Plaintiffs Rafi Amergi, Dan Davidovic, Judith Davidovic, Eliezer Davidovic, Ariel Davidovic, Sarah Zweig, and the Estate of Ahuva Amergi (collectively, “the Amergis”) *1353 appeal the dismissal of their complaint against defendants the Palestinian Authority (“PA”) and the Palestine Liberation Organization (“PLO”) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The suit arises from the murder of Ahuva Amergi, an Israeli citizen who was shot and killed as she drove her car in the Gaza Strip in February of 2002. The Amergis claim that Ahuva Amergi was killed in the course of an armed conflict between the defendants and the people and state of Israel, and that the district court therefore had subject matter jurisdiction over the suit pursuant to the Alien Tort Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1350 (“ATS”).
The federal courts of the United States are permitted to recognize a limited set of causes of action for international wrongs under the ATS. Their ability to do so, however, is sharply circumscribed, both by precedent and by prudence. The Amergis urge this Court to recognize their claim under the ATS, but because the act they allege — a single killing by non-state actors purportedly in the course of an armed conflict — fails to meet the Alien Tort Statute’s high bar, we hold that the district court properly dismissed their ATS claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We also hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a common law wrongful death claim, or in severing the Amergis’ claims from that of Moshe Saperstein, a co-plaintiff proceeding under the Federal Terrorism Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2333 (“FTA”). Accordingly, we affirm.
I.
A.
The operative complaint in this case— the Third Amended Complaint — alleges the following basic facts, which we accept as true for the purposes of this appeal.
Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Co.,
According to the complaint, the PA, the PLO, and Arafat “advocated, encouraged, solicited, facilitated, incited, sponsored, organized, planned and executed acts of violence and terrorism against Jewish civilians in Israel, Gaza and the Judea and Samaria regions of the West Bank.” The United States and Israel directed the PA, the PLO, and Arafat to take steps to prevent further terrorist activity, but the defendants refused. In fact, the PA, the PLO, and Arafat encouraged terrorism by giving money to the families of Al Aksa Brigades members who were killed or captured while engaging in terrorist acts against Israel.
Defendant Yaser Mahmud Alkativ was a commander of the Palestinian General Intelligence Services and the Al Aksa Brigades. Alkativ’s responsibilities included recruitment for the PA, the PLO, Arafat, and defendant the Palestinian Preventative Security Services (“PPSS”), and purchasing arms on their behalf for use in terrorist attacks against Israel. Defendant Nizhar D’Hliz was also a member of the A1 Aksa Brigades, and bought arms for the organizations at the direction of Alkativ.
One day in early February 2002, Alkativ informed D’Hliz that he had recruited Muhamad A1 Katzir, a young man who was interested in committing acts of terrorism against Israelis. Alkativ instructed D’Hliz to train Katzir, which he did. Katzir had completed his training by mid-February, *1354 and proceeded to attend a meeting with several members of the Al Aksa Brigades. Defendant Naim Mutzran, also a convicted terrorist, was present. At this meeting, Katzir executed his last will and testament and recorded a video (filmed by Alkativ) in which he described the terrorist acts he was about to commit.
On February 18, 2002, Katzir traveled to the Netzarim road near Kisufim, Israel. He was armed with án AK-47 machine gun and at least one hand grenade, and he had an explosive device strapped to his body. Driving on the road that day was plaintiff Moshe Saperstein, a dual U.S. and Israeli citizen. Saperstein was a veteran of the Yom Kippur War of October 1973, during which he lost his right hand and eye. Driving in another vehicle was Ahuva Amergi, an Israeli citizen and lawyer. She was the wife of plaintiff Rafi Amergi and mother of four year old plaintiff Itzhak Amergi and three year old plaintiff Efraim Amergi.
As their vehicles drove by, Katzir opened fire on both, spraying Bullets at the cars driven by Saperstein and Amergi. Amergi was killed, but Saperstein was only wounded, shot in the left hand. Saperstein managed to strike Katzir with his car, but Katzir escaped serious injury from the blow. Meanwhile, a battalion of. soldiers from the Israel Defense Forces up the road heard the shots and responded. Two Israeli soldiers were killed while coming to the aid of Amergi, but others were able to engage Katzir. Katzir died during the firefight, from the detonation of either his own hand grenade or the explosives which were strapped to his body.
D’Hliz and Mutzran were both captured and convicted in connection with the Amergi murder; they are now serving 36 and 33 years, respectively, in Israeli prison.
B.
We explicate the complex procedural history of this ease in some detail in order to address the issues raised by the appeal. On January 29, 2004, Saperstein and the Estate of Ahuva Amergi sued the PA, the PLO, the PPSS, Arafat, 1 and Alkativ in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Saperstein sued under the Federal Terrorism Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2333 (“FTA”), while the Estate sued under the Alien Tort Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1350 (“ATS”). The plaintiffs sought over $20 million in damages. Two amended complaints followed. 2 When the defendants did not satisfactorily respond to the Second Amended Complaint, the district court granted a default judgment to Saperstein on his FTA claim, but declined to enter default for the Amergis on their ATS claim. 3 The court scheduled the *1355 Saperstein case for trial on damages, and granted the Amergis leave to file a third amended complaint.
The Third Amended Complaint contained three counts: (1) Saperstein’s Federal Terrorism Act claim,
4
(2) the Amergis’ Alien Tort Statute claim, and (3) a common law wrongful death claim brought by the Amergis. Third Amended Complaint at 8-13,
Saperstein v. Palestinian Autk,
No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/BANDSTRA (S.D.Fla. Aug. 11, 2006) (“Third Amended Complaint”). Soon thereafter, the defendants moved to dismiss counts two and three of the Third Amended Complaint, and on December 22, 2006, the district court, in an extensive order, granted the motion.
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-cv-20225-PAS,
In determining whether the conduct alleged by the Amergis was actionable under the ATS, the district court first explained that the complaint was pled primarily as a terrorism case.
Id.
at *2-3, *7. The court ruled that acts of terrorism were not cognizable under the ATS and, therefore, it had no subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to a terrorism theory.
Id.
at *6, *7. Moving next to the Amergis’ theory that the killing violated the Geneva Conventions on the law of war and was cognizable under the Alien Tort Statute as a war crime, the court observed that not every violation of the Geneva Conventions supports ATS jurisdiction.
Id.
at *8. Moreover, the district court concluded, extending the ATS to cover this act, or
any
violation of the Geneva Conventions, would dramatically expand federal jurisdiction, in violation of the Supreme Court’s direction in
Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain,
In the meantime, the Saperstein case continued on its own. After a jury trial in February of 2007, a magistrate judge entered judgment for Saperstein in the amount of $48 million. An appeal followed, but because the district court never adopted or approved of the magistrate judge’s final judgment for Saperstein, and the parties never consented to the final judgment, we determined that the judgment was not binding. Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 07-11560-CC (11th Cir. July 18, 2007); Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 07-11313-CC (11th Cir. Oct. 17, 2007); see also 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).
The case went back to the district court where, on September 29, 2008, the trial court elected to sever the Amergis’ case from Saperstein’s case.
Saperstein v. Palestinian Autk,
No. 04-20225-CIV,
The Amergis timely appealed.
II.
“A district court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) is a question of law we review
de novo.” Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Co., 578.
F.3d 1252, 1260 (11th Cir.2009) (citing
McElmurray v. Consol. Gov’t of Augusta-Richmond County,
III.
A.
The Alien Tort Statute
5
was initially passed at the beginning of the Republic in 1789, and with only “minor amendments since that time,”
Sinaltrainal, 578
F.3d at 1261, today provides federal jurisdiction over a limited class of international wrongs: “The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1350. “Federal subject matter jurisdiction exists for an ATS claim when ... three elements are satisfied: (1) an alien (2) sues for a tort (3) committed in violation of the law of nations.”
Sinaltrainal, 578
F.3d at 1261. While the text of the statute itself makes reference only to jurisdiction,
see Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain,
The Supreme Court definitively addressed the scope of the ATS recently in
Sosa.
In giving content to the statute’s enigmatic language, the Court cited evidence that “Congress intended the ATS to furnish jurisdiction for a relatively modest set of actions alleging violations of the law of nations.”
Sosa,
Nonetheless, in deference to two centuries of continued development in international law,
Sosa
observed that federal
*1357
courts may also recognize torts beyond the paradigmatic three contemplated by the first Congress.
Id.
at 724-25,
Because of
Sosa’s
deliberate approach, and the Supreme Court’s admonition that only a limited band of cases may fall within the ambit of the statute, we proceed in this arena with “great caution when considering new causes of action,” and we open the door to only “a narrow class of international norms recognized today.”
Aldana v. Del Monte Fresh Produce, N.A, Inc.,
As the Supreme Court recognized in
Sosa,
a federal court’s assessment of whether an alleged wrong is actionable under the ATS is also bound up with the court’s important gatekeeping function. “[T]he determination whether a norm is sufficiently definite to support a cause of action should (and, indeed, inevitably must) involve an element of judgment about the practical consequences of making that cause available to litigants in the federal courts.”
Sosa,
B.
Against this legal backdrop, we examine the legal theories and facts offered by the Amergis in support of subject matter jurisdiction. But before doing so, we begin with what the Amergis have neither propounded as a legal theory nor presented as facts to the district court. For one thing, the Amergis asserted, for the first time during oral argument, that the actions of the defendants amounted to attempted genocide. Notably, however, they did not make in their complaint or in any of their other pleadings any sort of genocide argument, or any claim of ethnic cleansing, or any assertion that a group of Israelis, or Jews, had been targeted for removal or relocation. Nor have they presented any facts in support of this new claim.
In addition, the Amergis have not asserted that there was any state action involved in the single act of alleged mur
*1358
der. Moreover, they have not claimed torture, nor summary execution, nor multiple killings, nor multiple acts of rape, nor any other distinct war crimes. We cannot reach out and consider claims raised for the first time at oral argument, and notably without any factual foundation or even the barest averment in any complaint.
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Swann,
We turn, then, to the two legal theories on which the Amergis have traveled in this case. The first, which is embodied in the Third Amended Complaint, essentially propounds a terrorism theory. This theory posits that the district court had jurisdiction under the Mien Tort Statute over the acts alleged because they were “acts of international terrorism, as defined in federal law.” The district court rejected this theory,
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-cv-20225-PAS,
The Amergis’ second and only remaining legal theory is that a killing by private actors in the course of an armed conflict is enough to give rise to subject matter jurisdiction under the ATS, at least under the facts of this case. Again, while they concede that there is no state action, they argue nevertheless that the murder of Ahuva Amergi by the PA and the PLO is sufficiently egregious to constitute a war crime, thus conferring jurisdiction under the statute. They argued this point before the district court, and the district court squarely rejected this theory.
Saperstein,
The first problem that the Amergis face in this appeal is that the pleadings and the record do not evince any support for the theory that the single killing occurred during the course of an armed conflict. There is virtually nothing in the Third Amended Complaint that pleads the existence of an ongoing armed conflict.
6
The Third Amended Complaint does not explain whether the conflict was a war, how long it had gone on, who was fighting, what they were fighting for, how the conflict had evolved, or how the tort at issue fit into the larger picture. Quite simply, the Third Amended Complaint fails to establish subject matter jurisdiction under the ATS.
See Sinaltrainal,
Apparently recognizing the insufficiency of their complaint and the empty evidentiary record, the Amergis urge us to consider as extrinsic facts in support of their theory a series of concessions made by the defense before the district court.
See, e.g.,
Defendants Memorandum of Law in Support of Their Motion Pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b) To Dismiss The Second Amended Complaint at 3,
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/BANDSTRA (S.D.Fla. July 13, 2004)
8
(describing in some detail their view of “the intense ongoing armed conflict that was occurring in February 2002 between Israeli and militant Palestinian forces in the Gaza Strip and elsewhere in the occupied Palestinian territories”); Memorandum of the PA and PLO in Support of Their Motion to Dismiss Counts 2 and 3 of the Third Amended Complaint at 6,
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/MCALILEY (S.D.Fla. Aug. 31, 2006) (referring to “the illegality of the decades long Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory”). While it may be true that litigants are sometimes held to concessions or admissions of fact they make before a district court,
see N. Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Chatham County, Ga.,
C.
At the defendants’ behest, Muhamad Al Katzir shot Ahuva Amergi and Moshe Saperstein, unarmed civilians driving on a public highway, in a discrete violent incident. Utterly reprehensible as this act was, and notwithstanding the universal condemnation of such acts by all civilized nations, the norm allegedly violated here is, at its core, murder, and a single act of murder at that. The Supreme Court has directed us to compare any proposed cause of action under the ATS to the three torts contemplated at the time of its passage— offenses against ambassadors, violations of safe conduct, and piracy.
Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain,
For one, the violent crime here was not committed by a state, or in concert with a state.
See Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Co.,
We are aware of no case that holds, or even suggests, that a single murder committed by private actors in the course of an armed conflict gives rise to subject matter jurisdiction under the ATS. In
Sosa,
the defendant was a man who, acting at the direction of American government officials, “abducted [the plaintiff] from his house, held him overnight in a motel, and brought him by private plane to El Paso, Texas, where he was arrested by federal officers.”
Nor can the Amergis find support for their theory in a pair of cases from this Circuit. In
Aldana v. Del Monte Fresh Produce, N.A., Inc.,
In
Sinaltrainal,
we considered allegations of “systematic intimidation, kidnapping, detention, torture, and murder of Colombian trade unionists at the hands of paramilitary forces.”
The Amergis urge a reading of Sinaltrainal by which a murder that was “committed in the course of a civil war” must give rise to ATS jurisdiction, but we are not persuaded. While we did state in dicta that “the war crimes exception applies ... to claims of non-state torture that were perpetrated in the course of hostilities,” id., the Court in Sinaltrainal did not confront any such situation, because there the civil war provided only “the background” for the killings. So the Sinaltrainal Court did not have to consider the implications of the holding that the Amergis urge on this Court now.
■We further observe that the Amergis’ broad reading of Sinaltrainal is contradicted by dicta appearing elsewhere in the opinion. A panel of this Court said that,
under the ATS, the plaintiffs need not plead state action for claims of torture and murder perpetrated in the course of war crimes. Some acts, such as torture and murder committed in the course of war crimes, violate the law of nations regardless of whether the perpetrator acted under color of law of a foreign nation or only as a private individual.
Id.
at 1266-67 (citations and footnote omitted). This passage would require that murder or torture be committed or perpetrated “in the course of war crimes.” In other words, the dicta suggest the need for a war crime independent of the murder or torture at issue, even if that single act of murder or torture would itself constitute a war crime.
Cf. Aldana,
Similarly, the Amergis’ legal theory finds no support in a trio of paradigmatic pre-Sosa ATS cases. In
Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic,
Moreover, this case differs significantly from cases in which the ATS has provided subject matter jurisdiction. In
Kadic v. Karadzic,
And in
Filartiga v. Pena-Irala,
We reach this conclusion with full awareness that the case law, including
Filartiga
and
Kadic,
urges us to consider, among other things, any international treaty obligations governing the conduct at issue. Because the Amergis assert that the defendants have violated the laws of war, we consult the four Geneva Conventions, in which “the law of war was codified.”
Kadic,
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which is also common to all four Conventions (“Common Article 3”), governs this conflict,
see id.
at 243 (noting that Common Article 3 “binds parties to internal conflicts regardless of whether they are recognized nations or roving hordes of insurgents”);
cf. Harridan v. Rumsfeld,
There is more murder in the world than genocide. We state this unremarkable proposition because “the determination whether a norm is sufficiently definite to support a cause of action should (and, indeed, inevitably must) involve an element of judgment about the practical consequences of making that cause available to litigants in the federal courts.”
Id.
at 732-33,
If it were enough to allege under the ATS a single murder committed by private actors in the course of an armed conflict, our courts would be open to effectively every incident of violence in every unstable region of the world.
See Sinaltrainal,
The Amergis argue nevertheless that personal jurisdiction provides the necessary “limiting principle.”
See Tel-Oren,
Yet we do not consider merely the effects of asserting jurisdiction on the federal courts; we consider as well the effects of such a holding on U.S. foreign policy. “[T]he potential implications for the foreign relations of the United States of recognizing such causes should make courts particularly wary of impinging on the discretion of the Legislative and Executive Branches in managing foreign affairs.”
Sosa,
Were we to assert subject matter jurisdiction in this case and on this barren record, the “collateral consequences,”
see id.
at 727,
We do not point out these collateral concerns to say that the federal courts should simply decline to hear cases involving politically sensitive matters of international law.
See Baker v.
Carr, 369 U.S.
*1365
186, 211,
We emphasize the limited nature of this holding, which derives in large part from the peculiar manner in which this case was framed for judicial review. As discussed above, the Amergis in the Third Amended Complaint put forth a terrorism theory, but have not advanced this theory on appeal. Moreover, the Amergis did not allege state action, genocide, ethnic cleansing, multiple war crimes, mass killings or rapes, nor summary execution. We therefore do not consider whether, under such theories, jurisdiction would be appropriate under the ATS.
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Swann,
We agree with the Second Circuit that “free[ing] all people from brutal violence” is indeed an “ageless dream.”
Filartiga,
IV.
The Amergis also appeal a pair of matters of case administration. They assert first that it was an abuse of discretion for the district court to have declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over their common law wrongful death claim. They say next that it was an abuse of discretion for the district court, after dismissing counts two and three of the Third Amended Complaint, to sever their case from that of Moshe Saperstein. A district court does not abuse its discretion when it “has a range of choices and the court’s choice does not constitute a clear error of judgment,”
Vanderberg v. Donaldson,
A.
After the district court dismissed the Amergis’ ATS claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, it dismissed the common law wrongful death claim as well: “Having found that the Court does not have original jurisdiction under the ATS over Count 2, there is no basis to assert pendant jurisdiction over the common law claims in Count 3.” Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04-cv-20225-PAS, 2006 *1366 WL 3804718, *9 (S.D.Fla. Dec. 22, 2006) (citation omitted). The Amergis moved for reconsideration, but the district court denied the motion, “given the extraordinary inconvenience and expenditure of judicial resources” involved in hearing the Israeli law wrongful death claim. Order Denying Motion for Reconsideration and Directing Clerk to Sever Claims at 2-3, Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/O’SULLIVAN (S.D. Fla. June 11, 2009) (“Order Denying Motion for Reconsideration”). The Amergis now assert that this was a clear error of judgment, because the district court should have heard the Amergis’ common law claim alongside Saperstein’s federal claim.
“The application of supplemental jurisdiction is statutorily controlled by 28 U.S.C. § 1367,”
Palmer v. Hosp. Auth. of Randolph County,
in any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution.
28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). This section “defines the permissible boundaries for the exercise of supplemental jurisdiction; that is, it delineates the
power
of the federal courts to hear supplemental claims and claims against supplemental parties.”
Palmer,
The statute also permits the district courts to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction:
The district courts may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim under subsection (a) if—
(1) the claim raises a novel or complex issue of State law,
(2) the claim substantially predominates over the claim or claims over which the district court has original jurisdiction,
(3) the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction, or
(4) in exceptional circumstances, there are other compelling reasons for declining jurisdiction.
28 U.S.C. § 1367(c). This section “describes the occasions on which a federal court may exercise its
discretion
not to hear a supplemental claim or admit a supplemental party, despite the
power
of the court to hear such a claim.”
Palmer,
The district court specifically noted the “extraordinary inconvenience and expenditure of judicial resources” associated with trying the case in United States federal court. Order Denying Motion for Reconsideration at 2-3. Further underscoring the exceptional nature of these circumstances, the district court noted that the Amergis could obtain satisfaction in Israeli courts should the court decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction.
Id.
at 5. This Court is permitted to consider inconvenience, expense, and fairness to the parties under
Palmer/Gibbs, see Palmer,
B.
At a hearing before the district court on the motion to dismiss the Third Amended Complaint, the Amergis suggested orally that the court sever the claims brought by the Amergis and by Saperstein pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 21. The district court did so in its Omnibus Order.
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth,
No. 04-20225-CIV,
Because the district court did not commit a clear error of judgment, it did not abuse its considerable discretion in severing this case. Fed.R.Civ.P. 21 reads as follows: “Misjoinder of parties is not a ground for dismissing an action. On motion or on its own, the court may at any time, on just terms, add or drop a party. The court may also sever any claim against a party.” At the time of the Amergis’ suggestion that the district court sever, the case had become something of a nightmare.
Cf.
Order Denying Motion for Reconsideration at 2 (“Procedurally, this case has been an example of Murphy’s Law — if it could go wrong, it has.”). The presence of Saperstein, the Saperstein family, and the Amergis had caused numerous problems. In the first place, they traveled under different legal theories — the Sapersteins under the FTA and the Amergis under the ATS and Israeli common law. Moreover, at one point in this protracted litigation, the district court ordered default for Saperstein and invited the Amergis to file a third amended complaint. Saperstein, without permission, joined in that Third Amended Complaint, which created still further difficulties for the district court.
See Saperstein,
The district court plainly had sound administrative reasons to try to simplify a case that was becoming increasingly unmanageable. The court had a range of choices, and it was no abuse of discretion to sever the claims so that Saperstein could proceed to trial on his FTA claim and that the Amergis could take an immediate appeal for the dismissal of their claims.
See Rice v. Sunrise Express, Inc.,
*1368 V.
Because the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the Amergis’ ATS claim, it did not err in dismissing count two of the Third Amended Complaint. Moreover, it did not abuse its discretion in declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the common law claim, nor in severing the case, as suggested by the Amergis. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Arafat died on November 11, 2004. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiffs moved to substitute Mahmoud Abbas, his replacement at the PA, and the Estate of Arafat as defendants. The district court granted the motion on March 23, 2005.
. The amended complaints added a number of parties, including the families of Amergi and Saperstein as plaintiffs, and D’Hliz and Mutzran as defendants. However, all plaintiffs later served notice on the district court of their voluntary dismissal of the Palestinian Preventative Security Services and all of the individual defendants (Abbas, Alkativ, D’Hliz, Mutzran, and the Estate of Arafat) from the action. The district court also dismissed the Saperstein family from the action.
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-cv-20225-PAS,
. The defendants had moved to dismiss the Second Amended Complaint, but their motion was stricken by the district court because the attorneys who filed it had not been admitted to the district court. The defendants did not respond, and the clerk entered default. The court then granted the defense application for its lawyers to appear pro hoc vice, but denied *1355 the defense’s subsequent motions to set aside the entry of default and to resubmit its motion to dismiss. The district court also denied the plaintiffs' motion for a default judgment. .The plaintiffs renewed their motion for default judgment, which the district court ultimately granted as to Saperstein but denied as to the Amergis.
. The court had never given leave to Saperstein to join in the Third Amended Complaint, and accordingly later struck count one of the Third Amended Complaint.
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-20225-CIV,
. "The statute is also known as the Alien Tort Claims Act (ATCA), and the Alien Tort Act (ATA).”
Sinaltrainal v. Coca-Cola Co.,
. The complaint four times describes the activities that proceeded the Amergi killing. First, it alleges that arms purchased for the defendants by Alkativ "were used by young Palestinian operatives for acts of terror against Israel and its inhabitants.” Third Amended Complaint ¶ 4. Second, the complaint says that the defendants "advocated, encouraged, solicited, facilitated, incited, sponsored, organized, planned and executed acts of violence and terrorism against Jewish civilians in Israel, Gaza and the Judea and Samaria regions of the West Bank.” Id. ¶ 6. Third, the defendants are alleged to have
granted financial support to the families of members of the Al Aksa Brigades who had been captured or killed while carrying out acts of terrorist violence against Jewish civilians in Israel, Gaza and the Judea and Samaria regions of the West Bank, thereby providing the Al Aksa Brigades and its members with strong financial incentive to continue to carry out violence and terrorism against such victims.
Id. ¶ 9. Fourth, and finally, the defendants are alleged to have "continuously advocated, encouraged, solicited, facilitated and incited the use of violence and terrorism against Jewish civilians in Israel, Gaza and the Judea and Samaria regions of the West Bank.” Id. ¶ 11. These scattered passages give little sense of the nature of any controversy.
. The record in this case reveals that the defendants have mounted a factual attack. See Defendants' Memorandum of Law in Support of Their Motion Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b) To Dismiss The Second Amended Complaint at 3, Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/BANDSTRA (S.D.Fla. July 13, 2004) (asking the district court to consider "matters outside the pleadings ... for their bearing on plaintiffs[’] claims of subject matter jurisdiction which defendants dispute on factual and legal grounds.”); id. (describing their view of "the belligerent occupation of the Palestinian territories by Israel”); Memorandum of the PA and PLO in Support of Their Motion to Dismiss Counts 2 and 3 of the Third Amended Complaint at 6, Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/MCALILEY (S.D.Fla. Aug. 31, 2006) (further describing their views of the conflict). These arguments go well beyond a facial attack on subject matter jurisdiction.
. The district court struck the motion to dismiss the Second Amended Complaint because the lawyers representing the defendants were never admitted to the district court. Order Striking Defendants' Rule 12(b) Motion to Dismiss at 1, Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/BANDSTRA (S.D.Fla. July 20, 2004). However, in the memorandum in support of their motion to dismiss the Third Amended Complaint, the defendants "respectfully incorporate[d] by reference the facts contained in their prior submissions in this case including the supporting memorandum and exhibits on their motion to dismiss the second amended complaint.” Memorandum of the PA and PLO in Support of Their Motion to Dismiss Counts 2 and 3 of the Third Amended Complaint at 3, Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04-20225-CIV-SEITZ/MCALILEY (S.D.Fla. Aug. 31, 2006).
. “[S]eparate concurring statements of Judge Edwards, Judge Bork, and Senior Judge
*1362
Robb[] indicat[ed] different reasons” for the ruling.
Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic,
. We cite only the first Geneva Convention because Article 3 is common to all four.
. Of course, neither
Sosa
nor
Aldana
addressed the Geneva Conventions, so it cannot be said that either held that some violations of the Geneva Conventions do not give rise to ATS jurisdiction.
See United States v. Seher,
. Reversal is not merited on account of the Amergis' appeal of a discovery matter, either.
*1368
During discovery in advance of his trial on damages, Moshe Saperstein served requests for admissions on the defendants. He requested that the admissions, to which the defendants never responded, be admitted into the record, but the district court denied the request.
Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth.,
No. 04-20225-CIV,
