The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Saudi Arabia wants Sept. 11 lawsuit dropped

Kingdom’s lawyers say there’s no proof it backed attack.

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — Saudi Arabia on Tuesday asked to be dropped from a Sept. 11 lawsuit that victims’ families filed, saying no evidence links it to the deadly terrorist act.

Lawyers for Saudi Arabia made the request in papers filed in Manhattan federal court, saying lawyers for Sept. 11 families and survi- vors of the 2001 attack had failed repeatedly for the last 14 years to generate sufficient evidence to subject the U.S. ally to the $100 billion lawsuit brought against numerous government­al and non-government­al defendants. Defendants Iran, the Taliban and al-Qaida already have been found in default.

The lawyers said purported new evidence, like “the thousands of pages they unsuccessf­ully presented before,” are hearsay and speculatio­n and are “insufficie­nt to support the findings required for jurisdicti­on over Saudi Arabia.” They added that the plaintiffs had reached “grandiose conclusion­s” that far exaggerate the importance of “threadbare allegation­s and nonexisten­t evidence.”

In the lawsuit, hundreds of victims’ relatives and injured survivors, along with insurance companies and businesses, claim that employees of the Saudi government directly and knowingly assisted the attack’s airplane hijackers and plotters and fueled al-Qaida’s developmen­t into a terrorist organizati­on by funding chari- ties that supported them.

Fifteen of the 19 attackers were Saudis. Now-declassifi­ed documents show U.S. investigat­ors looked into some Saudi diplomats and others with Saudi government ties who had contact with the hijackers after they arrived in the U.S. The 9/11 Commission report found “no evidence that the Saudi government as an institutio­n or senior Saudi officials individual­ly funded” the attacks al-Qaida mastermind­ed, but the commission also noted “the likelihood” that Saudi-government-sponsored charities did.

U.S. District Judge George Daniels already tossed Saudi Arabia out as a defendant once, but Congress passed legislatio­n that eliminated some defenses and enabled the Sept. 11 victims to reassert their claims.

After Tuesday’s filing, a New Vernon, New Jersey-based group representi­ng Sept. 11 families and survivors said there’s plenty of evidence against the kingdom.

“It’s been almost 16 years since 9/11, and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia continues to do everything possible to duck, dodge and distract from the overwhelmi­ng evidence that their government officials and agents aided and abetted these horrific attacks,” said Terry Strada, National Chair for the 9/11 Families and Survivors United for Justice Against Terrorism.

He added that Congress made clear when it passed the law last year allowing the claims to go forward against Saudi Arabia that the Sept. 11 families and survivors “deserve their day in court and all of the Saudis’ highpriced lawyers, lobbyists and foreign agents in the world aren’t going to stop us.”

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