition of “international terrorism,” it would have been enough under a theory of secondary liability, for the September 11 attacks to be a crime publishable under state or federal law. The court did not directly address this issue, stating in a footnote that it would “assume[] the attacks of September 11 were an act of international terrorism.”
Terrorist Attacks I,
. It is somewhat unclear why, having applied the Restatement standard to determine the elements of secondary liability, the court discussed these criminal statutes. It appears that the court had already concluded by referring to the Restatement that the allegations against the Arab Bank satisfied the act component of secondary liability and proceeded to consider whether Arab Bank had the necessary scienter with respect to both direct and secondary liability. The court appeared to use the criminal statutes to help determine the scienter required. The analysis was premised on the underlying crimes being the bombings, not the material support provided by the Arab Bank.
.
Central Bank
was the basis for
Boim Ill's
holding that secondary liability is not available under the ATA.
. The basis for the conclusion that allegations of primary liability under § 2339A or § 2339C requires allegations of "intent to further the organization's terrorist activities” is unclear. Section 2339A requires "knowledge” or "intent” that the defendant’s material support is 'to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out, a violation of [the listed statutes].' Similarly, § 2339C criminalizes willful provision or collection of funds "with the intention that such funds will be used, or with knowledge that such funds are to be used, in full or in part, to carry out [an act violating §§ 2339C(a)(l)(A) or 2339C(a)(l)(B) ]." The statutes do not require "the intent to further the organization's activities”; knowledge that the defendant's material support or funds will be used for the organization's terrorist activities suffices. As the Rothstein court notes, the Court in Humanitarian Law Project did distinguish the mens rea required for § 2339B from that required for §§ 2339A and 2339C. Section 2339B requires only "knowledge that the organization is a designated terrorist organization.”
Section 2333(a) does not use the word "intend” or "intent.” The ATA provides a civil action for treble damages to "[a]ny national of the United States injured in his or her person, property, or business by reason of an act of international teirorism, or his or her estate, survivors, or heirs.” 18 U.S.C. § 2333(a) (emphasis added). “International terrorism” is defined in the statute as "activities that appear to be intended (i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population....” 18 U.S.C. § 2331(1).
. The plaintiffs alleged that Bank of China nonetheless knew that Said al-Shurafa was "effectively providing financial services to the PIJ” because "officials of the counterterrorism division of the Office of the Prime Minister of the State of Israel met with officials of the [Peoples’ Republic of China's] Ministry of Public Security and [BOC] regarding the PIJ transfers” and informed them that the transfers to al-Shurafa were in effect to the PIJ and that the funds were being used to support terror.
Wultz,
. To the extent there is a concern that this is not sufficient knowledge that the terrorist attacks could target Americans, the
Boim III
court stated well the reasons why terrorist attacks on Israel necessarily put Americans at risk. As stated above, the court explained "that Americans are frequent visitors to and sojourners in Israel, that many U.S. citizens live in Israel.”
Boim III,
. El Paso and NuCoastal also argue that because there are not sufficient allegations of liability on any claim, there is no liability to impute through these theories. This is no longer a valid objection. For the reasons described above, the factual allegations in the amended complaint state ATA violations by Coastal and Wyatt.
