MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
This аction arises out of the June 11, 2003 suicide bombing of a bus in Jerusalem, Israel by members of the terrorist organization Hamas.
1
The attack killed 17 individuals, including Alan Beer, a United States citizen living in Israel at the time. Plaintiffs, who include Mr. Beer’s estate, his mother and his siblings, brought suit under the state-sponsored terrorism exception to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1605A, alleging that defendants Islamic Republic of Iran (“Iran”) and the Iranian Ministry of Information and Security (“MOIS”) provided financial and material support to Ha-mas, and are thus liable for the death of Mr. Beer. They seek $150 million in compensatory damages and $300 million in punitive damages. Complaint 8, Oct. 17, 2008[3], The Court has already determined that defendants are “liable for the deаth of Alan Beer, which resulted from the tragic suicide bombing of Egged bus 14A in Jerusalem on June 11, 2003.”
Beer v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
No. 08 Civ. 1807,
This is not the first action brought by plaintiffs against these defendants. In
Beer v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
Because plaintiffs previously received compensatory damages, this Court has already rejеcted plaintiffs’ request for such an award in this case, holding that
[pjlaintiffs who obtained compensatory damages from a suit brought pursuant to former § 1605(a)(7) — including those before the Court in this case — may not obtain additional compensatory relief as a remedy to the federal cause of action in § 1605A where that subsequent suit arises out of the same terrorist act.
Beer II,
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. The Standard Method for Calculating Punitive Damages in FSIA Cases
When Congress passed the FSIA, it was clear that the state-sponsored terrorism exception rendered foreign states subject to suit in the United States for acts of terrorism. However, the original Act left several questions, including what sorts of damages were available to plaintiffs, unanswered.
In re Islamic Republic of Iran Terrorism Litig.,
In
Flatow v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
While a number of FSIA courts subsequently assessed punitive damages using the
Flatoiv
Method, such awards were brought to a screeching halt by the D.C. Circuit in
Cicippio-Puleo v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
in which it held that “neither section 1605(a)(7) nor the Flatow Amendment, separately or together, establishes a cause of action against foreign state sponsors of terrorism.”
In early 2008, Congress moved to reverse this trend through amendments to the FSIA enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 1083, 122 Stat. 3. 338-44 (2008) (“NDAA”). These Amendments struck § 1605(a)(7) and replaced it with the current state-sponsored terrorism exception, which is codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605A. Among numerous changes to the law, § 1605A now “provides for the recovery of punitive damages in suits based on acts of terrorism.”
Rimkus v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
In awarding damages following passage of the NDAA, courts have generally identified the
Flatow
Method as the procedure that best serves the retribution and deterrence interests that Congress sought to promote in enacting the 2008 Amendments.
See In re Terrorism Litig.,
B. Recent Supreme Court Jurisprudence on Punitive Damages
Outside the limited arena covered by federal statutes, develоpment of the law of punitive damages has historically been left to the States, whose legislatures and courts have passed laws and developed principles concerning such sanctions.
See BMW of N. Am., Inc. v. Gore,
The concerns expressed in
Gore
are not merely problems of a constitutional dimension, however, as the Supreme Court recently made clear in
Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker,
C. The Flatow Method in Light of Recent Jurisprudence
As the foregoing discussion highlights, an examination of the continuing viability of the established process for calculating punitive damages first set forth in Flatow requires the Court to confront two issues: whether the bases for the Supreme Court’s decisions are applicable in FSIA suits and, if so, whether the Flatow Method complies with the constraints implemented by this recent jurisprudence. This first issue in turn raises two distinct questions. First, do the limitations on punitive damage awards articulated by the Supreme Court under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment apply with equal force in this context? Second, does the extension of these constraints to general maritime law by the Exxon Court necessitate further extension of these same principles to FSIA suits? For the reasons set forth below, the Court answers both questions in the negative and holds that recent Supreme Court decisions play no role in terrorism-related FSIA suits. The Court thus concludes that the Flatow Method remains controlling in actions brought pursuant to the state-sponsored terrorism exception. 5
*20 1. Defendants in FSIA State-Sponsored Terrorism Cases May Not Rely Upon Principles of Due Process to Shield Themselves from Punitive Damage Awards
With the exception of
Exxon,
which is discussed
infra,
the Supreme Cоurt’s recent jurisprudence concerning punitive damages finds its genesis in individual liberty interests inherent to notions of Due Process embodied in the Constitution. In
Gore
— the case in which the Supreme Court first elevated the review of state court punitive damage awards to a constitutional dimension- — -the opinion begins with one fundamental tenet: “The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits a State from imposing a ‘grossly excessive’ punishment on a tortfeasor.”
These constitutional concerns, however, are inapplicable here. As an initial matter, FSIA litigation arises under a federal statute and does not involve the exercise of State authority against the defendant; as a result, the Fourteenth Amendment— upon which the Supreme Court’s recent line of decisions all rely — is not implicated here.
See SEC v. Lines Overseas Mgmt., Ltd.,
No. 04 Misc. 302,
Though the Fifth Amendment supplies equal limitations on punitive damages in cases brought under federal statutes, defendants here, as foreign sovereigns, cannot use these constitutional constraints to shield themselves. In Price
v. Socialist
*21
People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
the D.C. Circuit squarely held that “foreign states are not ‘persons’ protected by the Fifth Amendmеnt,” and thus cannot assert protections afforded to U.S. citizens by the Due Process Clause.
Though
Pnce
addressed foreign states and not other foreign entities,
see
The opinions in
Price, TMR Energy
and their progeny focus on questions of Due Process inherent to a court’s assertion of jurisdiction; howеver, the rationales for denying constitutional safeguards to foreign entities set forth in those decisions are equally applicable to any Due Process
*22
problems raised by the imposition of punitive damage awards. Whether the issue is the assertion of jurisdiction or potentially-excessive punitive damages, the key concern implicated is the right to personal liberty enshrined in the Due Process Clause.
See Gore,
2. Exxon Does Not Require Alteration of the Flatow Method
The second question relevant to this inquiry is whether the Supreme Court’s extension of its articulated framework for evaluating punitive damages from Due Process to general maritime law requires FSIA courts to reevaluate the established Flatow Method in cases brought under the state-sponsored terrorism exception. Based on the discussion below, the Court holds, for three reasons, that the Exxon decision does not undermine the traditional procedure.
a. The Holding in Exxon is Limited
While the Supreme Court in
Exxon
first ventured out of the constitutional realm in reviewing punitive damage assessments, it did so in limited fashion and over an area of law which has been specially committed to the discretion of the judiciary. The legal landscape in which the
Exxon
Court operated — maritime law — “falls within a federal court’s jurisdiction to decide in the manner of a common law court, subject to the authority of Congress to legislate otherwise if it disagrees.”
Exxon,
Rules articulated in the context of maritime law are not necessarily applicable to non-admiralty proceedings. The Supreme Court has observed that the implications of changes or evolution in maritime law are generally limited to Article III and do not require equivalent adjustments to the federal common law.
Romero,
b. Congress Re-Affirmed the Established Procedure
An independent justification for adhering to the
Flatow
Method is that Congress did not see fit to alter or otherwise question that procedure when enacting the NDAA. At the time the 2008 Amendments were passed, the Supreme Court had issued its highly-publicized opinions in
Gore, State Farm,
and
Philip Morris,
and was hearing arguments in
Exxon
to much fanfare. At the same time, the method for calculating punitive damages under the state-sponsored terrorism exception had been long-settled. Shortly after the decision in
Flatow,
numerous courts in this
*24
district came to rely upon the prpcedure established in that case. In
Anderson v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
for example, Judge Jackson, after observing that “[i]t is nеver a simple task to calibrate an award of punitive damages,” turned to the
Flatow
Method and the testimony of Dr. Clawson to conclude that “an award of thrice the ... maximum annual budget for terrorist activities, or $300 million, is the closest approximation that [the Court] can make to an appropriate award.”
“Courts ‘generally presume that Congress is knowledgeable about existing law pertinent to the legislation it enacts.’ ”
Ark. Dairy Coop. Ass’n v. Dep’t of Agriculture,
Here, the decisions of this Court and many others adopting the Flatow Method were based on the Flatow Amendment, which provided that money damages in state-sponsored terrorism suits could “include economic damages, solatium, pain and suffering, and punitive damages.” Flatow Amendment § 589. Had Congress been concerned that this established procedure was in conflict with the Supreme Court’s recently-articulated constraints on punitive damage awards, it could easily have easily imposed statutory protections against excessive awards in § 1605A by, inter alia, directing punitive sanctions to take the form of treble damages — as it often has — or instructing that any punitive damage award must be consistent with the guideposts articulated by the Supreme Court in Gore and its progeny. Instead, Congress chose to once again permit an *25 award of punitive damages in state-sponsored terrorism suits by employing the very same language that it had used in the Flatow Amendment. See 28 U.S.C. § 1605A (“[D]amages may include economic damages, solatium, pain and suffering, and punitive damages.”). This choice of language in § 1605A is a clear indication that Congress sought to return FSIA proceedings — at least with respect to punitive damages — to the period prior to the Cicippio-Puleo decision, when courts generally adhered to the Flatow Method.
Indeed, the presumption that Congress acted with knowledge of the
Flatow
framework is even stronger here, as there is no question that, in passing the NDAA, it was made aware of the history of punitive damages in terrorism-related FSIA cases. This Court has previously observed that when considering the 2008 Amendments, members of Congress were provided with a Congressional Research Service report informing them that, to date, judgments totaling nearly $10 billion had accumulated against Iran and its instrumentalities for involvement in terrorist atrocities.
In re Terrorism Litig.,
c. Terrorism-Related FSIA Cases Involve Unique Circumstances
Finally, beyond the distinguishable legal contexts in which recent Supreme Court jurisprudence arises and the legislative history of the NDAA, there are important policy justifications for adhering to the
Flatow
Method. Terrorism, along with atrocities such as genocide, occupies a unique place in the pantheon of human conduct as an activity devoid of value that observes no respect for life and no hint of compassion. It is an “insidious and murderous evil,”
In re Terrorism Litig.,
By contrast, the Supreme Court in
Exxon
addressed excessive punitive sanctions out of concern that such awards “exceedf ] the bounds justified by the punitive damages goal of deterring reckless (or worse) behavior.”
Hi «
For all the reasons set forth above, the Court holds that the Flatow Method for the calculation of punitive damage awards in FSIA cases should continue to govern cаses arising from the atrocities of state-sponsored terrorism.
III. APPLICATION
Having determined that the Flatow Method remains in force under § 1605A, the Court now turns to the application of this established procedure to calculate punitive damages in this case. As set forth above, see supra Section II.A, this process requires the Court to identify two numbers: the annual amount of money provided by defendants in support of international terrorism, and an appropriate multiplier. As to the former input, plaintiffs make no attempt to provide any new evidence concerning defendants’ support for terrorism, and instead point the Court to the “typically adopted ... figure[ ] of $100 million in annual expenditures” found in earlier cases. Ps.’ Br. at 3. Given the lack of new evidence, the Court will take judicial notice of Dr. Clawson’s expert testimony in Heiser II that Iran’s support for terrorism is somewhere between $50 and $150 million annually, and will adopt the mid-range estimate — -$100 million. As to the appropriate multiplier, plaintiffs urge the Court to adhere to its standard choice of 3, id., and the Court sees no reason to abandon this traditional magnitude. Thus, in the interest of deterring future terrorist attacks, and consistent with established procedures, the Court will award $300 million in punitive damages, to be dispersed in proportion to each plaintiffs share of the compensatory award.
IV. CONCLUSION
Punitive damages serve a societal interest in punishing wrongdoers and preventing similar heinous conduct in the future. In recent cases, however, the Supreme Court has recognized that these justifications are often countered — and thus constrained — by other interests, such as an individual’s right to expect consistent and non-excessive punishments (embodied by the Supreme Court’s Due Process jurisprudence), or the Court’s responsibility to fill the gaps in an area of law in which it is the sole authority (embodied by the Exxon decision in the field of maritime law.) These interests, however, are not implicated in the FSIA context, and courts therefore should continue to adhere to methods designed to impose optimal sanctions when faced with actors deliberately undertaking some of the most evil аnd inhuman acts imaginable. The Court thus holds that its *27 established approach to assessing punitive awards in state-sponsored terrorism cases under the FSIA should remain in place, and expresses hope that the sanction it issues today will play a measurable role in changing the conduct of Iran — and other supporters of international terrorism — in the future.
A separate Order and Judgment consistent with these findings shall issue this date.
Notes
. References to "Hamas” are to "Harakat alMuqawama al-Islamiyya, the jihadist Palestinian militia" generally known by that name.
Sisso v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
.
Under the prior state-sponsored terrorism exception, "punitive damages were not available against foreign states.”
Beer I,
. Principles of finality would normally bar a second suit against defendants for the same events. However, when Congress passed the current state-sponsored terrorism exception it also created a provision that permits plaintiffs with existing suits to bring subsequent actions under the new exception.
In re Islamic Republic of Iran Terrorism Litig.,
.
See Beer II,
. Because the Court concludes that the Supreme Court’s punitive damage jurisprudence has no effect on the procedures employed by the FSIA courts, it does not reach the issue of whether the Flatow Method itself would comply with the principles articulated in those recent decisions.
