Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
This appeal follows our remand to afford the plaintiffs an opportunity to amend their complaint to state a cause of action for hostage taking under the 1996 Terrorism Amendment to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7).
Simpson v. Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
I.
In February 1987, Sandra Jean Simpson, a United States citizen, and her husband, Dr. Mostafa Karim, a permanent resident of the United States who was born in Egypt, were aboard the Carin II, a private yacht, cruising in the Mediterranean Sea on a course from Italy to Greece, when an unexpected storm forced the boat to veer off course and send a radio distress signal. Libyan harbor authorities responded to the signal on February 10, 1987, offering the port of Benghazi as a safe harbor. According to the amended complaint, on February 14, 1987, while the boat was in port, Libyan authorities boarded the boat and removed the passengers and crew. The Libyans held the Carin II party captive and threatened to shoot them if they attempted to leave. Three months into the captivity, Libyan authorities forcibly separated Ms. Simpson and Dr. Karim, permitting Ms. Simpson to fly to Zurich and placing her husband in solitary confinement, in unsanitary conditions without adequate medical care or proper food, for a period of seven months. Dr. Karim was released from captivity in November 1987, after intense negotiations among Belgium, Egypt, and Libya; he died of cancer in 1993.
Ms. Simpson and her husband’s estate sued Libya, alleging torture, hostage-taking, battery, false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and loss of consortium, and seeking compensatory damages. Libya moved to dismiss the complaint for: (1) lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, on the ground that Ms. Simpson’s offer to arbitrate did not satisfy FSIA’s jurisdictional requirements; (2) lack of personal jurisdiction; and (3) failure to state a claim for torture and hostage taking. The district court denied the motion.
See Simpson v. Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
In response, the plaintiffs filed an amended complaint which alleged three likely motives Libya might have had for abducting Ms. Simpson and Dr. Karim. The amended complaint stated that, in exchange for releasing them, Libya may have wanted: (1) the United States to stop conducting air raids against Libya; (2) revenge for previous U.S. air attacks; and (3) Egypt to return military assets to Libya. It also referenced Libya’s pattern of terrorist activity. The amended complaint cited newspaper articles, Libya’s history of taking and releasing hostages, and a 1997 Department of Defense intelligence report.
Upon Libya’s renewed motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction, and for failure to state a claim, pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), 12(b)(2) and 12(b)(6), the district court ordered the plaintiffs to provide support for their jurisdictional claim. The plaintiffs submitted additional materials, including an expert opinion and the State Department’s
Patterns of Global Terrorism,
to show that prior and similar
*359
acts demonstrated that Libya intended to hold Ms. Simpson and Dr. Karim to trade them for Libyan defectors and military equipment held in Egypt, and/or as human shields against another United States air attack on Libya. Libya submitted no materials of its own in response, and the district court denied the motion to dismiss. The district court found that the plaintiffs had produced sufficient evidence of a
quid pro quo
to support two theories, regarding use of Ms. Simpson and Dr. Karim as human shields and use of Dr. Karim to obtain the return of Libyan defectors and material lost to Egypt, but not as regards Libya’s alleged pursuit of retributive justice as that entailed no form of exchange with a third party.
Simpson v. Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
II.
On appeal, Libya challenges the legal and evidentiary basis of the hostage taking claim on the ground that the plaintiffs failed to show the essential “intended purpose.”
Simpson I,
Congress amended the FSIA in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, 1241-42 (Apr. 24, 1996), adding the so-called “terrorism exception,” which denies sovereign immunity in any case “in which money damages are sought against a foreign state for personal injury or death that was caused by an act of ... hostage taking ....” 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7). Section 1605(e)(2) defines “hostage taking” as that term is used in Article I of the International Convention Against the Taking of Hostages (“ICATH” or “Convention”). See 28 U.S.C. § 1605(e)(2). As the court recognized in Simpson I,
'[h]ostage taking’ occurs under ICATH (and so under FSIA) when a person ‘seizes or detains and threatens to kill, to injure or to continue to detain another person in order to compel a third party ... to do or abstain from doing any act as an explicit or implicit condition for the release of a hostage.’
The hostage-taking exception applies only if three additional criteria are also satisfied: [ (1) ] the foreign state was designated a “state sponsor of terrorism” at the time the act occurred; [ (2) ] the foreign state was given a reasonable opportunity to arbitrate a claim regarding an act that occurred within the state’s borders; and [ (3) ] the claimant or victim was a national of the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7)(A), (B). These three criteria are satisfied here, and thus the only question is whether the plaintiffs’ claims fall within the main body of the exception.
Kilburn,
A.
The legal question raised by Libya is whether third-party awareness of a hostage-taker’s intent is a required element of the hostage-taking exception that must be pled as a jurisdictional fact and supported by evidence. Libya contends that the plaintiffs can show intended purpose only where there is “a minimum showing that the third party is at least aware of the possibility that there is a hostage.” Appellant’s Br. at 15. Libya’s contention, however, is wholly unsupported by our case law and the statutory definition of hostage-taking.
In
Simpson I,
speaks in terms of conditions of release; the defendant must have detained the victim in order to compel some particular result, specifically to force a third party either to perform an act otherwise unplanned or to abstain from one otherwise contemplated so as to ensure the freedom of the detainee.
Id. Consequently, to show intended purpose, the plaintiff must “suggest[ ][a] demand for quid pro quo terms between ... Libya and a third party whereby [the hostages] would have been released.” Id. The plaintiff must “point[] to [a] nexus between what happened to [the hostages] in Libya and any concrete concession that Libya may have hoped to extract from the outside world.” Id. (emphasis added).
The plain text of the FSIA definition, explanatory commentary on the Convention, and precedent under the Federal Hostage Taking Act (“FHTA”), 18 U.S.C. § 1203, which defines the behavior proscribed in terms identical to the Convention, all reflect that a plaintiff need not allege that the hostage taker had communicated its intended purpose to the outside world. Consistent with the plain text, the court in
Price I
explained that the intentionality requirement focused on the
mens rea
of the hostage taker.
It suffices, then, for a plaintiff bringing suit under the FSIA Terrorism Exception to allege a
quid pro quo
as the hostage-taker’s intended result from the detention at issue.
See Price I, 294 F.3d
at 94. Such an allegation is legally sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss, and the law requires no further showing with respect to third-party awareness of the defendant’s hostage-taking intent. Here, the plaintiffs have alleged the required
quid pro quo,
and thus their jurisdictional facts are legally sufficient to state a claim under the Terrorism Exception. However, a sovereign defendant disputing FSIA jurisdiction may also contest the jurisdictional facts alleged by the plaintiff.
See Phoenix Consulting,
B.
Libya challenges the competence of plaintiffs’ evidence supporting their allegations of Libya’s intended purpose and the district court’s failure to resolve an additional factual jurisdiction dispute.
First, Libya maintains that the “hypothetical scenarios” do not constitute either an explicit or an implicit condition for the release of Ms. Simpson or Dr. Karim. It points to the fact that in order to find that the plaintiffs had sufficiently alleged two theories for Libya’s possible “intended purposes,” the district court relied on the plaintiffs’ proffered expert opinion of Mr. Mayer Nudell. According to Libya, Mr. Nudell’s affidavit did not direct the district court to any implicit conditions for release, but only to “likely ‘scenarios” ’ and Mr. Nudell never asserted that he had knowledge of the scenarios independent of the materials supplied by the plaintiffs. Libya concludes that such “flimsy grounds” cannot support the exercise of subject matter jurisdiction. Even viewing the evidence most favorably to the plaintiffs, Libya maintains that the amended complaint and Mr. Nudell’s hypothetical scenarios do not point to any nexus between what happened to Ms. Simpson and Dr. Karim and any concrete concession that Libya may have hoped to extract from the outside world.
In
Kilburn,
the court noted that, beyond the defendant’s ultimate burden of persuasion, other burdens may be placed on the parties when the defendant files a motion to dismiss,
Based on Mr. Nudell’s extensive resume and the fact that courts have previously taken judicial notice of the proffered
Patterns of Global Terrorism
as representing the official position of the United States government,
see Kilburn,
The plaintiffs needed to know why Libya acted as it did, but could not compel Libya to explain. Instead, the plaintiffs submitted their jurisdictional filings and put forward their best assessments, based on available information. In that light, it was eminently reasonable for the district court to find sufficient the purposes proffered by the plaintiffs.
See Price II,
Second, Libya contends that the district court erred by failing to address all of the disputed jurisdictional facts, specifically ignoring evidence that “highlighted legitimate reasons for [Ms.] Simpson’s detention as well as evidence showing that [Ms.] Simpson and [Dr.] Karim were not hostages.” The district court resolved all of the disputed facts necessary to rule on Libya’s motion to dismiss.
See Kilburn,
Moreover, Libya is relying on evidence that on its face does not establish the propositions it claims. The earliest State Department cable that Libya references indicates only that, initially, a source in Tripoli believed that the Carin II party was being investigated in connection with an Egyptian espionage ring. The cable is dated April 1987. Over the next several months, however, various other cables indicate that: Ms. Simpson and Dr. Karim could shed no light on why they were detained; the State Department was considering a diplomatic note to Libya “to protest Ms. Simpson’s unwarranted detention” (emphasis added); and although the *363 Belgian consul general thought he might understand why the Carin II party was being detained, he did not elaborate. Thus, insofar as the cables show, by August 1987, the United States government was no longer relying on the Egyptian espionage ring as an explanation for the detention. Another cable indicates that Ms. Simpson, at least, could have left Libya without her passport in May 1987. However, again, in August 1987, the State Department was concerned about her continued “unwarranted detention.” The other evidence cited by Libya describes how the hostages were treated, and is unrelated to whether or not they would have been allowed to depart from Libya had they chosen to do so.
Accordingly, we affirm the denial of Libya’s motion to dismiss on grounds of sovereign immunity and we remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Fed.R.Evid. 703 provides in pertinent part: The facts or data in the particular case upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may be those perceived by or made known to the expert at or before the hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in forming opinions or inferences upon the subject, the facts or data need not be admissible in evidence in order for the opinion or inference to be admitted.
