MEMORANDUM OPINION
On the night of June 25, 1996, a tanker truck crept quietly along the streets of Dhahran, coming to rest alongside a fence surrounding the Khobar Towers complex, a residential facility housing United States Air Force personnel stationed in Saudi Arabia. A few minutes later, the truck exploded in a massive fireball that was, at the time, the largest non-nuclear explosion ever recorded on Earth. The devastating blast — felt up to twenty miles away— sheared the face off Building 181 of the Khobar Towers complex and left a crater more than eighty-five feet wide and thirty-five feet deep. The bombing killed nineteen U.S. military personnel and wounded more than 100. Subsequent investigations revealed that members of Hezbollah carried out the attack.
Four years after the bombing, plaintiffs — who are former service members injured in the attack, various family members, and the estates of those killed— brought suit under the “state-sponsored terrorism” exception to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), then codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7). Plaintiffs alleged that the Islamic Republic of Iran (“Iran”), the Iranian Ministry of Information and Security (“MOIS”), and the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (“IRG”) provided material support and assistance to Hezbollah in carrying out the heinous attack. Following Iran’s failure to appear and plaintiffs’ presentation of evidence to substantiate their claims, the Court found that “the Khobar Towers bombing was planned, funded, and sponsored by senior leadership in the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran; the IRGC had the responsibility and worked with Saudi Hizbollah to execute the plan; and the MOIS participated in the planning and funding of the attack.”
Heiser v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
A few years later, Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (“NDAA” or the “2008 Amendments”), which replaced § 1605(a)(7) with a new state-sponsored terrorism exception codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605A, permitted recovery of punitive damages, and added a new provision concerning the enforcement of judgments. Pub.L. No. 110-181, § 1083, 122 Stat. 3, 338-44 (2008). Invoking the NDAA’s procedures for retroactive application, in 2009 the Court entered an amended judgment, holding defendants jointly and severally liable for an additional $36 million in compensatory damages and $300 million in punitive damages.
Heiser v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
Following entry of final judgment, plaintiffs began their journey down the often-frustrating and always-arduous path shared by countless victims of state-spon
*432
sored terrorism attempting to enforce FSIA judgments. On August 10, 2011, this Court ordered Sprint Communications Company LP to turn over $613,587.38 owed to the Telecommunication Infrastructure Company of Iran.
Heiser v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
The matter before the Court today requires exploration of two attempts by Congress to aid these victims: Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 § 201 (“TRIA”), and FSIA § 1610(g). In accordance with these statutes, plaintiffs ultimately seek the turnover of funds held in various blocked accounts at Wells Fargo, N.A., and Bank of America, N.A. (collectively, “the Banks”). The Banks respond in two ways: first, the Banks argue that the TRIA and FSIA require that the terrorist party — ■ Iran — have an “ownership interest” in the blocked funds in order for them to be subject to execution; second, for those accounts in which Iran does have an ownership interest, the Banks argue that they should be permitted to file an interpleader complaint to account for potential third-party interests in the blocked funds. The Court first reviews the regime of legal and regulatory provisions governing execution of FSIA judgments, and then turns to the parties’ dispute.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory and Regulatory Framework
1. Iran-Specific Regulations
Relations between the United States and Iran deteriorated following the 1979 revolution in which Iran’s monarchy was displaced by an Islamic republic, ruled by the Ayatollahs, that remains in power today. Following the regime change and fueled by the Iran hostage crisis, President Carter — exercising the authority granted to him under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq. — blocked the flow of assets between the United States and Iran, and seized Iranian property located within the United States. Executive Order 12170, 44 Fed.Reg. 65,729 (Nov. 14, 1979). Over the next two years, Presidents Carter and Reagan issued numerous Executive Orders seizing additional assets, while the Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) — a component of the Department of the Treasury that administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions— promulgated regulations concerning transactions between persons in the United States and Iran. In 1981, the United States and Iran reached an agreement, known as the Algiers Accords, which led to the release of the hostages and the unfreezing of most Iranian assets. Over the following decades, sanctions regimes instituted by Executive Orders and rules promulgated by OFAC evolved into the complex web of regulations governing Iranian assets in the United States, as well as transactions with Iran. 3
*433
Today, the basic framework for the treatment of Iranian property and trade with Iran is set forth in two complementary sets of provisions promulgated by OFAC that generally bar all transactions either with Iran or involving Iranian interests and then carve out limited exceptions to that embargo. The first, known as the Iranian Assets Control Regulations (“IACR”) and codified at 31 C.F.R. Part 535, was implemented in 1980 during the Iran Hostage Crisis, 45 Fed.Reg. 24,432 (Apr. 9, 1980), and “broadly prohibits unauthorized transactions involving property in which Iran has any interest,” while granting specific licenses for certain transactions.
Flatow v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
B. Procedural History
After securing judgment against defendants and properly serving them with copies of that judgment as required under the FSIA, see Order, May 10, 2010, ECF No. 158, plaintiffs issued writs of attachment to garnishees Bank of America, N.A., and Wells Fargo, N.A., asking, inter alia, whether each company was indebted to defendants.
Bank of America answered its writ on July 19, 2011. Answer to Writ of Garnishment, ECF No. 191. Bank of America responded that it holds the proceeds of various Iranian-related transactions that it blocked pursuant to OFAC regulations. Specifically, Bank of America holds the following blocked asset accounts:
Amount_Iranian Entity(ies)_Type of Blocked Account
$34,453.88_Iran Marine and Industrial_Deposit Account
$11,717.00_Sedlran Drilling Company_Deposit Account
$ 5,939.97_Bank Sepah_EFT_
$ 9,721.85_Iran Air & Melli Bank Pic UK_Check Proceeds
$38,469.57_Bank Melli Iran_EFT_
Bank of America contests the turnover of only the two blocked Electronic Funds Transfer (“EFT”) accounts in its possession. These are the accounts involving Bank Sepah and Bank Melli Iran (bolded above). The remaining three accounts are uncontested and subject to the Banks’ motion to file an interpleader complaint.
Wells Fargo answered its writ on September 8, 2011. Answer to Writ of Garnishment, ECF No. 201. Wells Fargo also responded that it holds the proceeds of various Iranian-related transactions that it blocked pursuant to OFAC regulations. Specifically, Wells Fargo holds the following blocked asset accounts:
Amount_Iranian Entity(ies)_Type of Blocked Account
$207,873.00_Iranian Navy_Deposit Account
*434 $ 20,000.00_Bank Saderat Iran_EFT
$ 50,000.00_Bank Mellat, Korea_EFT
$ 13,000.00_Bank Mellat, London_EFT
$ 71,673.70_Bank Mellat Iran_EFT
$ 11,907.00_Bank Saderat Iran_EFT
$7 4,850.44_Bank Mellat_EFT
$ 6,500.00_Bank Saderat Iran_EFT
$ 34,298.81_Bank Saderat Iran_EFT
$105,000.00_Export Dev, Bank of Iran_ EFT
$ 6,300.00_Export Dev. Bank of Iran_EFT
$ 5,562.36_Iranian IRG_EFT
$ 10,000.00_Bank Mellat, Turkey_EFT
$ 12,979.07_Khazar Shipping_EFT
Wells Fargo contests the turnover of only nine of the blocked EFT accounts in its possession. These are the accounts involving Bank Mellat, Korea; Bank Mellat, London; Bank Mellat Iran; Bank Saderat Iran; Export Dev. Bank of Iran; and Bank Mellat, Turkey (bolded above). The remaining five accounts are uncontested and subject to the Banks’ motion to file an interpleader complaint.
Throughout this opinion, this Court refers to the eleven blocked accounts that the Banks contest turning over as “the Contested Accounts.” This Court refers to the remaining eight accounts as “the Uncontested Accounts.”
III. ANALYSIS
This Court will first discuss the cross-motions for judgment as a matter of law raised by plaintiffs and the Banks. ECF Nos. 206, 212. Subsequently, this Court will consider the Banks’ Motion for Leave to File Third Party Petition Alleging Claims in the Nature of Interpleader. ECF No. 213.
A. Contested Accounts — Cross-Motions for Judgment as a Matter of Law
Both plaintiffs and the Banks have moved for judgment as a matter of law with respect to turnover of the funds contained in the eleven Contested Accounts. Plaintiffs invoke FSIA § 1610(g) and TRIA § 201(a) as authority to execute on these funds. This Court begins with an overview of attachment and execution provisions of the FSIA and then discusses whether TRIA § 201(a) or FSIA § 1610(g) permit execution on the Contested Accounts.
1. Attachment & Execution under the FSIA
“It is a well-established rule of international law that the public property of a foreign sovereign is immune from legal process without the consent of that sovereign.”
Loomis v. Rogers,
The first difficulty plaintiffs holding judgments against Iran often faced was the limited number of Iranian assets remaining in the United States. Attempting to overcome this shortfall, plaintiffs targeted property in which an Iranian entity— often a financial institution owned or controlled by Iran — had an interest. Though expressly sanctioned by § 1610(b), this strategy was undercut by the Supreme Court’s decision in
First Nat’l City Bank v. Banco Para El Comercio Exterior de Cuba,
which involved a U.S. financial institution’s attempt to collect money owed to it by the Cuban government through the seizure of funds deposited in the institution by a Cuban bank.
The second hurdle facing FSIA plaintiffs involved assets that once belonged to Iran or its agencies but had been seized and retained by the United States. As a legal matter, “assets held within United State Treasury accounts that might otherwise be attributed to Iran are the property of the United States and are therefore exempt from attachment or execution by virtue of the federal government’s sovereign immunity.”
In re Islamic Republic of Terrorism Litig.,
As a matter of foreign policy, the President regards frozen assets as a powerful bargaining chip to induce behavior desirable to the United States; accordingly, allowing private plaintiffs to file civil lawsuits and tap into the frozen assets located in the United States may weak- . en the executive branch’s negotiating position with other countries. For this reason, several U.S. presidents have opposed giving victims access to these funds.
*436
Debra M. Strauss,
Reaching Out to the International Community: Civil Lawsuits as the Common Ground in the Battle against Terrorism,
19 Duke J. Comp. & Int’l L. 807, 322 (2009). The Executive Branch has consistently succeeded in arguing that the FSIA does not waive the United States’ immunity with respect to seized Iranian assets.
See, e.g., Flatow,
Eventually Congress enacted the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (“TRIA”), Pub.L. No. 107-297, 116 Stat. 2322 (2002), “to ‘deal comprehensively with the problem of enforcement of judgments rendered on behalf of victims of terrorism in any court of competent jurisdiction by enabling them to satisfy such judgments through the attachment of blocked assets of terrorist parties.’ ”
Weininger v. Castro,
[notwithstanding any other provision of law, ... in every ease in which a person has obtained a judgment against a terrorist party on a claim based upon an act of terrorism, ... the blocked assets of the terrorist party (including the blocked assets of any agency or instrumentality of that terrorist party) shall be subject to execution or attachment in aid of execution in order to satisfy such judgment to the extent of any compensatory damages for which such terrorist party has been adjudged liable.
§ 201(a). In other words, the TRIA “subjects the assets of state sponsors of terrorism to attachment and execution in satisfaction of judgments under § 1605(a)(7),”
In re Terrorism Litig.,
The TRIA was designed to remedy many of the problems that previously plagued victims of state-sponsored terrorism; in practice, however, it led to very few successes. Victims discovered that, at least with respect to Iran, “very few blocked assets exist.”
In re Terrorism Litig.,
Against this desolate backdrop, Congress enacted the NDAA, which added paragraph (g) to the execution section of the FSIA. This new provision, in its entirety, declares: (g) Property in Certain Actions.-
(1) In general. — Subject to paragraph (3), the property of a foreign state against which a judgment is entered under section 1605A, and the property of an agency or instrumentality of such a state, including property that is a separate juridical entity or is an interest held directly or indirectly in a separate juridical entity, is subject to attachment in aid of execution, and execution, upon that judgment as provided in this section, regardless of—
(A) the level of economic control over the property by the government of the foreign state;
(B) whether the profits of the property go to that government;
*437 (C) the degree to which officials of that government manage the property or otherwise control its daily affairs;
(D) whether that government is the sole beneficiary in interest of the property; or
(E) whether establishing the property as a separate entity would entitle the foreign state to benefits in United States courts while avoiding its obligations.
(2) United states sovereign immunity in applicable.—Any property of a foreign state, or agency or instrumentality of a foreign state, to which paragraph (1) applies shall not be immune from attachment in aid of execution, or execution, upon a judgment entered under section 1605A because the property is regulated by the United States Government by reason of action taken against that foreign state under the [TWEA] or the [IEEPA].
(3) Third-party joint property holders.—Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to supersede the authority of a court to prevent appropriately the impairment of an interest held by a person who is not liable in the action giving rise to a judgment in property subject to attachment in aid of execution, or execution, upon such judgment.
28 U.S.C. § 1610(g). Courts have had little opportunity to explore the full implications of § 1610(g), though at least one court has observed that the NDAA will have a significant impact on plaintiffs’ attempts to enforce FSIA judgments.
See Calderon-Cardona v. Dem. People’s Rep. of Korea,
2. Attachment and Execution on the Contested Accounts
Plaintiffs claim that they have met all of the elements necessary to satisfy both FSIA § 1610(g) and TRIA § 201(a), with satisfaction of either section being sufficient to execute on the Contested Accounts. The Banks respond that both statutes require plaintiffs to show that Iran has an ownership interest in the blocked assets—and Iran has no ownership interest in the Contested Accounts. The Banks concede that Iran has an ownership interest in the Uncontested Accounts. Accordingly, this Court must determine what, if any, ownership interest is required to execute on the Contested Accounts.
a. TRIA § 201(a) Requires an Iranian Ownership Interest
As with any question of statutory interpretation, this Court’s analysis begins with the plain language of the statute.
Jimenez v. Quarterman,
TRIA § 201(a) allows a person holding a judgment against a state-sponsor of terrorism to attach and execute on “the blocked assets of that terrorist party.” The parties agree that the Contested Accounts meet the definition of “blocked assets” provided in TRIA § 201(d)(2). The parties also agree that Iran qualifies as a “terrorist party” under TRIA § 201(d)(4). The issue is whether Congress’ use of the word “of’ requires plaintiff to prove that *438 Iran has an ownership interest in the Contested Accounts.
In
Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University v. Roche Molecular Systems, Inc.,
— U.S.-,
Applying
Stanford
and interpreting the word “of’ in TRIA § 201(a) to mean “belonging to” makes sense: judgment debtors normally pay for whatever caused the adverse judgment against them — third parties do not usually pick up the tab. Additionally, the common law historically provided that “[t]he lien of a judgment attaches to the precise interest or estate which the judgment debtor has actually and effectively in the property, and only to such interest.” 50 C.J.S. Judgments § 787 (2012);
see also U.S. v. Rodgers,
Unwilling to concede defeat on a plain language analysis, plaintiffs seek refuge in the expansive definition of “blocked asset” found in TRIA § 201(d)(2):
(2) Blocked asset. — The term ‘blocked asset’ means—
(A) any asset seized or frozen by the United States under section 5(b) of the Trading With the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C.App. 5(b)) or under sections 202 and 203 of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701; 1702); and
(B) Does not include property that—
(i) is subject to a license issued by the United States Government for final payment, transfer or disposition by or to a person subject to the jurisdictions of the United States in connection with a transaction for which the issuance of such license has been specifically required by statute other than the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) or the United Nations Participation Act of 1945 (22 U.S.C. 287 et seq.); or
(ii) in the case of property subject to the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations or the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, or that enjoys similar privileges and immunities under the law of the United States, is being used exclusively for diplomatic or consular purposes.
(emphasis added). Plaintiffs argue that Congress intended the phrase “of that terrorist party” to limit the expansive definition of “blocked asset” in one way — to restrict a judgment creditor to pursuing
*439
only assets blocked under a sanctions scheme targeting
that
terrorist party. In other words, TRIA permits an
Iranian
judgment creditor to attach assets blocked only under the
Iranian
sanctions regulations; simultaneously, TRIA prohibits an Iranian judgment creditor from attaching assets blocked under Cuban, Syrian, or other sanctions regimes. Judge Marrero’s decision in
Hausler v. JPMorgan Chase Bank,
N.A,
overlooks a very basic aspect of the TRIA: The statute is not directed at a single terrorist entity and does not relate to a single set of blocking regulations. The TRIA expressly defines “[t]he term ‘blocked asset’ [to] mean[] ... any asset seized or frozen by the United States under section 5(b) of the Trading With the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C.App. 5(b)) or under sections 202 and 203 of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act....” The phrase “of that terrorist party” provides the necessary, though perhaps perfunctory, instruction that the “blocked assets” available for execution are only those assets blocked pursuant to the particular regulation or administrative action directed at the particular terrorist-party judgment debtor. In other words, the TRIA does not permit a party with a judgment against Iran to execute against funds blocked pursuant to the CACRs, regulations which are, of course, targeted at Cuba.
Id. (citations omitted).
The Banks agree that, as Iran’s judgment creditors under TRIA § 201(a), plaintiffs may execute on only the assets blocked pursuant to the Iranian sanctions regimes and not on assets blocked pursuant to other sanctions regimes. To otherwise interpret the statute would read “that” out of the phrase “blocked assets of that terrorist party.” But plaintiffs go too far in presuming that the scope of the OFAC blocking regulations is coextensive with the scope of attachment authorized by TRIA. Examining OFAC regulations, it is quite apparent that OFAC blocks a much broader category of assets than those “of’ a terrorist party.
OFAC regulations provide the following: No property subject to the jurisdiction of the United States or which is in the possession of or control of persons subject to the jurisdiction of the United States in which on or after the effective date Iran has any interest of any nature whatsoever may be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn or otherwise dealt in except as authorized.
31 C.F.R. § 535.201 (emphasis added). While this language is broad, OFAC regulations go one step further by defining “interest” as “any interest of any nature whatsoever, direct or indirect.” § 535.312. Moreover, “property” includes a laundry list of items such as “money, cheeks, ... obligations ... pledges, liens or other rights in the nature of security ... contracts of any nature whatsoever, and any other property, real, personal, or mixed, tangible or intangible, or interest or interests therein, present, future or contingent.” § 535.311. Applying these regulations literally, OFAC apparently may block a transaction involving an indirect, intangible, future, contingent Iranian interest of any nature whatsoever.
The expansive language OFAC employs to block transactions with Iranian entities stands in stark contrast to the language employed in TRIA § 201(a) where Congress chose to allow execution on only a subset of blocked assets: those “of’ a ter
*440
rorist party. Every word in a statute must be given effect, including the seemingly trivial word “of.”
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd. v. Regal-Beloit Corp.,
— U.S. -,
At first glance, it might appear strange for a sanctions regime to block transfers of assets that a terrorist state — in this case, Iran — did not legally own. Why cast such a broad net? John E. Smith, Associate Director of OF AC’s Office of Policy and Implementation, explains that blocking serves a number of goals: providing the President with leverage to negotiate in resolving foreign policy disputes, depriving Iran of property that it might otherwise use contrary to U.S. interests, preventing Iran from transacting with U.S. persons or the U.S. financial market, limiting the flow of goods and U.S. dollars Iran has available, and making it more difficult for third parties to transact with Iran. Decl. of James Kerr, ECF No. 212-7, Ex. D, ¶ 10.
On the other hand, OFAC blocking regulations implicate a different set of interests than TRIA § 201. Congress intended TRIA as a vehicle to compensate victims of terrorist attacks while also punishing terrorist states by making them pay for their acts. However, under plaintiffs’ interpretation, virtually all blocked assets — regardless of whether Iran has an ownership interest in them — could be used to compensate victims. Such an attachment would actually
reduce
Iran’s liability for the judgments entered against it while imposing a potentially heavy cost on innocent property owners. For example, if a foreign national living and working in a different country attempted to send money to his personal bank account in Iran, this transfer could be blocked and, under plaintiffs’ reading of TRIA, be subject to attachment.
See Calderovr-Cardona,
Because the plain language of the statute cuts against plaintiffs’ interpretation, plaintiffs seek refuge in the traditional cannon of statutory interpretation that remedial statutes are to be liberally construed. See 3 Sutherland Statutory Construction § 60:1 (7th ed.). Justice Scalia describes this cannon as “surely among the prime examples of lego-babble.” Antonin Scalia, Assorted Cannards of Contemporary Legal Analysis, 40 Case W. Res. L.Rev. 581, 581-582 (1990) (“It is so wonderfully indeterminate, as both when it applies and what it achieves, that it can be used, or not used, or half-used, almost ad libitum, depending mostly upon whether its use, or nonuse, or half-use, will assist in reaching the result the court wishes to achieve.). Thankfully, this Court does not have to decide what a liberal interpretation *441 of this statute would mean because the plain meaning of “of’ requires ownership — and plain meaning wins. 3 Sutherland § 60.1 (“The rule of liberal construction does not override other rules where its application ... defeats the evident meaning of an act.”).
The Court also hesitates to interpret TRIA § 201(a) broadly in light of the important role blocked assets play in foreign policy — an area where the Courts have traditionally accorded some weight to the views of the Executive Branch.
See Republic of Austria v. Altmann,
The Government notes that “any judicial application of TRIA has important consequences for the Executive Branch’s implementation of sanctions regimes in the public interest.” ECF No. 230, at 3. Historically, the Executive Branch has viewed blocked assets as important “leverage in working out policy disputes with other countries.... ” Jennifer K. Elsea, Congressional Research Serv., Suits Against Terrorist States by Victims of Terrorism, at 9 (2008), available at http:// www.fas.org/sgp/crs/terror/RL31258.pdf (last accessed August 21, 2012); see also Decl. of James Kerr, ECF No. 212-7, Ex. D, ¶ 10. The Executive Branch also worries that attachment “exposes the United States to the risk of reciprocal actions against U.S. assets by other States.” Elsea, at 9.
Plaintiffs’ sweeping interpretation would effectively — through future attachments and executions — eliminate the President’s ability to use blocked assets as bargaining chips in solving foreign policy disputes. This is especially true as the amount of outstanding judgments against terrorist states greatly exceed the amount of blocked assets.
Compare
U.S. Dep’t of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control,
Terrorist Assets Report Calendar Year 2011,
at 13,
available at
http://www. treasury.gov/resource-eenter/sanctions/ Programs/Documents/tar2011.pdf ($72 million in blocked assets relating to Iran exist)
with Taylor v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
b. FSIA § 1610(g) Requires an Iranian Ownership Interest
In the alternative, plaintiffs argue that they may execute on the Contested accounts under FSIA § 1610(g). Section 1610(g), passed in 2008, contains language *442 very similar to that of TRIA § 201(a). The relevant section provides:
(g) Property in certain actions.—
(1) In general. — Subject to paragraph (3), the property of a foreign state against which a judgment is entered under section 1605A, and the property of an agency or instrumentality of such a state, including property that is a separate juridical entity or is an interest held directly or indirectly in a separate juridical entity, is subject to attachment in aid of execution, and execution, upon that judgment as provided in this section, regardless of—
(A) the level of economic control over the property by the government of the foreign state;
(B) whether the profits of the property go to that government;
(C) the degree to which officials of that government manage the property or otherwise control its daily affairs;
(D) whether that government is the sole beneficiary in interest of the property; or
(E) whether establishing the property as a separate entity would entitle the foreign state to benefits in United States courts while avoiding its obligations.
28 U.S.C. § 1610(g) (emphasis added). Again, the textual issue under § 1610(g) is the same: does the word “of’ require plaintiff to prove that Iran had an ownership interest in the Contested Accounts? For the same textual reasons previously discussed in reference to TRIA § 201(a), the answer remains yes. See Part III. A.2.a. Nonetheless, three unique aspects of § 1610(g) merit separate discussion.
First, the language in § 1610(g)(1) specifically permitting attachment of “an interest held directly or indirectly in a separate juridical entity” is inapplicable here. Congress included this language “to overcome the effect of
Dole Food Co. v. Patrickson,
which held that an entity owned indirectly by a foreign state, through another wholly-owned entity, was not an ‘agency or instrumentality’ of the foreign state.”
Calderon-Cardona,
Second, when this Court first described § 1610(g)’s attachment provisions in 2009, it found that § 1610(g) permitted “attachment or execution with respect to property
belonging to
designated state sponsors of terrorism.”
In re Terrorism Litig.,
*443 Third, plaintiffs argue that § 1610(g)(3) is rendered superfluous by the Banks’ reading of the statute. Section 1610(g)(3) provides the following:
(3) Third-party joint property holders. — Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to supersede the authority of a court to prevent appropriately the impairment of an interest held by a person who is not liable in the action giving rise to a judgment in property subject to attachment in aid of execution, or execution, upon such judgment.
Plaintiffs argue that “if property ‘owned’ only by Iran were subject to attachment, there would be no need for Congress to protect third-party ‘interests.’ ” Pis.’ Reply, ECF No. 220, at 17. This argument, however, fails to account for a number of possible situations. For example, Iran may jointly own property with a number of innocent third-parties who could have joint ownership rights that 1610(g)(3) protects. Or, Iran may wholly own an asset in which an innocent third-party holds a lesser interest — like a right of first refusal — that carries some economic value which 1610(g)(3) protects. Far from being superfluous, 1610(g)(3) provides courts with the important power to protect interests held by third-parties where Iran has some ownership of a property.
3. Iran Does Not Have an Ownership Interest in the Contested Accounts
In light of this Court’s ruling that both “blocked assets of that terrorist party” in TRIA § 201(a) and “property of a foreign state” in FSIA § 1610(g)(1) require plaintiffs to prove some terrorist state ownership in order to attach and execute on property, this Court must do two things: decide what law should be applied to determine whether Iran has an ownership interest, and apply that law to the Contested Accounts.
a. Federal Law Preempts D.C. Law
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69 provides that “[t]he procedure on execution ... must accord with the procedure of the state where the court is located, but a federal statute governs to the extent it applies.” Both parties concede that this Court must follow District of Columbia procedure for execution on both the Contested and Uncontested Accounts. Plaintiffs, however, argue that the substantive basis for their right to execution is found in federal law — specifically, TRIA § 201, FSIA § 1610(g), and OFAC regulations. Pis.’ Reply, ECF 220, at 34 (citing
Heiser III,
The Banks respond that neither the TRIA, FSIA, nor OFAC regulations define whether Iran has an ownership interest Contested Accounts, and that therefore state law must apply. The Banks propose that the substantive District of Columbia law which applies to this case is Uniform Commercial Code Article 4A, as codified in D.C.Code § 28:4A
et seq.
The Banks rely on Second Circuit precedent stating that “[i]n the absence of a superseding federal statute or regulation, state law generally governs the nature of any interests in or rights to property that an entity may have.”
Export-Import Bank of the United States v. Asia Pulp & Paper Co.,
State law must give way to federal law in at least three circumstances: (1)
*444
when Congress expressly preempts state law, (2) when Congress undertakes so-called “field preemption,” and (3) when state law conflicts with federal law.
Arizona v. U.S.,
— U.S.-,
Field preemption forecloses states from regulating an area of law— whether that state law conflicts with federal law or complements federal law.
Arizona v. U.S.,
— U.S.-,
The Supreme Court has emphasized the paramount federal interest that exists in the conduct of our foreign relations. In a recent pronouncement in this area, the Supreme Court stated that “[t]here is, of course, no question that at some point an exercise of state power that touches on foreign relations must yield to the National Government’s policy____”
American Ins. Ass’n v. Garamendi,
TRIA § 201 and FSIA § 1610(g) implicate exclusively federal interests and, therefore, preempt District of Columbia law. These statutes concern property “of’ a foreign sovereign, and not just any foreign sovereign — only those designated as state-sponsors of terror. TRIA § 201(d)(4); FSIA §§ 1610(g)(1), 1605A(h)(6). Designating a country as a state-sponsor of terrorism is a drastic decision that the Executive Branch does not make on a whim; serious political and economic consequences result from this designation. One such consequence is that the “property of’ a designated state-sponsor of terror loses its sovereign immunity and may become subject to attachment and execution. FSIA § 1610(g)(1). The idea that
state
property law definitions of ownership should control the disposition of these assets flies in the face of the dominant
federal
interest in our relations with terrorist states.
Cf. Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council,
Additionally, the National Defense Authorization Act of 2008 (“NDAA”), which created FSIA § 1610(g), shows that Congress intends for the federal government to wholly occupy this field. From 2004 when the D.C. Circuit decided
Cicippio-Puleo
until 2008, the state-sponsored terrorism exception (then codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7)) acted only as a jurisdiction-conferring provision — the substantive causes of action against foreign state-sponsors of terrorism were found in state law.
See Cicippio-Puleo v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
b. Federal Common Law Applies and Iran Does Not Have an Ownership Interest in the Contested Accounts.
Since Congress has preempted District of Columbia law in this area, the Court is left with a puzzling situation: how to determine the level of ownership TRIA § 201(a) and FSIA § 1610(g) require Iran to have in the Contested Accounts. The Government suggests that in this situation, “courts could achieve the desired uniformity through the development of federal common law or its functional equivalent to govern attachment.” Statement of Interest, ECF No. 230, at 13. This Court agrees. The D.C. Circuit has, however, long cautioned that “it is a mistake ... to label actions under the FSIA as ‘federal common law cases, for these actions are based on
statutory
rights.”
Bettis v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
In such cases, this Court “look[s] to Restatements, legal treatises, and state decisional law to find and apply what are generally considered to be the well-established standards of state common law, a method of evaluation which mirrors — but is distinct from — the ‘federal common law1 approach.”
Estate of Doe v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
Comment b to the Restatement (First) of Property § 10 states that “[a] person who has the totality of rights, power, privileges and immunities which constitute complete property in a thing [] is the ‘owner’ of the ‘thing,’ or ‘owns’ the ‘thing.’ ” The Restatement recognizes that the owner’s control is not necessarily absolute:
Ownership despite decrease in interests. The owner may part with many of the rights, powers, privileges and immunities that constitute complete property and his relation to the thing is still termed ownership both in this Restatement and as a matter of popular usage. Thus an owner of an automobile may mortgage it, or have it subjected to a mechanic’s lien, and still properly be said to be the owner. It is characteristic of ownership that upon the termination of any lesser interests, the interests of the owner are thereby automatically increased.
Id. at § 10 cmt. c. OFAC regulations blocked the Contested Accounts because an Iranian bank had a “contingent, future, interest” in the funds. Pis.’ at 33, 36. This description of Iran’s interest in the Contested Accounts could hardly sound less absolute. Common sense — and the Restatement’s definition of ownership— support the finding that Iran’s indefinite, ephemeral interest in the Contested Accounts does not rise to the level that would typically be considered “of,” “belonging to,” or “owned by” Iran.
However, while applying the Restatement’s skeletal definition of ownership may be quite simple, in “finding” the federal common law,
Bettis
was also guided by FSIA § 1606.
Bettis,
The operation of an EFT can appear quite complicated. Fortunately, the Second Circuit has outlined the EFT process:
An EFT is nothing other than an instruction to transfer funds from one account to another. When the originator and the beneficiary each have accounts in the same bank that bank simply debits the originator’s account and credits the beneficiary’s account. When the originator and beneficiary have accounts in different banks, the method for transferring funds depends on whether the banks are members of the same wire transfer consortium. If the banks are in the same consortium, the originator’s bank debits the originator’s account and sends instructions directly to the beneficiary’s bank upon which the beneficiary’s bank credits the beneficiary’s account. If the banks are not in the same consortium — as is often true in international transactions — then the banks must use an intermediary bank. To use an intermediary bank to complete the transfer, the banks must each have an account at the intermediary bank (or at different banks in the same consortium). After the originator directs its bank to commence an EFT, the originator’s bank would instruct the intermediary to begin the transfer of funds. The intermediary bank would then debit the account of the bank where the originator has an account and credit the account of the bank where the beneficiary has an *447 account. The originator’s bank and the beneficiary’s bank would then adjust the accounts of their respective clients.
Shipping Corp. of India Ltd. v. Jaldhi Overseas Pte Ltd.,
Property rights in EFTs are covered under Article 4A of the Uniform Commercial Code, which every state (including the District of Columbia) has adopted and which the Federal Reserve applies to its Federal Reserve Wire Transfer Network through Regulation J.
See
Gary D. Spivey, Annotation,
Effect of Uniform Commercial Code Article kA on Attachment, Garnishment, Forfeiture or Other Third-Party Process Against Funds Transfers,
First, “[a] creditor of the
originator
can levy on the account of the originator in the originator’s bank before the funds transfer is initiated.” U.C.C. Article 4A-502 official cmt. 4 (emphasis added). Once the EFT process has commenced, “[t]he creditor of the originator cannot reach any other funds because no property of the originator is being transferred.”
Id.
This is because, under Article 4A, “title to the funds passed when the originator’s payment order was executed upon transmittal to the intermediary bank.”
Palestine Monetary Authority v. Strachman,
Second, “[a] creditor of the
beneficiary
cannot levy on property of the originator.” U.C.C. Article 4A-502 official cmt. 4 (emphasis added). Additionally, “until the funds transfer is completed by acceptance by the beneficiary’s bank of a payment order for the benefit of the beneficiary, the beneficiary has no property interest in the funds transfer which the beneficiary’s creditor can reach.”
Id.
This is because, under Article 4A, title passes when the beneficiary’s bank accepts the payment order from the intermediary bank.
See Asia Pulp,
Third, a creditor of
the originator or the beneficiary
cannot levy on the property of either while the property is in the possession of an intermediary bank.
Jaldhi
These three situations explain when creditors of either the originator of the EFT or creditors of the intended beneficiary of the EFT may attach funds. However, Iran is neither the originator of the blocked EFTs contained in the Contested Accounts nor the intended beneficiary of these funds. Iran’s “contingent, future, interest” — the reason these accounts were blocked — stems from the fact that an Iranian instrumentality acted as the beneficiary’s bank. Plaintiffs here are creditors *448 of the beneficiary’s bank. Therefore, the issue is whether a creditor of a beneficiary’s bank may attach a midstream EFT held at an intermediary bank. Clearly, a creditor may do no such thing.
Legal title does not pass to the beneficiary’s bank until it accepts the payment order from the intermediary bank.
Asia Pulp,
Moreover, Article 4A contains a “money-back guarantee provision” as “an important protection” for the originator. Article 4A-402 cmt. 2. This is because — if an EFT is not completed — the originator likely continues to have an underlying obligation to pay the beneficiary. U.C.C. Article 4A-402(e) provides that when “an intermediary bank is obliged to refund payment ... but is unable to do so because not permitted by applicable law,” the originator may be “subrogated to the right of the bank that paid the intermediary bank to refund.” In other words, the originator and the originator’s banks have claims to an interrupted EFT and not the beneficiary or the beneficiary’s banks.
Plaintiffs argue that the money-back guarantee cannot apply to blocked accounts because OFAC regulations preclude such a refund from issuing absent a specific OFAC license. Pis.’ Reply at 35. While this may be true, OFAC blocking only inhibits the originator and the originator’s bank from pursuing a refund, it does not vest title in the beneficiary or the beneficiary’s bank. Under Article 4A, property rights do not pass to the beneficiary’s bank until it has accepted the intermediary bank’s payment order. U.C.C. Article 4A-402(c).
Plaintiffs also rely on the one-year statute of repose contained Article 4A. U.C.C. Article 4A-505. This provision extinguishes the right of an originator and an originator’s bank to seek a refund of an incomplete EFT. Again, plaintiffs’ argument fails because the statute of repose — if it applies — only extinguishes an originator’s or an originator’s banks right of refund. That provision does not magically vest property rights forward in the EFT transaction process to the beneficiary or the beneficiary’s bank.
Cf. India Steamship v. Kobil Petroleum Ltd.,
Applying both the Restatement and U.C.C. Article 4A, plaintiffs cannot show that Iran has any ownership interest in the Contested Accounts. Plaintiffs alternatively argue that OFAC regulations contain broad definitions of property that should control. The Banks — correctly— respond that OFAC regulations have nothing to do with defining what constitutes an Iranian ownership interest in property. While OFAC regulations may provide a broad definition of “property” for the purposes of FSIA § 1610(g) and a similarly broad definition of “blocked assets” for the purposes of TRIA § 201(a), plaintiff again mistakenly interprets these broad regulations coextensively with the narrower language requiring the Contested Accounts to be the property “of’ Iran. The Government concurs, stating that “[tjhere is no need — and no justifiable basis — to force OFAC’s regulations into serving a role they were not intended to perform.”
Even if OFAC regulations were ambiguous on the question of ownership, OFAC’s narrower interpretation would ordinarily
*449
be entitled to deference unless “plainly erroneous or inconsistent with regulation.”
See Auer v. Robbins,
Accordingly, the Banks’ motion for judgment as a matter of law is granted and plaintiffs’ motion for judgment as a matter of law is denied as to the Contested Accounts.
B. Uncontested Accounts — Garnishees’ Motion for Interpleader
The Banks move for leave to file a third-party petition alleging claims in the nature of interpleader against parties that the Banks believe may assert an interest in the Uncontested Accounts. Garnishee Banks’ Mot. for Leave to File Third Party Petition, ECF No. 213. Plaintiffs take no position on the Banks’ motion.
Interpleader is a tool which protects a stakeholder — here, the Banks — from multiple liability arising from multiple claims to the same fund.
See Commercial Union Ins. Co. v. U.S.,
Rule 22 is “merely a procedural device; it confers no jurisdiction on the federal courts.”
Morongo Band of Mission Indians v. California State Bd. of Equalization,
IV. CONCLUSION
This Court lamented in its
In re Islamic Republic of Iran Terrorism Litigation
treatise that FSIA terrorism cases often “turn[ ] into a long and [ ] futile quest for justice____”
Nevertheless, this Court is under no illusions that the path ahead will be much easier for victims than it has been in the past. The Uncontested Accounts contain $364,572, which is less than one-tenth of one percent of the approximately $591 million awarded against Iran in this case. This tiny sum is dwarfed by even greater magnitudes when compared to the endless suffering of these victims. “A step in the right direction, to be sure. But a very small one.”
Heiser III,
A separate Order consistent with this opinion shall issue this date.
Notes
. Hezbollah is synonymous with "Hizbollah,” which is merely a "variant transliteration[ ] of the same name.”
Oveissi v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
. In the interest of efficiency because of the number of potential turnover cases related to the
Heiser I
and
Heiser II
judgments, substantial parts of the introduction, background, and procedural history section of this Memorandum Opinion are taken from this Court’s August 10, 2011
Heiser III
opinion.
See
. The Court here only briefly recounts the relevant background to place the current regulatory framework in proper context. For an extensive history of regulations and Executive Orders concerning Iran, see Judge Wexler's excellent summary in
Weinstein v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
.
Accord Levin v. Bank of New York,
. Except, of course, diplomatic assets exempt under TRIA § 201(d)(2)(B)(ii), which have long been treated as sui generis.
. The Uncontested Accounts contain, among other types of accounts, four blocked EFTs. In each of these four EFTs, Iran or its instrumentality functioned as the originator, the originator’s bank, or in some role that is unclear from the record. The Banks concede that Iran has a sufficient ownership interest in these accounts to permit attachment.
