Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CLAUDIA BALCERO GIRALDO, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v. Case No. 1:10-mc-00764 (JDB) DRUMMOND COMPANY INC., et al.,
Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiffs seek to compel the testimony of a third-party, the former President of Colombia Alvaro Uribe ("respondent"), in connection with pending litigation in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. See Giraldo v. Drummond Co. Inc., 7:09-cv-1041 (N.D. Al.). At this Court's rеquest, the United States has submitted a Statement of Interest in this matter and suggests that respondent is immune from testifying to the extent that plaintiffs "seek information (i) relating to acts taken in his official capacity as a government official; or (ii) obtained in his official capаcity as a government official." United States' Statement of Interest ("SOI") [Docket Entry 13] at 1. Plaintiffs primarily argue that they can compel respondent's testimony because they only seek information related to illegal actions, and illegal actions are by definition not official actions. For the reasons set forth below, this Court will deny plaintiffs' motion to compel respondent's testimony.
BACKGROUND
"Plaintiffs are all lawful legal representatives for and . . . beneficiaries of the 113 decedents . . . who were [allegedly] executed by the Juan Andres Alvаrez Front of the Northern *2 Block of the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia ("AUC")." Second Am. Compl. (N.D. Al. No 7:09-cv-1041) at 1-2. In the underlying suit, plaintiffs "bring claims for war crimes, extrajudicial killings and crimes against humanity under the Alien Tort Statute ("ATS") and for extrajudicial killing under the Torture Victim Protection Act ("TVPA"), 28 U.S.C. § 1350," against Drummond Company, Inc., one of its wholly owned subsidiaries, and three of its employees. Id. at 2. In this Court, plaintiffs seek to "compel non-party [respondent] to appear for a deposition." Pls.' Mot. to Compel [Docket Entry 1] at 1.
Specifically, plaintiffs seek to depose former President Uribe regarding his knowledge of and relationship with the AUC and Drummond. Pls.' Resp. to the SOI ("Pls.' Resp.") [Docket Entry 16] at 6. At all relevant times, however, respondent was serving as a government official, either as President of Colombia or as Governor of Antioquia. See id. Primarily, plaintiffs seek to depose him regarding his actions during his presidency, including his alleged "illegal collaboration with and support of the AUC"; "cooperation with illegal drug smuggling"; "use of the Columbian military to assist the AUC[]"; "targeting [of] some of [p]laintiffs' decedents for execution"; and "acceptance of payments from Drummond in exchange for illegal services performed by the Colombian military." Id. Plaintiffs also seek to depose respondent regarding his role, while governor of Antioquia, "in helping to start the [AUC]." Id.; Pls.' Mot. to Compеl. Ex. H, at 3.
Following respondent's refusal to appear at a scheduled deposition, plaintiffs filed a motion with this Court to compel his testimony. The Court in turn requested a Statement of Interest from the United States. The United States "suggests that former President Uribe enjoys residual immunity from this Cоurt's jurisdiction insofar as Plaintiffs seek information (i) relating to acts taken in his official capacity as a government official; or (ii) obtained in his official *3 capacity as a government official." SOI at 1. Although plaintiffs do not contest that this Court should follow the United States' suggestion of immunity, they argue that the information they seek is consistent with the government's suggestion because only lawful acts are official acts, and they only seek testimony related to respondent's "illegal acts," which "are not within official immunity." Pls.' Resp. 1.
DISCUSSION
The Supreme Court has recently explained that foreign official immunity is governed by
common law. See Samantar v. Yousuf,
In this case, the State Department has granted respondent's request for a suggestion of immunity and suggests that former President Uribe enjoys residual immunity as to information relating to acts taken or obtained in his official capacity as a government officiаl. SOI at 1. Plaintiffs do not take issue with this standard for determining respondent's immunity. Rather, they contend that they seek "to depose [respondent] only with respect to events that occurred before he was President or that constitute illegal acts that are not within his official immunity." Pls.' Rеsp. 1. But although plaintiffs seek information "with respect to events that occurred before [respondent] was President," that information still relates to information he received and *4 acts he took in his official capacity as a government official—here, the Governor of Antioquia. Id. Moreover, mere allegations of illegality do not serve to render an action unofficial for purposes of foreign official immunity.
The only issue that plaintiffs specifically claim is unrelated to respondent's presidency is "his role, prior to becoming President, in helping to start the [AUC]." Pls.' Resp. 6. Elsewhere in their submissions to this Court, however, plaintiffs reveal that any alleged conduct related to "the establishment [of the AUC] in Antioquia" occurred during respondent's time "[a]s governor." Pls.' Mot. to Compel. Ex. H, at 3. And, as with all other suggested deposition topics, plaintiffs never claim that such information is unrelated to respondent's service as a government official. Indeed, plaintiffs readily admit that they only seek to depose respondent about "the relationship between him, his gоvernment, and the AUC" because their "claims under the TVPA" require a showing that "the AUC was acting under color of authority of the Colombian government." Pls.' Resp. 9 & n.4.
Plaintiffs further contend that "illegal acts . . . are not within official immunity." Pls.'
Resp. 1. But such a rule would eviscerate the protection of foreign official immunity and would
contravene federal law on foreign official immunity. To be clear, plaintiffs do not argue that
respondent engaged in garden-variety "crimes . . . in violation of his position and not in
pursuance of it." Jimenez v. Aristeguieta,
*5 to depose respondent in order to show that "the AUC was acting under color of authority of the Colombian government." Pls.' Resp. 9, n.4.
The D.C. Circuit has rejected the argument that
jus cogens
violations defeat foreign
official immunity in the context of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act ("FSIA"). Prior to the
Supreme Court's recent ruling that foreign official sovereign immunity is governed by the
common law, many courts, including the D.C. Circuit, had found that foreign official immunity
was govеrned by the FSIA. In Belhas v. Ya'alon, the D.C. Circuit found that the "FSIA contains
no unenumerated exception [to foreign official immunity] for violations of norms."
Not only would such a rule place a strain upon our courts and our diplomatic relations,
but it would also eviscerate any protection that foreign official immunity affords. As Judge
Williams explains in his concurrence in Belhas, a
jus cogens
exception "merges the merits of the
underlying claim with the issue of immunity."
Plaintiffs fail to cite any case that holds that allegations of violations of norms
*7
will defeat foreign official immunity. The D.C. Circuit has previously distinguished several
cases that plaintiffs cite because those courts "held that the defendant was acting outside thе
scope of his authority," unrelated to any violations. Belhas,
Plaintiffs, then, do not currently seek information unrelated to acts taken or obtained in
respondent's official capacity, but to the extent they were to seek such information, plaintiffs may
not depose respondent until they exhaust other reasonably available means for obtaining the
information. As the Supreme Court has counseled with respect to foreign litigants generally,
"American courts . . . should exercise special vigilance to protect foreign litigants from the
danger that unnecessary, or unduly burdensome, discovery may place them in a disadvantageous
position." Societe Nationale Industrielle Aerospatiale v. United States Dist. Court,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, the Court will deny plaintiffs' motion to compel the testimony of former President Uribe. A separate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
/s/ JOHN D. BATES United Statеs District Judge Dated: September 8, 2011
Notes
[1] A norm "is a norm accepted and recognized by the international community of states as a whole as a norm from which no derogation is permitted and which can be modified (continued...)
[1] (...continued)
only by a subsequent norm of general international law having the same character." Belhas v.
Ya'alon,
