ORDER
On Aрril 29, 2010, the plaintiffs filed their complaint alleging a number of federal and state-law claims including wrongful death, crimes against humanity, and torture. Pursuant to Rule 4(m) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, they had 120 days from that date in which to serve all defendants with a summons and a copy of the complaint. When that time ran without any return of service being filed, and without any other action being taken, the Court ordered the plaintiffs to show cause why their complaint should not be dis *1247 missed. In their response, the plaintiffs conceded that they had failed to serve all defendants except Mr. Kagame. They argued that they had indeed served Mr. Kagame pursuant to Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and 12 Okla. Stat. § 2004(C). In its order dated September 2, 2010, the Court found that pursuant to Tenth Circuit authority, it was premature to consider whether service over Mr. Kagame had been effected. By order entered January 26, 2011, the Court gave the plaintiffs additional time to respond to its show cause order and the plaintiffs responded by seeking and obtaining a Clerk’s Entry of Default against Mr. Kagame, and by filing the motion for default judgment (docket entry no. 9) which is now before the Court.
Upon learning of thе Clerk’s Entry of Default, Mr. Kagame appeared for the purpose of opposing the motion for default judgment, moving to strike and set aside the Clerk’s Entry of Default (docket entry no. 19), moving to dismiss the complaint or stay the matter pending action by the United States Department of State (docket entry no. 18), and moving to correct the caption to reflect Mr. Kagame’s status as the recognized president and current head of state of the Republic of Rwanda (docket entry no. 20). In response, the plaintiffs filed their Motion to Strike Defendant’s Pleadings and Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss. Pursuant to LCvR 7.1(c), “[a] response to a motion may not also include a motion ... made by the responding party.” Because the response filed by the plaintiffs violates LCvR 7.1(c)’s proscription against incorporating a motion into a response, said motion shall be stricken from the response and regarded as of no legal consequence. 1 Although the plaintiffs’ response is styled as a response to only Mr. Kagame’s motion to dismiss, it appears also to address his motion to set aside the Clerk’s Entry of Default. In any case, time for response has passed and the Court renders its ruling based upon the submissions properly before it.
Background
As this litigation is yet in its earliest stages and the parties entertain dramatically divergent accounts of important events, the Court is hesitant to attempt even a broad outline of Rwanda’s tragic recent history. According to the complaint, plaintiff Madame Habyarimana is the widow of the deceased president of Rwanda, Juvénal Habyarimana, and plaintiff Madame Ntaryamira is the widow of the deceased president of Burundi, Cyprien Ntaryamira. The plaintiffs sue on their own capacity and on behalf of the estates of their late husbands. They contend that in the early 1990s, Rwandan ethnic Tutsi expatriates formed a guerilla military unit intent on overthrowing the Rwandan government. This unit, the Rwandan Patriotic Army (the “RPA) was led by defendant Paul Kagame, the remaining defendants, according to the plaintiffs, were under his authority. The plaintiffs allege that in early 1994, the defendants planned and executed the assassination of Juvénal Habyarimana and Cyprien Ntaryamira.
It is undisputed that Juvénal Habyarimana and Cyprien Ntaryamira died on April 6, 1994, when the Rwandan Presidential jet airplane in which they were рassengers exploded on its approach to *1248 Kanombe International Airport in Kigali, Rwanda. The plaintiffs allege that upon the direct command of Mr. Kagame, defendants Franck Nziza and Eric Hakizimana fired SAM-16-type surface-to-air missiles at the plane, destroying it in flight. The plaintiffs further allege that the assassination of the Rwandan and Burundian presidents was intended by the defendants to incite Rwanda’s Hutu ethnic majority to undertake “bloody reprisals against the Tutsi community” offering “a veneer of legitimacy for [Mr. Kagame’s] renewal of hostilities and his seizing of State power in Rwanda by criminally violent means.” See Complaint at ¶¶ 4-9.
Mr. Kagame counters that for the past 16 years, the United Nations and numerous governmental bodies have investigated the cause of the plane crash but have failed to reach a conclusion. He argues that the authoritative report on the matter was issued by an “Independent Committee of Experts,” which concluded that “the plane was shot down from Kanombe Military Barracks by elements of the Rwandan Armed Forces which controlled that zone (and not by the RPF).” See Opening Brief in Support of Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction, Foreign Sovereign Immunity, Lаck of Prosecution, and Insufficient Service of Process, or Stay Case; Strike and Set Aside Default; Response in Opposition to Motion for Default Judgment; Amend and Correct Caption; and Request for Judicial Notice Filed by Defendant His Excellency President Paul Kagame (hereafter simply the “Opening Brief’) at p. 6, see also Exhibit 24 to Opening Brief. According to Mr. Kagame, Hutu extremist soldiers are responsible for the plane crash which was instantly seized upon as an excuse for the Hutu majority to perpetrate a genocide against Tutsi and moderate Hutu Rwandans.
Discussion
1. Defendant Paul Kagame is widely recognized to be the current head of state and president of the Republic of Rwanda.
The Court first addresses Mr. Kagame’s request that the Court take judicial notice of the fact that he is the president and current head of state of the Republic of Rwanda. Mr. Kagame offers a copious collection of articles from established news organizations, encyclopedia entries, and documents published and relied upon by the government of the United States, all reflecting the well-established and commonly-known fact that Mr. Kagame is recognized to be the current president of Rwanda. Included among the materials collected by the defendant is what is sworn to be a true and correct copy of the U.S. State Department Bureau of African Affairs’ “Background Note: Rwanda,” published January 3, 2011, which recognizes Paul Kagame to be the duly elected president of Rwanda. See Exhibit 1 to Declaration of Michael S. Cryan, attached as Exhibit E to Opening Brief.
Federal Rule of Evidence 201(b) states: “A judicially noticed fact must be one not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” The defendant’s status as the current president of Rwanda is not disputed by the plaintiffs. The Court takes notice that the defendant is recognized to be the current president and head of state of the Republic of Rwanda. The defendant President Paul Kagame’s motion to correct the caption of this case should, therefore, be granted.
*1249 2. The plaintiffs have failed to establish that they effectively served President Kagame with process.
As discussed in the Court’s January 26, 2011 order, prior to the filing of a motion for default judgment, it is generally improper for a district court to
“sua sponte
consider defects in personal jurisdiction on behalf of parties who may choose to waive the defects or subject themselves to the court’s jurisdiction ...”
Williams v. Life Sav. and Loan,
Although the plaintiffs’ motion for default judgment triggered the Court’s independent obligation to examine its jurisdiction over President Kagame regardless whether he appeared and challenged the plaintiffs purported service of the complaint, President Kagame has now come forward to challenge the Court’s jurisdiction over his person. He asserts that even accepting as true their allegations, including hearsay allegations, the plaintiffs have wholly failed to establish that they effected service upon him while he was present at Oklahoma Christian University in the spring of 2010.
The factual allegations underlying the plaintiffs’ assertion that they effected personal service upon Mr. Kagame are set forth in the affidavit of Professor Carl Peter Erlinder, III, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys herein. See Affidavit of Professor Carl Peter Erlinder, attached as Exhibit 1 to the plaintiffs’ Supplemental Response to the Court’s Show Cause Order. The pertinent facts as recounted by Professor Erlinder are as follows:
1. On May 1, 2010, Professor Erlinder and a licensed process server named Bryan Schubert approached the ticket booth to the auditorium at Oklahoma Christian University about a half hour before Mr. Kagame was scheduled to speak there. Mr. Schubert asked to speak to a person named “Bill,” whom Mr. Schubert had met earlier.
2. Bill brought over the Director of Alumni Relations who was accompanied by a lawyer and Professor Brian Bush, a former Oklahoma City prosecutor.
3. Professor Erlinder and Mr. Schubert were taken along with Professor Brian Bush to a room near the entrance to the auditorium. There Professor Bush read a copy of the complaint for about ten minutes before handing it back to Professor Erlinder or Bryan Schubert.
4. They were joined by a person identifying himself as an agent of the Secret Service detail escorting President Kagame, as well as a person identifying himself as an Oklahoma City police officer assigned to “celebrity security.”
5. Mr. Schubert explained his intent to serve President Kagame with a federal complaint and summons. Mr. Schubert *1250 and Professor Erlinder provided the Secret Service Agent with their identification and a copy of the summons and complaint. The Agent took the papers and left the room for 15-20 minutes.
6. When he returned the Secret Service Agent said he had confirmed that the summons and complaint were lawful and legitimate and that he would deliver the documents to President Kagame’s entourage who were in the building and preparing to enter the auditorium.
7. The Secret Service Agent confirmed that President Kagame was on the premises. Professor Erlinder had seen President Kagame enter the auditorium a few minutes earlier. The Secret Service Agent said that for security reasons, Professor Erlinder and Mr. Schubert could approach members of President Kagame’s entourage, but not President Kagame himself.
8. After another 15-20 minutes had passed, the Secret Service Agent returned without the summons and complaint, and informed Professor Erlinder and Mr. Schubert that President Kagame’s staff was checking on what to do and that someone from the staff would come and speak with them.
9. The Secret Service Agent left and returned again a few minutes later saying he had been told to inform Professor Erlinder and Mr. Schubert that “the Ambassador had told him that no one in Kagame’s party would accept service and that we should send the Summons and complaint to Mr. Kagame’s address.” The ambassador to whom the Secrеt Service Agent referred was the Rwandan Ambassador to the United States, Mr. Kimonyo of Washington, D.C. Mr. Kimonyo is personally known to Professor Erlinder.
10. The Secret Service Agent informed Mr. Schubert and Professor Erlinder that they could wait in the public area and attempt to hand the documents to someone in Mr. Kagame’s party as they passed. Consistent with this suggestion, Professor Erlinder attempted to hand the documents to Mr. Kagame’s driver/staff member near the car waiting for Mr. Kagame to exit the auditorium.
11. Most of the foregoing events were captured on videotape or film by Mr. Schubert.
12. Professor Erlinder was arrested in Rwanda on May 28, 2010. During an interrogation by the Rwandan prosecutor on June 3, 2010, a copy of the complaint filed herein was produced as evidence that Professor Erlinder was guilty of “spreading rumors to destabilize the Rwandan State.”
13. On July 14, 2010, A copy of the complaint was among the documents supplied by the Rwandan government to the registrar of the International Criminal Tribunal of Rwanda as the basis for criminal charges against Professor Erlinder.
14. The Rwandan government has announced that it intends to continue its prosecution of Professor Erlinder for, among other alleged offenses, having published articles on the internet and having filed the complaint herein. Professor Erlinder risks life imprisonment in Rwanda should he again travel to that country.
The plaintiffs contend that the foregoing facts establish that they have achieved service upon Mr. Kagame under both Oklahoma and federal law. They argue first that Oklahoma law requires merely “substantial” compliance, and they have substantially complied with Oklahoma’s statutory service requirements. They argue second that Mr. Kagame had actual knowledge of their action against him as evidenced by his government’s use of the complaint as a basis for the arrest of Professor Erlinder. They also contend that Mr. President Kagame received actual notice of the attempted service while he was physically in the State of Oklahoma. They *1251 argue thirdly that President Kagame actively evaded service, and that because any defects in plaintiffs’ service were caused by his evasion, they are harmless and should be excused in light of his actual notice of the lawsuit filed against him. The Court rejects the plaintiffs’ arguments for the reasons set forth below.
“Before a federal court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant, the procedural requirement of service of summons must be satisfied.”
Omni Capital Int’l, Ltd. v. Rudolf Wolff & Co., Ltd.,
The plaintiffs claim to have served Mr. Kagame by means of personal delivery while he was on the premises of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma. The pertinent provisions of Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require that to constitute effective service, delivery of the summons and complaint to an individual within a judicial district of the United States must be accomplished by “(1) compliance with a method of service prescribed by the law of the state where the district court is located, (2) delivery of the summons to the defendаnt personally, ... or (4) delivery of the summons to an authorized agent of the defendant.” Similarly, Oklahoma law permits service by personal delivery “... by delivering a copy of the summons and of the petition personally or ... by delivering a copy of the summons and of the petition to an agent authorized by appointment or by law to receive service of process.” 12 Okla. Stat. § 2004(C)(l)(c)(l).
A. The plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that they substantially complied with the requirements of service by personal delivery.
The plaintiffs bear the burden of demonstrating that the court has personal jurisdiction over the parties, including valid service of process.
Claus v. Mize,
Clearly the plaintiffs have not shown that they met the requirements of Federal Rule 4(e)(2) or 4(e)(4) because they failed to establish that they delivered a copy of the complaint to President Kagame or to his “authorized agent.” The plaintiffs argue, that they nonetheless have achieved service because they have met the requirements of Rule (4)(e)(l) which requires “compliance with a method of service prescribed by the law of the state where the district court is located.” They contend that they are not required to show that they actually delivered the summons and complaint to Mr. Kagame or his agent because Oklahoma law requires only “substantial compliance” with its service provisions.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court definitively adopted the rule of substantial compliance in
Graff v. Kelly,
The plaintiffs ask the Court to disregard
Graff’s
holding that service by personal delivery is not effective where the summons and complaint are provided to a person not statutorily authorized to receive them. They cite to
Izen v. Catalina,
In Shamblin, the Oklahoma Supreme Court evaluated the validity of a county’s notice of a tax resale. The Court noted that the applicable statute for service by mail required that the notice be sent by certified mail, but did not require that delivery be restriсted to the addressee or that a receipt be returned. The Court did not disagree with the trial court’s conclusion that the county had met the statutory requirements, rather it considered whether despite having complied with the statutory requirements, the county nonetheless failed to obtain service when notice mailed to a wife was delivered to her husband instead. The Court stated:
Service is not subject to invalidation for any departure from the mode prescribed by statute. When it is alleged that there was want of strict compliance with statutory requirements for service, the court must in every case determine whether the found departure offends the standards of due process and thus may be deemed to have deprived a party of its fundamental right to notice.
Shamblin at 1209.
This language was echoed the following year in
Vance v. Federal Nat. Mortg. Ass’n,
Superficially,
Shamblin
and
Vance
appear to be in direct contradiction to
Graff’s
teaching that actual knowledge of a suit is no substitute for substantial compliance with Oklahoma’s notice provisions. The Tenth Circuit, in
Hukill v. Oklahoma Native American Domestic Violence Coalition,
In Hukill, the plaintiff brought suit against her former employers. Before attempting service of process, she contacted the defendants’ lawyer to inquire whether he would accept service on behalf of his clients. The lawyer responded that his clients would not authorize him to do so. Pursuant to the Federal Rules 4(e)(1) and 4(h)(1)(A), the plaintiff elected to serve the defendants in accordance with Oklahoma’s notice provision which permits notice may be accomplished by “mailing a copy of the summons and petition by certified mail, return receipt requested and delivery restricted to the addressee.” 12 Okla. Stat. § 2004(C)(2)(b). The plaintiff mailed summonses to her employers’ address. One of the summonses restricted delivery to the defendants’ registered agent, one did not. The individual who signed both return receipts was not the registered agent. The defendants failed to respond to the complaint and default judgment was entered. The defendants moved to set aside the default judgment on the ground that they *1254 were never properly served. The trial court denied the motion finding, in reliance on Shamblin, that the plaintiff had substantially complied with Oklahoma’s Pleading Code, and that “[m]ore than a reasonable probability exists that defendants had actual notice of the action.” See Hukill at 796. The trial court emphasized that the defendants did not assert that they did not receive the summons and complaint. It also focused on evidence that the defendants were aware of the pendency of the lawsuit as evidenced by their refusal to allow their counsel to accept service.
The Tenth Circuit reversed the trial court. It found that
Shamblin
and
Vance,
with their broad language regarding actual notice, are distinguishable from
Graff
and its progeny. The court reasoned that while
Shamblin
and
Vance
painted in very broad strokes an approach to be taken when a plaintiff fails to strictly comply with a service statute, actually at issue in those cases was “whether, despite technical compliance with the applicable statutory requirements, the service was nonetheless insufficient to satisfy fundamental due process requirements.”
Id.
at 800. The circuit court found that the
Shamblin
line of cases is not applicable where the defendant is not raising a constitutional claim that service is invalid despitе the plaintiffs technical compliance with the applicable statute. Where the defendant maintains, as in
Hukill,
that service is invalid
because
it did not satisfy the statutory requirements, it is not
Shamblin,
but
Graff
that applies. The appeals court found support for its conclusion in the fact that in its more recent treatment of the issue, the Oklahoma Supreme Court applied
Graff to
find that there was no effective service by mail when service was refused by a person authorized neither to accept nor refuse service.
See Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. v. H. Webb Enterprises, Inc.,
While President Kagame separately attacks the constitutionality of service upon him, he in no way cedes that the plaintiffs have achieved technical compliance with Oklahoma’s pleading provisions. He strenuously argues that the plaintiffs’ method of service fails to conform to any statutory provision authorizing service. Thus, it is Graff that controls in this instance. Applying Graff’s three-part test to determine whether service is effective, the Court first looks to whether there is a statute authorizing the method of service employed. While clearly, there is no statute authorizing service by delivery to persons who merely may come into contact with the defendant or his staff, Oklahomа does have a statute permitting service by delivery to persons “authorized by appointment or by law to receive service of process” on behalf of the defendant. See 12 Okla. Stat. § 2004(C)(l)(c)(l). It is that provision with which the plaintiffs claim to substantially complied. The Court must next determine whether the requirements of the statute were, in fact, observed. They were not. The plaintiffs allege that they delivered the documents to Professor Bryan Bush, who merely read and returned them, and to a Secret Service Agent who purportedly delivered the documents to members of President Kagame’s staff. They also allege that they “attempted to hand the documents to defendant’s driver/staff member near the car waiting for him to exit the auditorium.” The plaintiffs do not contend that Professor Bush, the nameless Secret Service Agent, or the “driver/staff member” were authorized to receive service on behalf of President Kagame. They do not allege that the staff members to whom the Secret Service Agent claimed to deliver the summons and complaint were such authorized agents. Because the plaintiffs failed to substantially conform to Oklahoma’s statutory rеquirements for service of process, the *1255 Court need not examine whether the fundamental requirements of due process were met.
B. President Kagame’s actual knowledge of the plaintiffs’ complaint is no substitute for service of process, and is not sufficient to establish jurisdiction over his person.
Pursuant to
Graff,
the plaintiffs have failed to effect service upon President Kagame. President Kagame’s actual knowledge of the plaintiffs’ lawsuit does not excuse them from substantial compliance with Oklahoma’s requirements.
See Graff,
President Kаgame’s actual knowledge of the plaintiffs’ lawsuit does not dispense with the requirements of service under Oklahoma law. Nor does it substitute for proper service of process under Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
See Mid-Continent Wood Products, Inc. v. Harris,
C. The plaintiffs have not established that President Kagame intentionally evaded service.
In a final attempt to overcome their failure to comply with the general requirements for valid service of process, the plaintiffs allege that President Kagame intentionally evaded service. They cite
Western Farmers Elec. Co-op., Anadarko, Oklahoma v. Stephenson,
The plaintiffs also cite
Doe v. Qi
The plaintiffs contend that their attempt to serve President Kagame is analogous to the scenarios set forth in Stephenson and Doe. However, unlike the situation in Stephenson, this was the plaintiffs’ first attempt at service and they never spoke to or came within close physical proximity of President Kagame. They have presented no evidence that anyone on President Kagame’s staff informеd him of the attempted service. And certainly, President Kagame does not admit that he avoided service. Unlike the scenario in Doe, the plaintiffs have failed to show that their process servers ever came in close proximity to President Kagame. Nor have the plaintiffs shown that they ever spoke to him. Professor Erlinder states that at one point he saw President Kagame, but there is no indication that President Kagame ever saw or heard Professor Erlinder or Mr. Schubert. Neither Professor Erlinder nor Mr. Schubert ever informed President Kagame that they were attempting service. This situation is simply not analogous to the one in Doe. The plaintiffs have pointed the Court to no authority finding effective service of process under circumstances similar to those at hand.
The plaintiffs’ burden in proving that President Kagame intentionally evaded service of process is not a light one.
See Light v. Wolf,
Here, the record does not sustain, by clear and convincing evidence, Plaintiffs’ claim that Mr. Kagame intentionally evaded service of process. Plaintiffs point to a single effort to serve Mr. Kagame by in-hand delivery while President Kagame was present at Oklahoma Christian University. This attempt consisted of Professor Erlinder and Mr; Schubert providing the complaint first to Professor Bryan Bush of Oklahoma Christian University, and then to a purported secret service agent allegedly assigned to provide security to President Kagame. The plaintiffs *1257 imply that one of these individuals, or some member of President Kagame’s staff interrupted him just minutes before he was to make a speech to show him a copy of the summons and complaint, and to alert him the need to evade service. They have offered no evidence, however, that President Kagame altered his scheduled speech or his departure рlans, or otherwise actively evaded their service efforts. The plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence any intentional evasion which would permit the Court to excuse compliance with the rules of service.
Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that the plaintiffs failed to effectuate service upon President Kagame. The Court lacks personal jurisdiction over him and, pursuant to Rule 55(c), the Clerk’s Entry of Default shall be set aside.
3. The Court has discretion to permit the plaintiffs additional time to effectuate service.
President Kagame states that because the plaintiffs failed to achieve service within the 120 days prescribed by Rule 4(m) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and because the plaintiffs failed to file proof of service as required by Rule 4(1), their complaint must be dismissed. While Rule 4(m) provides that a complaint may be dismissed for want of timely service, it makes clear that “if the plaintiff shows good cause for the failure, the court must extend the time for service for an appropriate period.” The Court finds that the plaintiffs undertook a good faith attempt tо serve President Kagame while he was in Oklahoma City. Although they failed to achieve service, the plaintiffs’ submissions demonstrate the difficulties of delivering process in person to a dignitary whose position necessitates security measures. This in conjunction with the extraordinary arrest, detention, and prosecution of the plaintiffs’ counsel, allegedly as a result of his representation of the plaintiffs herein, convinces the Court that justice is best served by permitting the plaintiffs additional time to effectuate service should they desire to do so. The Court is mindful, however, that such opportunity will be futile if President Kagame is correct in his assertion that as head of state of Rwanda, he is absolutely immune from suit.
Although authority addressing the issue is sparse, the United States Supreme Court’s recognition of heads of foreign states as immune to suit in the U.S. courts dates back nearly 200 years. In 1812, Chief Justice John Marshall authored the Court’s opinion in
The Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon,
For most of the 165 years following
McFaddon,
the Executive Branch determined whether a foreign nation was entitled to immunity.
Zemin,
In 1976, Congress largely codified the restrictive theory of immunity when it enacted the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1602
et seq.
The FSIA grants foreign states presumptive immunity while carving out exceptions for, among other things, purely commercial acts. The FSIA does not, however, address the immunity of foreign heads of state. In a recent case, the Supreme Court made clear that the FSIA does not provide immunity to individual foreign officials.
See Samantar v. Yousuf,
—- U.S.-,
Here, the government of the Republic of Rwanda transmitted to the U.S. Government a request for the State Department to submit to this Court a statement of interest in the claims underlying this lawsuit, or a suggestion of immunity regarding President Kagame. The Court has not yet received any submission from the State Department. Because the applicable authorities make clear the primacy of the Executive Branch’s interest in suits against heads of state, until the State Department has had sufficient time to register its interest, if any, in this matter, the Court should refrain from inquiring into the question of head of state immunity, as well as the questions of diplomatic immunity and justiciability. Thus, for the time being, there can be no determination that President Kagame is immune from suit or service of process. The Court finds, therefore, that the plaintiffs should be permitted additional time in which to attempt service upon President Kagame.
Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the Court:
*1259 1. DENIES the plaintiffs’ motion for default judgment;
2. GRANTS President Kagame’s motion to set aside the Clerk’s Entry of Default;
3. VACATES the Clerk’s Entry of Default entered herein;
4. GRANTS President Kagame’s motion to amend and correct the caption of this case;
5. ORDERS the Clerk of Court to amend the caption so that the defendant’s name is reflected as Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda;
6. DENIES President Kagame’s motion to dismiss;
7. FINDS good cause why the plaintiffs’ case against President Kagame should not be dismissed for lack of prosecution and failure of service;
8. DISMISSES all remaining defendants as the plaintiffs have not attempted service upon them and admit that they have no intention of so doing;
9. GRANTS the plaintiffs an additional 120 days in which to serve President Kagame; and
10. ADVISES the plaintiffs that if at the conclusion of those 120 days they have filed no return of service, in the absence of further order of the Court, their complaint shall be dismissed.
ORDER
On June 23, 2011, the Court entered its order ruling, among other things, that the plaintiffs had failed to establish that they had effected service upon defendant Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda. The Court carefully examined the plaintiffs’ factual assertions regarding their attempt to serve President Kagame in person while he was on the prеmises of Oklahoma Christian University. Even accepting, for the sake of argument, the plaintiffs’ various hearsay assertions that they delivered a copy of the summons and complaint to a “Secret Service Agent” who then delivered the documents to members of President Kagame’s staff, the Court concluded that the plaintiffs failed to meet the requirements of either Federal Rule 4(e)(2) or 4(e)(4) because they failed to establish that they delivered a copy of the complaint to President Kagame or to his “authorized agent.” 1 The Court spent considerable time dissecting the plaintiffs’ argument that their service attempt should be considered effective under Rule 4(e)(1) which requires “compliance with a method of service prescribed by the law of the state where the district court is located.” The Court’s particular focus on Oklahoma’s service requirements was prompted by the plaintiffs’ contention that Oklahoma’s requirements were less rigorous than those of the Federal Rules because the state mandates only “substantial compliance” with its service provisions. After examining the controlling Oklahoma authorities and comрaring them to the plaintiffs’ allegations regarding their service attempt, the Court concluded that, even under Oklahoma’s arguably more lenient standards, the plaintiffs had failed to establish service of President Kagame.
Despite the plaintiffs’ failure to effect service under the provisions of either the Federal Rules or the Oklahoma Pleading Code, the Court found good cause for the failure and, pursuant to Rule 4(m), extended an additional 120 days in which to serve President Kagame. At the same time, the Court noted that such service efforts *1260 would prove futile if, as President Kagame asserts, he is immune from suit.
President Kagame argues that as a head of state recognized by the United States government, he is absolutely immune from suit. In addition, he argues that he is entitled to diplomatic immunity, and that the plaintiffs’ case, because it implicates matters of national security and international diplomacy, ultimately raises issues reserved for resolution by the Executive Branch. President Kagame informed the Court that the government of the Republic of Rwanda had transmitted to the United States Government a request for the State Department to submit a statement of interest in the claims underlying this lawsuit, or a suggestion of immunity pertaining President Kagame. The Court concluded that because of the long-recognized primacy of the Executive Branch in matters involving suits against foreign heads of state, it should refrain from inquiring into the question of head of state immunity, as well as questions of diplomatic immunity and justiciability, until the Executive Branch had a reasonable opportunity to register its interest in the case. Thus, in addition to granting additional time for the plaintiffs to serve President Kagame, the 120-day extension also provided additional time for the Executive Branch to make its position known.
On August 29, 2011, the United States submitted its Suggestion of Immunity (docket entry no. 49). It informed the Court that the Executive Branch of the United States Government has determined that President Kagame is immune from this suit. The plaintiffs were given time to respond to the United States’ submission and on September 12, 2011, they filed their objection (docket entry no. 51). The Court has received no further submissions from the United States or from President Kagame.
The United States maintains that incident to the exclusive responsibility for foreign relations granted it by the Constitution, the Executive Branch has “sole authority to determine the immunity from suit of sitting heads of statе.”
2
Suggestion of Immunity at ¶ 1. The United States asserts that the Executive Branch, upon “consideration of the relevant principles of customary international law, and in the implementation of its foreign policy and in the conduct of its international relations,” has determined to recognize President Kagame’s immunity from this suit while he is in office.
Id.
As the United States points out, such determinations by the Executive Branch have been found to be controlling and not subject to judicial review.
See Ex Parte Republic of Peru,
In its June 23, 2011 order, the Court discussed the origins and general parameters of the head of state immunity doctrine. The Court noted that the United States Supreme Court’s recognition of heads of foreign states as immune to suit in the U.S. courts dates back to Chief Justice John Marshall’s opinion in
The Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon,
In the wake of
McFaddon,
courts were “expected to ‘defer[ ] to the decisions of the political branches — in particular, those of the Executive Branch — on whether to take jurisdiction over actions against foreign sovereigns and their instrumentalities.’ ”
Ye v. Zemin,
McFaddon
established a pattern of extreme deference to the Executive Branch, and for most of the ensuing 165 years the Executive Branch determined whether a foreign nation was entitled to immunity.
Zemin
at 624. Upon making the determination that a nation was entitled to immunity, the State Department provided a court with a “suggestion of immunity” and the court thereupon surrendered its jurisdiction and dismissed the claims against said foreign nation.
Id.; see also Samantar v. Yousuf,
— U.S. -,
The FSIA now governs the determination whether a foreign state is entitled to sovereign immunity. It grants foreign states presumptive immunity while carving out exceptions for, among other things, purely commercial acts. As Somantar recently made plain, the FSIA does not address the immunity of foreign heads of state. Rather, such officials may look to traditional immunities. Id. at 2290, fn. 15. Those immunities remain under the governance of the common law that had also pertained to foreign states prior to the enactment of the FSIA. Id. at 2285.
In accordance with the common law procedure set forth above, the Republic of Rwanda formally requested that Government of the United States proffer its suggestion President Kagаme be held immune from this lawsuit.
See
Suggestion of Immunity at ¶ 2;
see also Lafontant v. Aristide,
Despite the United States’ formal determination that President Kagame is immune from the plaintiffs’ suit, and the considerable body of law establishing that deference be given that determination, the plaintiffs contend that this suit must not be dismissed. The plaintiffs’ position appears to be based upon a misreading of
Somantar
and a misplaced reliance upon
Clinton v. Jones,
The plaintiffs concede that in Somantar, the Supreme Court held that the FSIA applied only to foreign states and that suits against foreign officials continued under the governance of the common law. They proceed to confuse Samantar’s discussion of the restrictive theory of foreign state immunity, which сonfined immunity to suits involving the foreign sovereign’s public acts as opposed to its purely commercial acts, with the common law immunities afforded foreign heads of state who fall outside the FSIA’s provisions. In Somantar, the Court makes clear that the law that has developed with regard to foreign head of state immunity is unaffected by the FSIA. Somantar in no way undermines the common law procedure or tradition of deference to Executive Branch immunity determinations that traces to McFaddon. Samantar’s discussion of the immunities afforded foreign officials who act in their official capacities is not pertinent here as President Kagame is not relying on immunity arising from the performance of official acts. Rather, he is relying on the immunity traditionally granted a sitting head of state recognized by the U.S. State Department. That immunity extends to unofficial acts undertaken prior to the head of state’s assumption of office. As discussed above, it is grounded in a respect for the separation of pow *1263 ers and a determination that the courts should abstain from intrusion into matters that could trammel the Executive Branch’s conduct of foreign policy.
It is true that separation of powers сoncerns also informed the Supreme Court’s decision in
Clinton v. Jones,
The Court rejected President Clinton’s assertion that given the nature of his office, exercise of jurisdiction by the federal judiciary over his private conduct amounted to an impermissible interference with the Executive Branch. It observed that the separation of powers doctrine is focused on the allocation of official power among the three coequal branches of government. The judiciary, of course, is empowered by Article III to decide cases and controversies. As the respondent was “merely asking the courts to exercise their core Article III jurisdiction,” her case presented no threat to the separation of powers.
Id.
at 701,
According to the plaintiffs’ interpretation of Clinton, this Court’s adjudication of claims relating to President Kagame’s unofficial conduct occurring prior to his becoming a head of state poses no risk of intrusion upon the powers of the Executive Branch. The plaintiffs’ interpretation is untenable. As Clinton makes clear, nothing in the U.S. Constitution exempts a sitting president from oversight of even his official actions. Indeed, our system of checks and balances depends upon the president being subject to the rule of law. No such concerns for executive accountability underlie the doctrine of foreign heаd of state immunity. When faced with a suit against a foreign head of state, a court must investigate whether said litigation potentially intrudes upon, or even usurps the Executive Branch’s constitutionally-vested responsibility for conduct of diplomacy and foreign relations.
Clinton is simply inapplicable to the matter at hand. In that case, the Supreme Court. concluded that the doctrine of separation of powers does not require federal courts to stay all private actions against a sitting President of the United States until he leaves office. Such a holding provides no guidance to the only issue before this Court, namely, whether the Court is bound by tradition and applicable authorities to defer to the United States’ determination that President Kagame is immune from the plaintiffs’ suit.
Conclusion
Where the United States’ Executive Branch has concluded that a foreign head of state is immune from suit, and where it has urged the Court to take recognition of that fact and to dismiss the suit pending *1264 against said head of state, the Court is bound to do so.
Accordingly, the Court:
1. RECOGNIZES the United States’ Suggestion that President Kagame is immune from the plaintiffs’ suit;
2. DEFERS to said suggestion of immunity;
3. DEEMS the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration to be moot; and
4. ORDERS the plaintiffs’ action DISMISSED.
Notes
. Although the plaintiffs' motion to strike was improperly filed and is, thereforе, treated as a legal nullity, the Court notes that the motion is premised upon the plaintiffs' argument that the defendant was effectively served with process while he was present in Oklahoma. Because the Court finds that the plaintiffs failed to substantially comply with the rules for service, the motion to strike would, in any event, be denied.
. In their motion for reconsideration (docket entry no. 48), the plaintiffs assert that the Court failed to consider whether service complied with Rule 4(2)(A) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. A cursory examination of the Court's June 23, 2011 order makes clear that the plaintiffs’ assertion is without merit.
. The Court takes exception to the United States’ position that it has "sole” authority to determine the immunity of a sitting head of state. It is clear that "in the 'absence of recognition of the immunity by the Department of State,” a district court has "authority to decide for itself whether all the requisites for such immunity existed.' ”
Samantar v. Yousuf,
-U.S. -,
