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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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February 20, 2015
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New
York Jury Could Hit PA in Pocketbook and Beyond
by IPT News • Feb 20, 2015 at
11:04 am
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Deliberations are expected to be underway today in a civil lawsuit
brought by American victims of Palestinian terrorist attacks during the
second Intifada.
The Palestinian Authority (PA) could face $1 billion in damages to the victims'
families and survivors of the attacks if jurors find that it, along with
the Palestine Liberation Organization and its branches, encouraged its
people to carry out attacks on Israeli civilians. The attacks took place
between 2001-04 and include shooting attacks on public streets and bombings
targeting buses and a Hebrew University cafeteria.
During six weeks of testimony, jurors saw internal PA documents which
detailed payments to terrorists being held in Israeli prisons, and to
families of terrorists killed carrying out attacks. In closing arguments Thursday, defense attorney Mark
Rochon reiterated the PA's claim that the terrorists acted on their own.
Payments to the families were meant to provide support for those suddenly left without the
breadwinner's income.
For those in prison, the payments increased based upon the length of
sentence. That support still flows today.
Kent Yalowitz, who represents the American victims, argued that the PA's documents show that the violence
was sanctioned at the highest levels.
"Where are the documents punishing employees for killing people? We
don't have anything like that in this case," Yalowitz said.
What they do have are documents detailing the payments to the terrorists and
their families containing hand-written notes of approval by longtime PLO
Chairman and then PA President Yasser Arafat. In addition, a 2002 report about West Bank operations sent to the PA's
General Intelligence Service chief praised one squad for its "high
quality successful attacks."
The squad's "men are very close to us (i.e. to the General Intelligence)
and maintain with us continuous coordination and contacts," the report
said. Some of the attacks at issue were carried out by Fatah, the PLO's
armed wing, or the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade. Records show those groups
ultimately were part of the same hierarchy controlled by Arafat until his
death in 2004.
The lawsuit, Sokolow v. PLO, was brought under the
Anti-Terrorism Act. The plaintiffs asked for a judgment of $350 million,
but that could be tripled under the law's provisions because terrorist acts
were at issue.
The prospect of such a huge judgment isn't the Palestinian Authority's
only worry. A judgment against the PA "threatens to undermine
Palestinian efforts to rally international support for a brewing battle at
the International Criminal Court in The Hague," according to an
Associated Press report.
It cited multiple PA officials who acknowledged anxiety over the jury's
deliberations.
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