
9-11 Victims' Families File $1 Trillion Lawsuit Against Arab Notables
Barry Wood
Washington
Wood report - Download 222k (RealAudio)
Relatives of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks have filed a $1
trillion lawsuit against several Middle Eastern banks, Saudi princes and the
government of Sudan.
They
call themselves "Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism." They announced their
legal action at the U.S. District Court in Washington. Deena Burnett, a mother
of three small children, is the widow of one of the passengers who overpowered
the hijackers of flight 93, which crashed in southern Pennsylvania.
"By filing this lawsuit this is our only source of retribution, our only source
of action to help stop them [the terrorists]," she said. "And so we'll use the
court system. But we're probably going to need your help. In the coming months
we'll need letters to congressmen and senators to encourage the Senate
Intelligence Committee to stand in our favor and help provide documents and
information and records that will help us freeze the assets of the defendants
named in this lawsuit."
The group, made up of about 500 relatives of the victims, is seeking $1 trillion
in damages from eight Islamic charities, several Arab financiers, the bin Laden
family's construction company, and three Saudi princes: Mohammed al-Faisal al
Saud, Turki al-Faisal al-Saud, Sultan bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud. The plaintiffs say
they will subject the sponsors of terror to the rule of law.
The September 11 attacks killed more than 3,000 people and destroyed the twin
towers of the World Trade Center in New York. Fifteen of the 19 alleged
hijackers were Saudi nationals.
The group says those named in the lawsuit sponsored and financially supported
the Taleban, Osama bin Laden, and the al-Qaida terrorist network.
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