Wagner v. Islamic Republic of Iran

172 F. Supp. 2d 128, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18424, 2001 WL 1424312
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedNovember 6, 2001
DocketCiv.A. 00-1799(TPJ)
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 172 F. Supp. 2d 128 (Wagner v. Islamic Republic of Iran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 172 F. Supp. 2d 128, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18424, 2001 WL 1424312 (D.D.C. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

JACKSON, District Judge.

Shortly before noon on Thursday, September 20, 1984, U.S. Navy Petty Officer First Class Michael Wagner died a violent death at his duty station at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon. The manner of his death was homicide. The cause of death was massive trauma sustained in the explosion of a car bomb driven onto the embassy compound at high speed and detonated at the base of the building by a suicide bomber acting in the service of Hizballah (also on occasion known as “Islamic Jihad”), a terrorist organization operating primarily in Lebanon at that time. 1

*131 This action for the wrongful death of Michael Wagner is prosecuted by Raymond D. Wagner, individually, and as representative of the Estate of Michael Wagner, his deceased son. Co-plaintiffs are Michael Wagner’s surviving younger siblings, Stephen W. Wagner and Rebecca Wagner Quate, and the Estate of Michael’s deceased mother, Dorothy J. Wagner. 2 Defendants are the Islamic Republic of Iran (“Iran”) and the governmental agency known as the Iranian Ministry of Information and Security (“MOIS”). Neither Iran nor MOIS has deigned to appear and defend, and the case has therefore proceeded by default. The action is brought pursuant to certain 1996 amendments to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1602-1611, which enabled such actions to be brought for the first time, with the Court’s jurisdiction being predicated upon 28 U.S.C. §§ 1330(b) and 1605(a)(7). The Court held an eviden-tiary hearing on October 16-17, 2001, from which the facts set forth below are found pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a) upon evidence satisfactory to the Court. 3

I.

Michael Ray Wagner, a U.S. citizen, was born in Columbia, N.C., in July, 1954. He attended college in North Carolina for four years, then enlisted in the U.S. Navy in June of 1977. Trained by the Navy as an intelligence specialist, after serving at sea on the U.S.S. Midivay and elsewhere in the Pacific region, Michael Wagner volunteered for assignment to the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, reporting for duty, in November, 1983.

In 1983, Lebanon was a nation embroiled in a civil war, as it had been for several years. Armed factions organized largely upon religious orientations were contending with one another for control of the country, including, in particular, its capital, Beirut, with exchanges of heavy gunfire occurring daily at all hours throughout the city. Several neighboring countries were striving to affect the outcome, and two of them — Iran and Syria— were simultaneously exploiting the disorder in attempts to achieve a dominant influence in Lebanese affairs, as well as to expunge all Western influence, primarily American, from the Middle East region altogether. The principal weapon employed against Westerners was terrorism: kidnaping, hostage-taking, assassination, and the like, including car bombings. In the months preceding Wagner’s arrival in Beirut, terrorist car bombs had destroyed the original U.S. Embassy in West Beirut in April, 1983, and the U.S. Marine barracks near the airport the following October. In November, 1983, when Wagner arrived in Lebanon, the U.S. Embassy had transferred embassy operations to a new building in East Beirut. 4

*132 Accordingly to the testimony of the U.S. Ambassador at the time, Reginald Bartholomew, on the morning of September 20, 1984, he was conferring with his British counterpart in his office on the sixth floor of the Embassy when the bomber made his approach to the building. Accelerating up the hill in a station wagon, the bomber was obliged to drive a sinuous course negotiating his way around several concrete barriers erected to impede such an attack. The vehicle was taken under fire by gunners of the Ambassador’s Lebanese bodyguard on the roof, as well as a British unit escorting its ambassador, 5 and the driver may well have been hit before detonating the bomb: He was unable to negotiate a sharp turn into the underground garage, later assumed to be his destination because the blast would have been yet more devastating had he reached it.

The vehicle exploded in the vicinity of a concrete cistern filled with water at the front of the Embassy. Although the cistern absorbed some of the force of the explosion, the bomb, containing, by Ambassador Bartholomew’s informed estimate, some 1500 kilograms of explosives, demolished the embassy building, wounded the Ambassador, and killed Petty Officer Wagner, age 30, in the second floor office he shared with an Army colleague, Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth V. Welch, who was also killed. The blast also killed 12 Lebanese, wounded 60 other people, and rendered the second U.S. Embassy building in Beirut in less than two years uninhabitable.

II.

The testimony of retired U.S. Ambassador Robert B. Oakley and Dr. Patrick L. Clawson. Director of Research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, together with declassified intelligence materials from the U.S. Department of State and the Central Intelligence Agency admitted into evidence by the Court, conclusively establish the identity of the perpetrators of the September 20, 1984, bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut. As in the numerous prior kidnaping cases tried to this district court, the perpetrators were shown to be the militant Islamic fundamentalist Shi'ite organization known as Hizballah, the Lebanese organization publicly committed to the expulsion of the American presence in Lebanon by terrorist means, as well as to the post-war reincarnation of Lebanon as an Islamic fundamentalist state. Hizballah, in turn, has been shown to be an agency or instrumentality of the Iranian MOIS, employed (somewhat less publicly) by the MOIS to achieve similar ends — by terrorist means when necessary — as well to establish Iranian ascendancy as the premier Islamic patron of the Shi'a population in Lebanon.

On the day after the bombing, Ambassador Oakley, the newly appointed Director of the Office of Terrorism, U.S. Department of State, traveled to Beirut to meet with Ambassador Bartholomew. Within two weeks his investigation had acquired satellite photo evidence of an exact replica of the obstacle-strewn approach to the U.S. Embassy, situated at the Sheik Ab-dullah Barracks in the Bekka Valley of Lebanon, obviously constructed as a training device for the suicide bomber-to-be. Iranian Revolutionary Guards were known to be quartered at the barracks, where members of Hizballah were also quartered and trained, and in other cases the barracks have been shown to be one of the *133 places of confinement for American hostages seized by Hizballah.

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Bluebook (online)
172 F. Supp. 2d 128, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18424, 2001 WL 1424312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-islamic-republic-of-iran-dcd-2001.