                                  UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

ODILLA MUTAKA MWANI, et al.,

         Plaintiffs,

         v.                                                                Civil Action No. 99-125 (JMF)

AL QAEDA,

         Defendant.


                        FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

         From January 31 through February 2, 2011, the Court conducted a “bellwether” trial 1 on

damages. 2 Although the total number of plaintiffs in this case is 523, 3 only the claims of the

following eight plaintiffs went to trial: 1) Abel Mutego Nijru; 2) Felistus Njeri Thuo; 3) Castro

Otiende; 4) Protus Manyasa Buluma; 5) Dipak L. Shah; 6) Wilfred Nderitu; 7) Charles Makori

Mogi; and 8) Kioko Muema. Testimony was taken via videoconference from Nairobi, Kenya,

and the Court admitted the following exhibits into evidence: 1) Photographs (Plaintiffs’

Exhibit (“PX”) 1); 2) Video of Bombing Site August 7, 1998 (PX 2); 3) April 9, 1999 Report

from the Department of State, captioned “The Bombings of the United States Embassies in Dar

Es Salaam, Tanzania and Nairobi, Kenya” (PX 3); 4) January 8, 1999 Accountability Review


1
  “In a bellwether trial procedure, a random sample of cases large enough to yield reliable results is tried to a jury. A
judge, jury, or participating lawyers use the resulting verdicts as a basis for resolving the remaining cases.”
Alexandra D. Lahav, Bellwether Trials, 76 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 576, 577 (2008). A bellwether trial may be binding
or not binding on the other plaintiffs. If it is binding, the results of the bellwether trial are extrapolated to the other
plaintiffs who have similar factual circumstances and/or injuries. Id. at 581. This method has been used in other
multi-plaintiff cases stemming from terrorist-related events. See Dammarell v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 404 F.
Supp. 2d 261, 271 n.1 (D.D.C. 2005).
2
  There are three transcripts of the proceedings: 1) Transcript of Proceedings on January 31, 2011 [#119]; 2)
Transcript of Proceedings on February 1, 2011 [#118]; and 3) Transcript of Proceedings on February 2, 2011 [#103].
3
  Plaintiffs’ Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law [#105] at 29.
Board Report (PX 4); 5) Kiema-Ngunnzi Report: “An Assessment of Recovery Strategies of

the 1998 Nairobi Bomb Disaster Victims: A Case Study of Teachers Service Commission” (PX

5); 6) World Psychiatry Study: “Psychological Effects of the Nairobi U.S. Embassy Bomb

Blast on Pregnant Women and their Children” (PX 6); and 7) a drawing of the site (PX 7).

       On the basis of that evidence, the court makes the following findings of fact and

conclusions of law.

                                     FINDINGS OF FACT

I.     Background

       1.      On August 7, 1998, Usama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda exploded a massive truck

bomb at the United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya. Mwani v. bin Laden, 417 F.3d 1, 4 (D.C.

Cir. 2005).

       2.      According to the State Department’s 1999 Report of the bombing, the incident

took place as follows:

               At approximately 10:30AM on Friday, August 7, 1998, two
               vehicle bombs detonated nearly simultaneously at United States
               embassies in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania and Nairobi, Kenya.
               The United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya was located on a
               half-acre site in downtown Nairobi at the busy intersection of two
               main thoroughfares, Moi and Haille Selassie Avenues. Behind the
               embassy was the four-story Ufundi Cooperative House, with
               numerous offices and a secretarial school, and the 23- story high-
               rise Cooperative Bank building . . .

               At the rear of the embassy was a parking lot shared with the
               adjacent Cooperative Bank . . . (After entering the parking area),
               one of the terrorists began shooting at the chancery and the other
               tossed a flash grenade at the guard . . . Approximately 10 seconds
               after the grenade exploded, the bomb in the vehicle detonated . . .
               The explosion killed 213 people, including 44 embassy employees
               . . . Many of these fatalities were due to occupants going to the
               windows after the grenade exploded to see what was happening




                                                2
               outside.

               Other casualties were pedestrians and motorists in the crowded
               streets next to the embassy. Vehicles caught fire; at least eight bus
               passengers died. In total, 20 persons were blinded, and 50 have
               severely limited sight from lacerations incurred from flying shards
               of glass; the actual count of eye injuries is in the hundreds, but the
               severity of many will not become apparent for some time. The
               shock of the explosion broke glass in buildings and vehicles within
               at least a quarter-mile radius. The collapse of the Ufundi building
               confirms the extreme hazard posed by building collapse. The
               majority of the fatalities were persons trapped and crushed under
               the weight of the building after falling several stories . . .

               Given the types of injuries most prevalent in these incidents, non-
               penetrating fragment impact is probably the most appropriate
               injury model for severe injuries. A radius of 200 feet indicates that
               all people within a one-half block radius (not protected by
               buffering walls) were vulnerable to injury from flying debris . . .
               For glass injuries, the radius is 1000 feet. Reports indicate that
               injuries due to glass fragments extended somewhat further out than
               this model predicts.

PX 3 at 9265, 9273, 9275, 9277-80.

II.    Plaintiffs

       A.      Abel Mutegi Nijru and Felistus Njeri Thuo

       1.      Njiru was killed in the Embassy bombing. [#119] at 5.

       2.      Thuo was also killed in the Embassy bombing. [#118] at 46.

       3.      Both Njiru and Thuo were named as plaintiffs in this action, but must be

dismissed since they, as deceased individuals, lack the capacity to sue. See Adelsberger v.

U.S., 58 Fed. Cl. 616, 618 (Fed. Cl. 2003) (“[A] party must have a legal existence as a

prerequisite to having the capacity to sue or be sued.) (citations omitted).

       B.      Castro Otiende

       1.      Otiende is 44 years old, married, and has four daughters. [#103] at 48.




                                                  3
       2.      Otiende received a degree in land economics from the University of Nairobi in

1991. Id. at 50-51. He started work in 1993 in a land appraisal office near the American

Embassy. Id. at 52-53.

       3.      On August 7, 1998, Otiende heard some gunshots and then a small blast. Id. at

57. He believes he lost consciousness and then found himself in the stairwell with others trying

to leave the building. Id. at 58. He was bleeding profusely from flying glass that cut his neck

and chest. Id. at 57, 59. He then walked to his family doctor, received stitches and took public

transportation home. Id. at 60.

       4.      Despite receiving plastic surgery after the bombing, Otiende suffered permanent

scarring from the glass cuts. Id. at 62. He also feels a sharp pain in his ears when he hears a

slight noise and is jumpy. Id.

       5.      Otiende believes that people are afraid of him because of the scarring. Id. at 63.

He also believes that some people in Kenya regard him as being unlucky or being bad luck

because he was a victim of the Embassy bombing. Id. at 63-64.

       C.      Protus Manyasa Buluma

       1.      Buluma is 51 years old, married, and has five children. [#119] at 55, 65.

       2.      Buluma was raised in western Kenya until he was 15. Id. at 56.

       3.      Buluma has two brothers and three sisters. Id. at 56-57.

       4.      Buluma attended grammar school and completed his “A” level studies in

seminary. Id. at 58. He then went to the Thomas Aquinas Seminary in Nairobi, and then to

Nairobi University, where he received a certificate in religious studies. Id. He subsequently

completed certificate courses in management and strategic planning, and community




                                                 4
participation. Id. at 59.

        5.      In 1985, Buluma took a position as a project coordinator with a non-

governmental organization that focused on improving life in the Nairobi slums. Id. at 62.

        6.      From 1990-1996, Buluma worked as an insurance salesman. Id. at 63.

        7.      In 1996, Buluma began working for a real estate valuation and property

management company. Id. at 64. His office was directly across the street from the American

Embassy. Id.

        8.      Buluma took pride in and enjoyed his work. Id. at 67. He was paid on salary

and commissions, so his monthly income fluctuated between 120,000 and 150,000 Kenyan

schillings (“KSH”). Id. at 66. He was the sole provider for his immediate family, and

consistent with the African custom of the “extended family,” also provided financial support to

many other family members. Id. at 67-69.

        9.      Prior to the attack on the Embassy, Buluma was happy and healthy. Id. at 87.

        10.     At approximately 10:00 a.m. on August 7, 1998, Buluma heard a small blast. Id.

at 69. Along with his co-workers, Buluma went to look out the window of their third floor

office. Id. at 70. When the second blast came, Buluma was knocked down. Id. Buluma was

bleeding from his chest, could not breathe properly, and his eyes “were not working.” Id. at 71-

72. There was dust, smoke, and blood everywhere. Id. at 72. Everything in the office had

fallen down and he and others were crawling on the floor to escape. Id. at 71-72.

        11.     Approximately 15 to 20 minutes after the second blast, Buluma was pulled out

by other people who had been in the building. Id. at 73. He was in pain and tried

unsuccessfully to remove pieces of glass from his body. Id.




                                                5
         12.    As Buluma was getting on the ambulance, he saw other victims of the blast. Id.

at 74-75. About the other victims, he said: “Some of them were in very bad shape, very bad.

Some people had their whole face burned, and you could see meat, nothing else.” Id. at 75. At

the hospital, he saw dead people who had been placed in piles. Id. at 76. He was traumatized

by what he saw at the hospital. Id.

         13.    At the hospital, Buluma was given painkillers and was told to rest. Id. at 78-79.

         14.    As a result of the bombing, Buluma suffers from headaches and worsening

vision. Id. at 81. He has very little vision in his left eye and 20% vision in his right eye, as a

result of the glass that was blown into his eyes by the bomb. Id. at 81-82, 95.

         15.    Buluma saw a psychiatrist for six months after the bombing. Id. at 84. He

testified: “Psychological effects is [sic] that actually I feel completely debilitated. I used to

work very hard. Now I can’t work. I cannot even – nobody can employee me, and I have

children I should be supporting.” Id. at 85. He suffers from sleeplessness. Id. at 83-84.

         16.    According to Buluma, a social stigma attaches to an individual who has been

involved in an incident like the bombing. Id. at 85-86. He feels he is viewed as being disabled.

Id. at 85.

         17.    After the bombing, Buluma lost his job and can no longer support his family. Id.

at 87.

         18.    Buluma sometimes views himself as a “beggar,” because he has to ask for

assistance. Id. at 88, 93.




                                                   6
       D.      Dipak L. Shah

       1.      Shah was born and raised in Nairobi, and has one brother and one sister. [#119]

at 97-98. He is married and has two children. Id. at 98.

       2.      Shah went to the United Kingdom to pursue a degree in “chemicals and business

studies.” Id. at 97. Because his father was ill, Shah returned to Nairobi in 1976, before

completing his studies. Id. at 97-98.

       3.      Upon his return to Nairobi, Shah opened a menswear shop with his brother. Id.

at 99. Each brother had a 50% share in the business, called “Cloud Nine.” Id. at 100. It was

located around the corner from the American Embassy. Id. at 100.

       4.      In 1997, the business net annual profits of 500,000 KSH. Id. at 104. In 1998, the

business had three employees. Id. at 105. The business had many regular customers, including

prominent officials and their families. Id. at 107. Neither Shah nor his brother intended to

expand, because they were “quite happy” with the business as it was in 1998. Id.

       5.      On August 7, 1998, Shah was in the back of the shop. Id. at 108-09. He heard

two blasts, and felt a tremor in the floor, like an “earthquake.” Id. at 109-10. The shop

windows shattered, and power immediately went out. Id. Shah feared that the building was

going to collapse. Id. at 110.

       6.      After the bombing, Shah was “in a daze.” Id. at 111. When he went outside,

Shah saw many other victims of the bombing: “Most of the injuries were [sic] the faces. A lot

of glass fell from above, like it was a big shower. Some of the glass was embedded in people’s

heads, you know. And a lot of blood.” Id. at 118. He also saw intestines, brains, and eyeballs,

and dead bodies. Id. at 118-19.




                                                 7
        7.      Since the bombing, Shah has had a problem sleeping. Id. at 120. In addition, his

psoriasis and diabetes have gotten worse, and he has lost 20 kilos over the past 12 years. Id. He

also cannot manage tasks he was able to do before the bombing, such as using a keyboard and

texting. Id. Shah also lost interest in social interactions with friends after the bombing. Id. at

121-22.

        8.      Shah lost his business as a result of the bombing. Id. at 122. He will not go to

the movies or other public events because of the fear caused by the bombing. Id. He thinks of

the bombing every day. Id. at 119.

        E.      Wilfred Nderitu

        1.      Nderitu is a Kenyan attorney who is a survivor of the attack on the American

Embassy. [#118] at 2-3. He was born in Nyeri, Kenya. Id. at 3. He is married and has three

children. Id. at 5-6.

        2.      At age 7, he and his family moved to Nairobi. Id. at 3. In 1985, he began

attending the University of Nairobi. Id. at 4. In 1998, he received an honors degree in law. Id.

He completed one year of post-graduate education in 1989. Id.

        3.      Nderitu was admitted to the Law Society of Kenya in 1989. Id. at 5. That year,

he accepted a position at the Nairobi law firm of Vohra & Gitao. Id. at 6. In 1991, he moved to

the firm of AGN Kamao and Kimani. Id. Both firms were general practice law firms that

specialized in insurance law. Id. at 7. In 1993, he accepted a position with the UN High

Commissioner for Refugees, and he remained there for two years. Id. He then accepted a

position as a senior associate with the law firm of Maina Murage & Company Advocates,

where he focused on corporate law and property transactions. Id. at 7-8. In 2005, he




                                                  8
commenced post-graduate studies in international human rights law. Id. at 4.

       4.      Up to that point in his legal career, Nderitu believes he was regarded as hard-

working, honest and well-respected. Id. at 8. He had no problems with memory or

concentration. Id. at 8-9.

       5.      Nderitu opened his own practice in 1996. Id. at 9. Initially, he started with a

secretary and a shared clerk. Id. at 10. Within two years, his practice had grown to four full-

time employees. Id. Nderitu was both the manager and a practitioner. Id. He was, by his own

estimate, very focused and very good at organization. Id. at 10-11. In addition to his work with

his firm, he has been assigned as defense counsel at the UN International Criminal Tribunal for

Rwanda, based in Arusha, Tanzania. Id. at 12.

       6.      In 1997, Nderitu moved his firm’s offices to the seventh floor of the NHC

House, overlooking the American Embassy and the Ufundi Cooperative, not more than 30

meters from the Embassy. Id. at 11-12.

       7.      On August 7, 1998, Nderitu was in his office, on the phone with a client, when

he heard a loud explosion. Id. at 14. Immediately after he heard a second blast, he “saw

something glittering in the sky.” Id. at 15. At that moment, he felt like somebody had cut

through the right side of his head: “So, it all happened very, very, very fast. But I felt like,

actually, it’s like somebody had cut through me with [an] ax or somebody had just grabbed my

head and banged it against a stone.” Id. The windows, window frames and partitions in his

office were destroyed and the power had gone off. Id. at 15-17. After the explosions, he

experienced great pain in his ear and also in his back, where pieces of glass had either cut him

or were embedded. Id. at 17-18. He was filled with fear. Id. at 19.




                                                  9
       8.      Nderitu eventually made it downstairs and out of the building. Id. at 18. At that

point, he saw other bleeding victims. Id. at 19. A good Samaritan drove him to a hospital, but

the hospital could not cope with the flood of patients from the Embassy bombing. Id. at 20- 23.

       9.      Nderitu was placed on a stretcher, but after some time passed, he concluded that

he had been forgotten. Id. at 23-24. He was losing blood, and was in great pain, so he got off

the stretcher and told a nearby doctor that without any assistance he was going to die. Id. at 24.

He was then taken to the operating room, where he received stitches to his head and to his ear,

without anesthetic. Id. at 27. The stitching did not stop all of his bleeding. Id. at 28-29.

       10.     After Nderitu’s operation, he was returned to a ward. Id. at 29. However, he

was unable to rest because of the overpowering smell of blood and because people searching

for missing loved ones kept disturbing him. Id.

       11.     By the time Nderitu left the hospital, there were six patients in his ward. Id. at

30. Because he wasn’t being treated, he snuck out of the hospital and returned home. Id. at 30-

31. Blood was seeping through his bandages while he was being driven home. Id. at 31-32.

When his one year old daughter saw him, she began crying. Id. at 34.

       12.     After the bombing, Nderitu was in constant pain and was anxious about his

medical condition. Id. at 34-35. He received additional stitches from a private doctor and was

unable to work for over a month. Id. at 35-36. He could not rebuild his practice, which was

netting about $2,000 USD per month in profits. Id. at 36-37.

       13.     As a result of the bombing, Nderitu suffered loss of memory, loss of the ability

to retain information, and loss of the ability to concentrate. Id. at 37-39. His administrative

abilities are also weaker; he is less efficient, and he must work much harder to perform tasks he




                                                  10
performed easily before the bombing. Id. at 39.

       14.     Nderitu also finds that he is more irritable and more aggressive since the

bombing. Id. at 42.

       F.      Charles Makori Mogi

       1.      Mogi is a Kenyan citizen. [#118] at 90. He was born and raised in Kisii, Kenya,

which is a small town located approximately 350 kilometers from Nairobi. Id. at 91. When he

was 22, he went to India to pursue degrees in economics and labor welfare. Id. at 92. In 1984,

he returned to Kenya. Id. First, he worked odd jobs and then he started a successful stationery

supply business. Id. at 93.

       2.      By 1997, Mogi had two full- time employees, had built a house and purchased

two cars with the profits from his new business. Id. at 94-95. His office was across the street

from the American Embassy. Id. at 95. He was very proud of his business, and planned to

expand the business by importing computer parts. Id. In 1998, he lived with his wife and two

children in a four bedroom home in Nairobi. Id. at 96.

       3.      On August 7, 1998, Mogi was in the lobby of his office building when a loud

explosion knocked him down. Id. at 99. He saw people bloodied from the explosion running

from the Embassy. Id. at 98-99. As a result of the explosion, he was bleeding profusely from

his face and was in great pain. Id. at 100.

       4.      Mogi was carried to a car with others and taken to a hospital, where he was

eventually treated and released. Id. at 99-101. As a result of the bombing, he has scarring on

his head and chin. Id. at 102.

       5.      Mogi’s business was destroyed by the bombing. Id. at 103. His monthly income




                                                  11
has dropped from $5,000 to $1,000. Id. at 105. His health deteriorated and his marriage to his

first wife ended. Id. at 105. He must expend 4,000 KSH per month for medication for his high

blood pressure and cannot get health insurance. Id. at 103-05.

       G.      Kioko Muema

       1.      Muema is a 37-year-old native of Nairobi. [#103] at 3. He and his brother and

four sisters were raised by their parents. Id. at 4. In 1998, Muema was in his fourth year at the

University of Nairobi. Id. at 5.

       2.      On the morning of August 7, 1998, Muema was on a public minibus stopped at a

traffic light at an intersection by the American Embassy. Id. at 6-7. While waiting for the light

to turn green, he heard a small blast, and turned to look in that direction. Id. at 8. After a few

moments, he saw blasts of fire. Id. He then felt sharp pain, and felt that something was “very

wrong.” Id. at 9. The bus engine switched off, and there was momentary silence. Id. at 9. He

began to lose his eyesight and ultimately was the only passenger to leave the minivan. Id.

       3.      Muema began running on the street, away from the Embassy. Id. at 12. He was

afraid that he would be hit by a vehicle. Id. A good Samaritan took him by car to a hospital,

where he waited quite a while to be treated. Id. at 13, 15. Horns were blaring and it was

“pandemonium.” Id. at 14.

       4.      By the time Muema arrived at the hospital, he still had not regained his eyesight.

Id. at 15. He was worried about the extent of his injuries because he could not personally

assess them and other people kept saying, “I’m sorry,” as they passed by. Id.

       5.      The hospital notified Muema’s parents and when they arrived, they took him to

another hospital. Id. at 16. He was admitted immediately upon his arrival but not seen by a




                                                 12
doctor until the following day. Id. at 17-18. Although he could still not see, he could hear his

sister crying nearby. Id. at 118. After he was discharged from the second hospital, the doctors

recommended that he see an American eye specialist who was working at a different hospital.

Id. at 20-21.

        6.      After being discharged from the second hospital, Muema was examined by the

American eye specialist at a third hospial. Id. at 24. The following day, he underwent

exploratory eye surgery. Id. at 25. He recalls that it was “the most excruciating pain” he had

ever felt. Id. at 26. While under a local anesthetic, he thought: “[T]hree days ago I was

perfectly well and right now people are opening up my eye.” Id. at 27.

        7.      The following day, Muema was informed by his father that his left eye could not

be saved, because pieces of glass had entered that eye. Id. at 27-28, 29. He began to think that

he would have been better off if he had been killed, because he did not know how he could

survive as a blind man. Id. at 29.

        8.      On August 24, 1998, Muema’s left eye was removed. Id. at 34. While at the

hospital, he developed asthma as a result of the trauma. Id. at 36-37. After several months, he

regained vision in his right eye. Id. at 38. Ultimately, he was fitted for a prosthetic, but it is not

a permanent solution. Id. at 38, 41.

        9.      Currently, Muema lacks depth perception and now cannot read without glasses.

Id. at 40. He considers himself to be disfigured and feels that his future is less promising as a

result of the bombing. Id. at 45-46.

III.    Expert Witness

        1.      Joan Mwendi Kiema-Ngunnzi was accepted by the Court as an expert in the




                                                  13
field of sociology, with a particular emphasis on the impact on social groups or individuals of

disasters. [#103] at 91.

       2.      Kiema-Ngunnzi received her bachelor degree in literature and English at Moi

University. Id. at 75. She then attended the University of Nairobi, where she studied sociology

with an emphasis in disaster management. Id. As part of her master’s academic work, she

focused her research on the effect of the Embassy attack on employees of the Teachers Service

Commission, whose offices were nearby and were destroyed in the bombing. Id. at 76-77.

       3.      Kiema-Ngunnzi prepared a comprehensive report captioned “An Assessment of

Recovery Strategies for the 1998 Nairobi Bomb Disaster Victims: A Case Study of the

Teachers Service Commission Employees.” Id. at 85; PX 5. She concluded that survivors of

the bombing suffered post-traumatic stress disorder, a finding that was consistent with the

conclusions of another report on the psychological effects of the bombing on pregnant women.

Id. at 89; PX 6.

       4.      According to Kiema-Ngunnzi, a social stigma attached to the victims of the

bombing and that stigma remains today. Id. at 95. She further concluded that even victims who

did not suffer physical injuries also felt devalued. Id. at 96. Furthermore, victims of the

bombing are referred to, in a demeaning sense, as “bomb people.” Id. at 96.

       5.      Kiema-Ngunnzi testified that victims of the Embassy bombing are regarded as

bad omens, who bring bad fortune to those in contact with them, and that the notion of a bad

omen is consistent with certain aspects of Kenyan culture and belief. Id. at 97-98. In other

words, victims of the Embassy bombing are viewed by other Kenyans in a negative light

simply because of their status as victims. Id. at 98, 101.




                                                 14
        6.      Kiema-Ngunnzi testified that the bombing adversely affected the victims’

“economic and psychological situation.” Id. at 106. She also opined that the children of victims

of the Embassy bombing are also viewed in a negative light by other Kenyans. Id. at 106-07.

        7.      Kiema-Ngunnzi testified that each victim of the Embassy bombing suffered

long-term or permanent psychological injury from the scenes that they observed during the

bombing and in its aftermath. Id. at 122-23. She testified that the victims of the bombing

suffered the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder. Id. at 129-33. Specifically, she testified

that each victim of the Embassy bombing “has sustained material, significant emotional,

psychological and financial injury,” whether he suffered a physical injury or not. Id. at 134.

                                     CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

I.      Jurisdiction

        A.      Subject Matter Jurisdiction

        Plaintiffs’ claims are brought pursuant to the Alien Tort Claims Act (“ATCA” or “ATS”),

which provides that district courts “shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien

for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.” 28

U.S.C. § 1350. To establish jurisdiction under the ATS, a plaintiff must allege facts “sufficient

to establish that: (1) they are aliens; (2) they are suing for a tort; and (3) the tort in question has

been committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.” Mwani v. Bin

Laden, No. 99-CIV-125, 2006 WL 3422208, at *2 (D.D.C. Sept. 28, 2006) (citing Kadic v.

Karadzic, 70 F.3d 232, 238 (2d Cir. 1996); Doe I. v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 393 F. Supp. 2d 20, 24,

28 (D.D.C. 2005); and Burnette v. Al Baraka Inv. & Dev. Corp., 274 F. Supp. 2d 86, 99-100

(D.D.C. 2003)).




                                                   15
        On September 28, 2006, Judge Kollar-Kotelly concluded that subject matter jurisdiction

existed for the plaintiffs’ claims because “the attack on the United States Embassy in Nairobi,

Kenya alleged in Plaintiffs’ Complaint impinged the diplomatic mission of the United States and

directly infringed on the rights of ambassadors, which was and has been a clear violation of the

law of nations since the inception of the ATCA.” Mwani, 2006 WL 3422208, at *4. Therefore,

the three jurisdictional elements of the ATS have been met.

        On April 17, 2013, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch

Petroleum Co., 133 S.Ct. 1659 (2013). After reviewing the Kiobel decision, this Court noted

that “the majority of Justices agreed that, except where the claims ‘touch and concern the

territory of the United States’ with ‘sufficient force,’ the ATS could not be used to establish

jurisdiction in a United States Court for a dispute between foreign nationals for conduct that

occurred on foreign ground.” Memorandum Opinion [#110] at 3-4 (citations omitted) (emphasis

added). Based on its interpretation of the Kiobel decision, this Court then concluded that “a

terrorist attack that 1) was plotted in part within the United States, and 2) was directed at a

United States Embassy and its employees” was sufficient to “displace the presumption against

extraterritorial application of the ATS” because it “‘touched and concerned’ the United States

with ‘sufficient force.’” Id. at 6-7.

        B.       Personal Jurisdiction and Service of Process

        On August 5, 2005, the Court of Appeals concluded, in the instant case, that this Court’s

exercise of personal jurisdiction over Bin Laden and Al Qaeda was justified under the Due

Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment because of the sufficiency of their contacts with the

United States:




                                                 16
                 In this case, there is no doubt that the defendants “engaged in
                 unabashedly malignant actions directed at [and] felt in this forum.”
                 Id. The plaintiffs’ allegations and evidence were that Bin Laden
                 and Al Qaeda orchestrated the bombing of the American embassy
                 in Nairobi, not only to kill both American and Kenyan employees
                 inside the building, but to cause pain and sow terror in the
                 embassy’s home country, the United States. Nor were the
                 plaintiffs’ allegations and evidence of contacts with the United
                 States limited to the Nairobi bombing. The plaintiffs described an
                 ongoing conspiracy to attack the United States, with overt acts
                 occurring within this country's borders. Putting to one side the acts
                 that took place after the embassy bombing (including the attacks
                 on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11,
                 2001), the plaintiffs pointed to the 1993 World Trade Center
                 bombing, as well as to the plot to bomb the United Nations,
                 Federal Plaza, and the Lincoln and Holland Tunnels in New York.

                 The plaintiffs thus amply made a prima facie showing that Bin
                 Laden and Al Qaeda “‘purposefully directed’ [their] activities at
                 residents” of the United States, Burger King, 471 U.S. at 472, 105
                 S.Ct. 2174 (quoting Keeton, 465 U.S. at 774, 104 S.Ct. 1473), and
                 that this litigation results from injuries to the plaintiffs “that ‘arise
                 out of or relate to’ those activities,” id. (quoting Helicopteros
                 Nacionales, 466 U.S. at 414, 104 S.Ct. 1868). Bin Laden and Al
                 Qaeda therefore had “fair warning” that their activities would
                 “subject [them] to the jurisdiction” of the United States. Id.
                 (quoting Shaffer, 433 U.S. at 218, 97 S.Ct. 2569).

Mwani, 417 F.3d at 13.

          In concluding that the district court could exercise personal jurisdiction over the

defendants, the court of appeals also confirmed that service of process, made in this case through

publication pursuant to Rule 4(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, was authorized. Id. at

11, 14.

II.       Analysis of Plaintiffs’ Tort Claims

          In Kiobel, the Supreme Court also held that the appropriate substantive tort law to apply

to plaintiffs’ ATS claims was the federal common law: “The [Alien Tort Statute] provides




                                                    17
district courts with jurisdiction to hear certain claims, but does not expressly provide any causes

of action. . . . The grant of jurisdiction is instead ‘best read as having been enacted on the

understanding that the common law would provide a cause of action’ . . . federal courts may

‘recognize private claims [for such violations] under federal common law.’”) Kiobel, 133 S. Ct.

at 1663 (citing Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692, 724, 732 (2004)). Thus, plaintiffs’ tort

claims against Al Qaeda for 1) wrongful death; 2) assault; and 3) battery, will be analyzed under

the federal common law. See First Amended Complaint [#13] ¶¶ 113-119.

       A.      Wrongful Death

       As noted above, although Njiru and Thuo were named as plaintiffs in this action, they

lack the capacity to sue because they are deceased. In any event, even if suit had been brought

by their estates, the federal common law does not recognize a wrongful death cause of action.

As stated by the Third Circuit, “[t]he right to recover damages for wrongful death is purely

statutory since no such right was given by the common law.” Williams v. Dowling, 318 F.2d

642, 643 (1963). Accord Der Weer v. Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp., No. SX-2005-CIV-274,

2014 WL 1387371, at *5 (V.I. Super. Mar. 21, 2014) (“Like survival actions, wrongful death

actions did not exist at common law.”); Ceja v. Rudolph & Sletten, Inc., 302 P.3d 211, 214

(Cal. 2013) (“In California, wrongful death actions are statutory in origin and exist only so far

and in favor of such person as the legislative power may declare.” (internal quotation marks

and citation omitted)); Ecker v. Town of W. Hartford, 530 A.2d 1056, 1060 (Conn. 1987)

(“With only a few exceptions, courts in America have almost universally accepted, and

continue to accept, the rule that a civil action for wrongful death was not recognized at

common law, and that no such cause of action may be maintained except under the terms and




                                                  18
authority of a statute.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); Capone v. Philip

Morris USA, Inc., 116 So.3d 363, 374 (Fla. 2013) (“Under Florida common law, a cause of

action did not exist for wrongful death. An action for wrongful death is solely a creation of the

Legislature.”); Sanders v. Ahmed, 364 S.W.3d 195, 203 (Mo. 2012) (en banc) (“Missouri does

not recognize a common-law claim for wrongful death. This Court has reaffirmed time and

time again that a claim for damages for wrongful death is statutory; it has no common-law

antecedent.”) (internal quotations and citations omitted)). Plaintiffs, therefore, have no right to

recover under this theory.

        B.      Assault and Battery

        In Count VI of the First Amended Complaint, the remaining plaintiffs (Otiende, Buluma,

Shah, Nderitu, Mogi, and Muema) asserted claims of common law assault and battery. [#113] ¶¶

113-119. Al Qaeda is liable for assault in this case if, when it bombed the American Embassy in

Nairobi, Kenya, it 1) acted “intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact with . . . or an

imminent apprehension of such a contact” by those attacked; and 2) those attacked were thereby

“put in such imminent apprehension.” See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 21. Al Qaeda is

liable for battery in this case if it 1) acted “intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact . . .

or an imminent apprehension of such a contact” with those attacked; and 2) “an offensive contact

with [those attacked] directly or indirectly results.” See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 18.

Harmful contact is that which results in “any physical impairment of the condition of another's

body, or physical pain or illness.” Id. § 15.

        In this case, it is clear that Al Qaeda intended to cause harmful contact and the immediate

apprehension thereof because “acts of terrorism are, by their very nature, intended to harm and to




                                                   19
terrify by instilling fear of further harm.” Fain v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 856 F. Supp. 2d 109,

122 (D.D.C. 2012) (citing Valore v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 700 F. Supp. 2d 52, 76 (D.D.C.

2010)). Accepting, as the Court has above, plaintiffs’ uncontroverted testimony that the attack 1)

caused them injury; or 2) made them apprehensive and fearful of such harm; or 3) both, the

Court concludes that defendants are liable. The following chart illustrates Al Qaeda’s liability as

to each of the remaining plaintiffs.

       Plaintiff                      Injury                                                       Tort 4
1.     Otiende                        Permanent scarring from the glass cuts to his                Battery
                                      neck and chest; psychological damage
2.     Buluma                         Little vision in his left eye and 20% vision in              Battery
                                      his right eye; psychological damage
3.     Shah                           Fear of being in public and reluctance to                    Assault
                                      interact with other people; psychological
                                      damage
4.     Nderitu                        Permanent scarring from the glass cuts to his                Battery
                                      head, ear, and back; psychological damage
5.     Mogi                           Permanent scarring on his head and chin;                     Battery
                                      psychological damage
6.     Muema                          Loss of his left eye; psychological damage                   Battery

III.     Damages

         A.        Compensatory Damages

                   1.      Economic Damages

         Under the Restatement (Second) of Torts (“the Restatement”), “[c]ompensatory damages

for harm involving pecuniary loss include compensation for (a) harm to property, (b) harm to

earning capacity, and (c) the creation of liabilities.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 906. The

comment to this section of the Restatement suggests the following approach to calculating such


4
 Although some plaintiffs may have suffered both assault and battery, because plaintiffs cannot recover twice, the
Court need only find liability upon one tort theory, rather than multiple theories. See Haim, 784 F. Supp. 2d at 13
(The prohibition against double recovery “prevents a plaintiff from receiving damages that exceed actual losses by




                                                         20
damages:

                  In determining the measure of recovery, aside from harm to body,
                  emotions or reputation, a balance sheet is in effect set up by the
                  court in which are stated the items of assets and liabilities which
                  have been affected by the tort, (a) before the tort, and (b) as they
                  appear at the time of trial. In this are put on one side such assets of
                  the injured person as have been affected by the tort, including his
                  capacity to make profitable use of his time, and on the other side,
                  the same assets at the time of the trial and any existing or
                  prospective liabilities imposed upon him as a result of the tort. The
                  difference, to the extent that it results from the tort, constitutes the
                  theoretical measure of recovery. In this comparison damages are
                  allowed for harm which has matured before trial and that which
                  probably will result after the trial.

Id. at § 906 cmt. a.

         Furthermore, in cases involving acts of terrorism, such as the instant action, courts have

consistently relied upon the testimony of experts to aid in their calculation of economic damages.

See Baker v. Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahirya, 775 F. Supp. 2d 48, 78 (D.D.C. 2011)

(basing calculation of economic damages in Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act case upon the

testimony of economic expert); Burton v. U.S., 668 F. Supp. 2d 86, 110-13 (D.D.C. 2009)

(basing calculation of economic damages in Federal Tort Claims Act case upon the testimony of

economic expert); Wachsman ex rel. Wachsman v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 603 F. Supp. 2d

148, 161-62 (D.D.C. 2009) (basing calculation of economic damages under Israeli law upon the

testimony of economic expert). For example, in Baker, plaintiffs’ expert made detailed

calculations with respect to a victim who had been injured in the hijacking of EgyptAir Flight

648 in 1985. Baker, 775 F. Supp. 2d at 79-80. First, the expert calculated the victim’s life

expectancy prior to the hijacking, based on his age at the time of the hijacking. Id. at 79. Second,


either bringing several actions or articulating multiple theories of recovery concerning the same event.”).




                                                          21
the expert calculated the victim’s “statistically expected worklife, based on his age and

education,” and his age of retirement, considering U.S. social security regulations. Id. Third, the

expert produced tables showing average earnings for people with the victim’s current and

projected levels of education and compared those figures with the victim’s current earnings. Id.

at 80. Finally, the expert calculated the victim’s post-retirement pension. Id.

        In Burton, a Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”) case, plaintiffs’ expert calculated the

economic damages due the spouse of an individual who had died as a result of medical

malpractice on the part of his treating physician. Burton, 668 F. Supp. 2d at 110-13. First, the

expert calculated the pre-tax present value of the decedent’s lifetime pension payments and his

lifetime Social Security benefits. Id. at 111. Second, the expert deducted any federal and state

income taxes that would have been due. Id. Third, the expert deducted an amount that the

decedent would have spent on personal maintenance (personal food, clothing, entertainment, and

transportation). Id. at 111-12. At this point, the Court deducted prejudgment interest, based on

the expert’s calculations, in light of the FTCA’s prohibition on awards of prejudgment interest.

Id. at 112. Fourth, the expert calculated the value of household services the decedent would have

provided had he lived—based on those tasks he performed before he died. Id. at 112-13. Finally,

the court awarded funeral expenses as part of the decedent’s spouse’s economic damages. Id. at

113.

        The following chart summarizes the evidence regarding plaintiffs’ economic damages in

this case.

             Plaintiff              Economic Damages
1.           Otiende                No figures provided.
2.           Buluma                 His monthly income at the time of the bombing fluctuated




                                                 22
                                    between 120,000 and 150,000 KSH but he has not been able
                                    to work since.
3.        Shah                      In 1997, his menswear business net annual profits of 500,000
                                    KSH but he lost his business as a result of the bombing.
4.        Nderitu                   Prior to the bombing, his law practice was netting about
                                    $2,000 USD per month in net profits. He could not rebuild
                                    the business after the bombing.
5.        Mogi                      His monthly income from his stationery supply business
                                    dropped from $5,000 to $1,000. He now has to expend 4,000
                                    KSH per month for medication for his high blood pressure and
                                    cannot get health insurance.
6.        Muema                     No figures provided.

       As is clear from the above chart, however, the evidence before this Court is insufficient

to support an award of economic damages for any of the plaintiffs. In other words, plaintiffs

have both failed to “reasonably prove” the extent of their past economic losses or prove “by a

preponderance of the evidence” the extent of their future economic losses.

                 2.    Pain and Suffering

       Under the Restatement, “[o]ne whose interests of personality have been tortiously

invaded is entitled to recover damages for past or prospective (a) bodily harm and emotional

distress; (b) loss or impairment of earning capacity; (c) reasonable medical and other expenses;

and (d) harm to property or business caused by the invasion.” Restatement (Second) of Torts §

924. “Thus the rule is applied in actions for assault, battery, false imprisonment, malicious

prosecution when the plaintiff is put under restraint, insulting conduct amounting to a tort, and

all other acts constituting a tort because intended or likely to cause bodily harm or emotional

distress, whether the harm is negligently, recklessly or intentionally caused or results from an

abnormally dangerous activity.” Id. at § 924 cmt. a.

       In support of their claim for pain and suffering, plaintiffs state the following:




                                                 23
                    Plaintiffs also seek damages for injuries associated with serious
                    bodily injury for 44 plaintiffs. Those injuries are comprised of loss
                    of vision or hearing, internal injuries and one miscarriage.
                    Plaintiffs also seek emotional distress damages on behalf of all
                    plaintiffs, and, in particular, plaintiffs seek damages resulting from
                    the social stigma which attaches in Kenya to each plaintiff’s status
                    as a victim of the bombing.

[#105] at 30.

           As noted above, the Court accepted the testimony of Kiema-Ngunnzi as an expert in the

field of sociology with a particular emphasis on the impact on social groups or individuals of

disasters. Based on her studies and testimony, the Court further accepts Kiema-Ngunnzi’s

conclusion that the survivors of the bombing suffered post-traumatic stress disorder and that a

unique social stigma attached to these Kenyan victims, a stigma that remains today.

           In similar cases brought by victims of terrorist acts, the courts have considered various

factors in determining an appropriate amount of compensation for pain and suffering. As noted

by this Court in Baker, such factors include “the severity of the pain immediately following the

injury, the length of hospitalization, and the extent of the impairment that will remain with the

victim for the rest of his or her life.” Baker, 775 F. Supp. 2d at 82 (internal citations omitted).

The Court further noted the following:

                    In Peterson, 5 the Court granted a baseline award of $5 million to
                    individuals suffering injuries such as compound fractures, broken
                    jaws, severe flesh wounds, continuing back and shoulder injuries,
                    and continuing psychological and substance abuse problems
                    stemming from the attack. Peterson, 515 F. Supp. 2d at 54–56.
                    The court departed upward from the baseline in several cases,
                    including to $7.5 million for an individual who lost sight in one
                    eye and ruptured an eardrum, in addition to experiencing lasting
                    psychological problems; to $8 million for an individual who was
                    mistaken for dead, placed in a body bag, and left in a morgue for
5
    Peterson v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 515 F. Supp. 2d 25 (D.D.C. 2007).




                                                          24
                  four days; and as high as $12 million for an individual who
                  suffered a broken neck, resulting in permanent quadriplegia. Id.
                  The court departed downward from the baseline in cases where
                  injuries were minor, including injuries from being hit by shrapnel
                  from the explosion. Id.

Id.

        In this case, the Court concludes that the following awards are appropriate:

      Plaintiff                    Injury                                                Award
1.    Otiende                      Permanent scarring; PTSD                              $6M
2.    Buluma                       Little vision in his left eye and 20% vision in       $7.5M
                                   his right eye; PTSD
3.    Shah                         PTSD                                                  $5M
4.    Nderitu                      Permanent scarring; PTSD                              $6M
5.    Mogi                         Permanent scarring; PTSD                              $6M
6.    Muema                        Loss of his left eye; PTSD                            $7.5M

        B.        Punitive Damages

        The Restatement describes punitive damages as follows:

                  (1) Punitive damages are damages, other than compensatory or
                  nominal damages, awarded against a person to punish him for his
                  outrageous conduct and to deter him and others like him from
                  similar conduct in the future.

                  (2) Punitive damages may be awarded for conduct that is
                  outrageous, because of the defendant’s evil motive or his reckless
                  indifference to the rights of others. In assessing punitive damages,
                  the trier of fact can properly consider the character of the
                  defendant’s act, the nature and extent of the harm to the plaintiff
                  that the defendant caused or intended to cause and the wealth of
                  the defendant.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 908.

        In Gates, an action brought under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 28 U.S.C. §

1602 et seq., the court awarded $150,000,000 to the estates of two individuals who were first

tortured and then murdered by Al Qaeda in Iraq, which acted with the support of Syria. Gates,




                                                   25
580 F. Supp. 2d at 74. The court explained its award as follows:

                   Here, Syria’s conduct was most reprehensible. While punitive
                   damages are awarded in an amount far in excess of compensatory
                   damages for economic loss, pain and suffering, and solatium, the
                   size of the award here is commensurate with that awarded in other
                   FSIA 6 cases filed by the families of those tortured and killed by
                   terrorists. See, e.g., Weinstein, 184 F. Supp. 2d at 25 (family
                   members and estate awarded $150,000,000 in punitive damages);
                   Elahi, 124 F. Supp. 2d at 114 (family members and estate awarded
                   $300,000,000 in punitive damages).

Id. at 74 n.19.

           In Valore, an FSIA case brought against Iran by survivors of the bombing of the United

States Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, the court awarded plaintiffs a total of $1 billion in

punitive damages, to be apportioned among the plaintiffs in proportion to their compensatory

damages awards. Valore, 700 F. Supp. 2d at 90. In making such an award, the court found the

following: 1) “[t]he nature of the defendants’ acts and the nature and extent of the harm

defendants intentionally caused are among the most heinous the Court can fathom;” 2) “[t]he

defendants’ demonstrated policy of encouraging, supporting and directing a campaign of deadly

terrorism is evidence of the monstrous character of the bombing that inflicted maximum pain and

suffering on innocent people;” and 3) “the amount of Iran’s annual expenditures on terrorist

activities” multiplied by five would yield an amount with “the desired deterrent effect.” Id. at 87-

89.

           The instant action, the bombing of the United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, like the

bombing of the Marine barracks, is one of the most grotesque and depraved acts imaginable.

While it caused injury, death, and irreparable emotional harm to hundreds of Kenyan citizens, Al


6
    Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.




                                                   26
Qaeda’s wealth is unknown. Furthermore, it is unclear to this Court whether any award of

punitive damages is likely to have any deterrent effect whatsoever. Thus, although this incident

is similar to the bombing in Valore, the Court will follow the per-victim standard utilized in

Gates and award each of the six plaintiffs identified above $150 million in punitive damages.

The Court simply cannot, in keeping with requirements of due process, make any greater award

without additional expert testimony as to Al Qaeda’s wealth and the multiplier necessary to

affect Al Qaeda’s future conduct.

       C.      Prejudgment Interest

       It is within the Court’s discretion to award prejudgment interest from the date of the

attack on August 7, 1998, until the date of final judgment. See Pugh v. Socialist People’s Libyan

Arab Jamahiriya, 530 F. Supp. 2d 216, 263 (D.D.C. 2008). The decision to award prejudgment

interest, as well as how to compute that interest, rests within the discretion of the Court, subject

to equitable considerations. Id. (citations omitted). “Courts in this Circuit have awarded

prejudgment interest in cases where plaintiffs were delayed in recovering compensation for their

injuries—including, specifically, where such injuries were the result of targeted attacks

perpetrated by foreign defendants.” Id. Although it is unclear whether plaintiffs will ever

recover their damages in this case, prejudgment interest is nevertheless appropriate in this case,

and necessary to fully compensate the victims for the injuries they sustained as a result of Al

Qaeda’s terrorist act. In an exercise of its discretion, therefore, the Court will award

prejudgment interest as an element of plaintiffs’ compensatory, but not punitive damages. See

Pugh, 530 F. Supp. 2d at 264) (“In contrast to punitive damages, which can not be imposed

against foreign sovereign defendants in FSIA cases, ‘[p]rejudgment interest is an element of




                                                 27
complete compensation.’”) (quoting West Virginia v. United States, 479 U.S. 305, 310, 107 S.Ct.

702, 93 L.Ed.2d 639 (1987)).

       The next issue is to determine how best to measure and calculate prejudgment interest. In

Doe v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 943 F. Supp. 2d 180 (D.D.C. 2013), a case involving the

calculation of damages under the FSIA, the court first noted that the appropriate measure of

prejudgment interest is the prime rate, i.e., the rate banks charge for short-term unsecured loans

to credit-worthy customers. Id. at 184 (citing Forman v. Korean Air Lines Co., Ltd., 84 F.3d 446,

450 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 1028 (1996)). The court then explained why using the

average prime rate for each year was a more precise method of calculating damages than simply

using the average prime rate over the entire period at issue:

               [Using the prime rate for each year] measures how much the award
               would have grown between 1983 and 1984 using the 1984 interest
               rate, then measures how much that total would have grown
               between 1984 and 1985 using the 1985 interest rate, and so on.
               The difference is substantial where, as here, prime rates were
               vastly higher longer ago. Because prime rates in the 1980s and
               1990s were several times higher than they are today, using the
               average rate for the whole 185 period does not reflect the rapid
               initial growth of an amount received in 1983 or 1984, growth that
               itself would have been compounded. Just as the prime rate is a
               more accurate measure of the true cost to plaintiffs than is the more
               conservative Treasury Bill rate, employing the prime rate for each
               year is more accurate than using the average prime rate for the
               whole period.

Doe, 943 F. Supp. 2d at 184.

       In this case, assuming annual compounding and starting with $1 for the first year, the

multiplier is therefore calculated as follows:




                                                 28
                   Year         Average Annual    Total
                                Prime Rate
                           1998               n/a                        $1.0000
                           1999                 8                        $1.0800

                                                            (= Total from 1998 +
                                                               Total from 1998 x
                                                           1999 Average Annual
                                                               Prime Rate ÷ 100)

                           2000                   9.23                   $1.1797
                           2001                   6.91                   $1.2612
                           2002                   4.67                   $1.3201
                           2003                   4.12                   $1.3745
                           2004                   4.34                   $1.4341
                           2005                   6.19                   $1.5229
                           2006                   7.96                   $1.6441
                           2007                   8.05                   $1.7765
                           2008                   5.09                   $1.8669
                           2009                   3.25                   $1.9276
                           2010                   3.25                   $1.9902
                           2011                   3.25                   $2.0549
                           2012                   3.25                   $2.1217
                           2013                   3.25                   $2.1907
                           2014                   3.25                   $2.2619

Thus, for damages incurred in 1998 and awarded in 2014, a multiplier of 2.2619 will be applied.

       D.      The Effect of the Bellwether Trial on The Remaining Plaintiffs

       A bellwether trial having been held, the only issue remaining before the Court is the

extent to which the Court’s analysis and damage award as to the above six plaintiffs can be

applied to the remaining plaintiffs. In its March 12, 2010 status report, plaintiffs noted that each

plaintiff in this case had completed a Department of State Form 95, a claim form under the

FTCA, which “sets out the civil and criminal penalties for presenting fraudulent claims and for

making false statements.” Plaintiffs’ Status Report Pursuant to Order of January 7, 2010 [#94] at

9. Plaintiffs then proposed that these form be submitted to the Court after the bellwether trial




                                                 29
had concluded in order to enable the Court to determine an appropriate damages matrix for the

remaining plaintiffs. The Court agrees and hereby orders the following:

         1.      Plaintiffs shall provide the Court with an electronic copy (submitted via e-mail)
                 and a hard copy of each plaintiff’s Form 95. Each form shall be numbered for
                 ease of reference. 7

         2.      Plaintiffs shall create and provide the Court with an electronic copy (submitted
                 via e-mail) and a hard copy of an Excel spreadsheet, which contains the following
                 information in the format shown below:

Number Name of                Page number        Number          Nature of       Nature of      Nature of
       plaintiff as it        where              associated      plaintiff’s     plaintiff’s    damages
       appears in             plaintiff’s        with            injury          tort claim     sought
       the First              name appears       plaintiff’s
       Amended                in First           Form 95
       Complaint              Amended
       [#13]                  Complaint
1.     John Doe               Page 4             Form No.        Scarring;       Battery        Compensatory
                                                 5               PTSD                           – Pain and
                                                                                                Suffering;
                                                                                                Punitive

         3.      A status conference in this matter will be held on October 3, 2014, at 3:00 p.m., at

which time the Court will hear further from plaintiffs on the creation of a damages matrix.

IV.      Conclusion

         For the foregoing reasons, final judgment against Al Qaeda will be entered for the above

six plaintiffs by way of a separate Judgment Order in the amounts set forth in the summary chart

below.

Plaintiffs           Compensatory Damages                                       D.               Total Award
                     A.         B.                       C.                     Punitive         (A + C + D)
                     Economic Pain                       Prejudgment            Damages
                                & Suffering              Interest

7
 Although plaintiffs previously submitted copies of their Form 95, the copies were not numbered and therefore
difficult for the Court to correspond with individual plaintiffs. See Reply to Dedendant’s [sic] Opposition to
Plaintiff’s Motion for Recertification at Appendix Volumes 1-7.




                                                        30
                              (B x 2.2619)
1.   Otiende   n/a     $6M        $13,571,400       $150M     $163,571,400
2.   Buluma    n/a   $7.5M        $16,964,250       $150M     $166,964,250
3.   Shah      n/a     $5M        $11,309,500       $150M     $161,309,500
4.   Nderitu   n/a     $6M        $13,571,400       $150M     $163,571,400
5.   Mogi      n/a     $6M        $13,571,400       $150M     $163,571,400
6.   Muema     n/a   $7.5M        $16,964,250       $150M     $166,964,250

                                                 Digitally signed by John M. Facciola
                                                 DN: c=US, st=DC, l=Washington,
                                                 email=John_M._Facciola@dcd.usco
                                                 urts.gov, o=United States District
                                                 Court, cn=John M. Facciola
                                                 Date: 2014.09.25 09:41:36 -04'00'
                                        JOHN M. FACCIOLA
                                        U.S. MAGISTRATE JUDGE




                             31
