Court denies plaintiffs' attempt to link Saudi princes to al‑Qaida‑funding charities in 9/11 FSIA case
Court denies plaintiffs' attempt to link Saudi princes to al‑Qaida‑funding charities in 9/11 FSIA case The passage reveals a procedural fight over alleged evidence that Prince Salman and Prince Naif knowingly funded terrorist charities, but the court found the evidence unauthenticated and rejected it. It points to specific charities, a foreign‑state immunity argument, and the involvement of Saudi‑government‑linked entities, offering a concrete lead (the disputed Rus al‑Yusef article) for further verification. However, the claim remains unsubstantiated and the document is a court filing rather than new investigative data, limiting its immediate impact. Key insights: Plaintiffs sought to supplement the record with a 1998 Egyptian article alleging Saudi princes funded charities used by al‑Qaida.; The court rejected the submission due to lack of authentication and timing issues.; SHC (Saudi Humanitarian Council) claims to be an organ of the Saudi government, with Prince Salman appointed President by the Council of Ministers.
Summary
Court denies plaintiffs' attempt to link Saudi princes to al‑Qaida‑funding charities in 9/11 FSIA case The passage reveals a procedural fight over alleged evidence that Prince Salman and Prince Naif knowingly funded terrorist charities, but the court found the evidence unauthenticated and rejected it. It points to specific charities, a foreign‑state immunity argument, and the involvement of Saudi‑government‑linked entities, offering a concrete lead (the disputed Rus al‑Yusef article) for further verification. However, the claim remains unsubstantiated and the document is a court filing rather than new investigative data, limiting its immediate impact. Key insights: Plaintiffs sought to supplement the record with a 1998 Egyptian article alleging Saudi princes funded charities used by al‑Qaida.; The court rejected the submission due to lack of authentication and timing issues.; SHC (Saudi Humanitarian Council) claims to be an organ of the Saudi government, with Prince Salman appointed President by the Council of Ministers.
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