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Arab Bank to face May damages trial over Hamas attacks - judge

Published 11/12/2014, 03:45
Updated 11/12/2014, 03:50
© Reuters. Stephens, a lawyer for Arab Bank Plc, exits the Brooklyn Federal Court

By Nate Raymond

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Arab Bank Plc will face a trial in May to determine how much it owes for providing material support to Hamas in three of two dozen attacks attributed to the Islamic militant group in Israel and the Palestinian territories, according to a court order.

U.S. District Judge Brian Cogan in Brooklyn, New York, on Wednesday scheduled jury selection for May 18 for a damages trial involving claims by 17 of the 310 Americans who were either victims or related to victims of the attacks.

The cases will be the first to have damages assessed after a federal jury in September found Arab Bank liable in what lawyers described as the first terrorism financing civil case to reach trial in the United States.

The plaintiffs accuse the Jordanian bank of violating the Anti-Terrorism Act, a law that lets victims of U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organizations such as Hamas seek damages.

Arab Bank has said it will appeal. Cogan has yet to rule on if he would allow it to appeal prior to final judgements being issued.

At a November hearing, Cogan had expressed interest in picking just a "bellwether", or test, case so that if he was affirmed on appeal, a settlement might occur.

Bellwether trials are common mass tort litigation in the United States and are used by both sides to assess the claims' value.

Gary Osen, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said he looked forward to a damages trial and conveying "to a jury some measure of the grief and loss experienced by American terror victims as a result of Arab Bank knowingly providing tens of millions of dollars to Hamas."

© Reuters. Stephens, a lawyer for Arab Bank Plc, exits the Brooklyn Federal Court

Arab Bank in a statement said it hoped "the court will be as expeditious in approving the bank's path to appeal as it has been in ordering a very complex damages proceeding to be completed under an extraordinarily compressed timeframe."

(Editing by Bernard Orr and Ryan Woo)

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