The Iran Hostages:
Efforts to Obtain Compensation

Jennifer K. Elsea
Legislative Attorney
November 1, 2013
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R43210


The Iran Hostages: Efforts to Obtain Compensation

Summary
Even today, after the passage of some three decades, the 1979-1981 Iran Hostage Crisis remains
an event familiar to most Americans. Many might be unaware that the 52 American mostly
military and diplomatic personnel held hostage in Tehran for 444 days continue to strive for
significant compensation for their ordeal. The former hostages and their families did receive a
number of benefits under various civil service laws, and each hostage received from the U.S.
government a cash payment of $50 for each day held hostage. The hostages have never received
any compensation from Iran through court actions, all efforts having failed due to foreign
sovereign immunity and an executive agreement known as the Algiers Accords, which bars such
lawsuits. Congress took action to abrogate Iran’s sovereign immunity in the case Roeder v.
Islamic Republic of Iran
, but never successfully abrogated the executive agreement, leaving the
plaintiffs with jurisdiction to pursue their case but without a judicial cause of action.
Having lost their bids in the courts to obtain recompense, the former hostages have turned to
Congress for relief. This report outlines the history of various efforts, including legislative efforts
and court cases, and describes three bills currently before Congress (H.R. 904, S. 559, H.R.
3200).

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The Iran Hostages: Efforts to Obtain Compensation

Contents
The Hostage Relief Act .................................................................................................................... 1
Algiers Accords ............................................................................................................................... 2
President’s Commission on Hostage Compensation ........................................................................ 3
Court Actions ................................................................................................................................... 4
The Omnibus Diplomatic Security and Anti-Terrorism Act of 1986 ............................................... 5
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act Amendment .............................................................................. 6
Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran ............................................................................................ 6
Efforts to Abrogate the Algiers Accords .................................................................................. 10
Roeder II .................................................................................................................................. 11
Current Legislative Proposals ........................................................................................................ 13
S. 559 ....................................................................................................................................... 13
H.R. 3200................................................................................................................................. 15
H.R. 904 .................................................................................................................................. 16

Tables
Table 1. Proceeds from Iran Sanctions Violations ......................................................................... 14
Table 2. Major Penalties for Iran Sanctions Violations.................................................................. 15

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 17

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The Iran Hostages: Efforts to Obtain Compensation

ven today, after the passage of some three decades, the 1979-1981 Iran Hostage Crisis
remains an event familiar to most Americans. Many might be unaware that the 52
EAmerican mostly military and diplomatic personnel held hostage in Tehran for 444 days or
their survivors continue to strive for significant compensation for their ordeal. The former
hostages and their families did receive a number of benefits under various civil service laws, and
each hostage received from the U.S. government a cash payment of $50 for each day held
hostage. The hostages have never received any compensation from Iran through court actions, all
efforts having failed due to foreign sovereign immunity and an executive agreement known as the
Algiers Accords, which bars such lawsuits. Congress took action to abrogate Iran’s sovereign
immunity in the case, but never successfully abrogated the executive agreement, leaving the
plaintiffs with jurisdiction to pursue their case but without a judicial cause of action.
Having lost their bids in the courts to obtain recompense, the former hostages have turned to
Congress for relief.1 This report outlines the history of various efforts, including legislative efforts
and court cases, and describes three bills currently before Congress (H.R. 904, S. 559, H.R.
3200).
The Hostage Relief Act
The 52 Americans taken hostage in Tehran in November 1979 and held until January 19812
included civilian foreign service diplomats and other government employees, as well as military
service members and one private citizen. Concern about the effects of the ordeal on the hostages
and their families led Congress to enact legislation in 1980 designed to make the hostages and
their families eligible for the same benefits that were available to prisoners of war and soldiers
missing in action during the Vietnam conflict, including their dependents. The Hostage Relief Act
of 19803 did not provide for a cash payment to hostages or their families; however, benefits under
the act included
• creation of an interest-bearing salary savings fund including retroactive interest;
• reimbursement of medical expenses of the hostages and their family members;
• extension of relief under the Soldiers and Sailors Act to hostages;
• tax relief, including deferred assessment of taxes and penalties, tax forgiveness
during the period of captivity, and refunding of tax collected prior to enactment;
• educational expenses for family members of hostages and retraining of hostages.4

1 See Matthew L. Wald, Iran Hostages See Renewed Focus on Their 17-Year Bid for Compensation, NY TIMES, May 9,
2013, at A18.
2 All but three of these individuals were confined at the U.S. Embassy for the duration of their captivity. The three
exceptions were those detained at the Iranian Foreign Ministry until 17 days before the hostages’ repatriation. Thirteen
other hostages were released during the first several weeks of the hostage crisis, and one was released after 86 days. See
THE FINAL REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE PRESIDENT’S COMMISSION ON HOSTAGE COMPENSATION 3 (1981)
[hereinafter FINAL REPORT].
3 P.L. 96-449, 94 Stat. 1967 (1980).
4 The benefits for family members were cut off after the semester during which the captivity ended, while benefits for
the hostages themselves continued for 10 years, similar to educational benefits for veterans. Id. §104.
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These benefits were supplemental to benefits to which government employees and service
members and their families were already entitled.5 The Congressional Budget Office estimated
that the cost of additional medical benefits for the 1981 fiscal year would amount to $390,000;
educational benefits would cost from $80,000 to $307,000 depending on the version of the bill
enacted; and internal revenue would decrease by less than $1 million due to the tax benefits.6 A
proposal to provide the hostages each with $1,000 per day to be paid from frozen Iranian assets in
the United States met with the objection of the State Department on the grounds that it could
complicate negotiations to secure the hostages’ release, and it was not adopted.7
Algiers Accords
In order to secure the release of the hostages and bring the crisis to an end, the U.S. government
sought the good offices of Algeria to broker a deal with the new Iranian government. The result
was a set of executive agreements known collectively as the Algiers Accords.8 The agreements
provided not only for the release of the hostages, but also the unfreezing of Iranian assets in the
United States and the creation of an international tribunal to settle claims between the two
governments, as well as certain private claims against either government by a national of the
other, mostly arising as a result of contracts disrupted by the revolution in Iran.
The Algiers Accords contain the following provisions respecting claims arising out of the hostage
taking:
[T]he United States ... will thereafter bar and preclude the prosecution against Iran of any
pending or future claim of the United States or a United States national arising out of events
occurring before the date of this declaration related to (A) the seizure of the 52 United States
nationals on Nov. 4, 1979, (B) their subsequent detention, (C) injury to United States
property or property of the United States nationals within the United States embassy
compound in Tehran after Nov. 3, 1979, and (D) injury to the United States nationals or their
property as a result of popular movements in the course of the Islamic Revolution in Iran

5 Under the Missing Persons Act, 5 U.S.C. §§5661 et seq., the hostages were entitled to receive continued pay and
benefits, including special pay and incentive pay as well as basic allowances for quarters and subsistence, and a per
diem allowance for up to 90 days. They were also permitted to accrue leave without limit and have forfeited leave
restored.
6 H.Rept. 96-1349, pt. 1 at 13-14 (estimate of H.R. 7085, 96th Cong., for the Committee on Post Office and Civil
Service); pt. 2 at 13-15 (estimate for the Committee on Foreign Affairs) (1980). The version of the bill that was
eventually enacted contained the educational benefits provision pointing toward the lower end of the estimate.
7 The Hostage Relief Act of 1980, Hearings and Markup of H.R. 7085 before the Subcomm. on International
Operations of the H. Comm. on Foreign Affairs
, 96th Cong. 28-29 (1980) (statement of Rep. Mica). The Carter
Administration noted that it was preparing claims resolution legislation that would “establish a mechanism to ensure
that the hostages and their families are fully compensated for the grievous wrongs they have endured.” Id. at 29
(memorandum from the Department of State).
8 The Algiers Accords consists of five documents: The Declaration of the Government of the Democratic and Popular
Republic of Algeria (“General Declaration”); Declaration of the Democratic and Popular Republic of Algeria
Concerning the Settlement of Claims by the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran (“Claims Settlement Declaration”); The Undertakings of the Government of the United States
of America and the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran with Respect to the Declaration of the Government of
the Democratic and Popular Republic of Algeria; The Escrow Agreement; and The Technical Arrangement Between
Banque Centrale D’algerie as Escrow Agent and the governor and Company of the Bank of England and the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York as Fiscal Agent of the United States, United States-Iran, January 19, 1981, reprinted at 20
I.L.M. 223 (1981).
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which were not an act of the Government of Iran. The United States will also bar and
preclude the prosecution against Iran in the courts of the United States of any pending or
future claims asserted by persons other than the United States nationals arising out of the
events specified in the preceding sentence.9
To fulfill this commitment, President Carter issued Executive Order 12283,10 citing the
International Emergency Economic Powers Acts (IEEPA),11 among other authorities, to order the
Secretary of the Treasury to promulgate regulations prohibiting any person subject to U.S.
jurisdiction from bringing any court claim against Iran arising out of the hostage seizure or
subsequent detention.12 The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) at the Treasury Department
amended the Iranian Assets Control Regulations (31 C.F.R. Part 535) accordingly.13
President’s Commission on Hostage Compensation
On the same day the Algiers Accords were signed to secure the release of the hostages, President
Carter created the President’s Commission on Hostage Compensation14 and tasked it to provide
recommendations as to whether the United States should provide financial compensation to the
former hostages.15 The Commission reviewed prior practice regarding governmental
compensation for prisoners of war and the value of benefits already received by the former
hostages under other laws in making its recommendation.16 The Commission focused on the
obligations it found the U.S. government owes as an employer, and concluded that “compensation
in the tort sense” was not appropriate.17 It did, however, recommend a “token” payment of tax-
exempt detention benefits in the amount of $12.50 per day of captivity, similar to benefits paid to
Vietnam prisoners of war and interned civilians as well as to the crew of the USS Pueblo who
were detained by the government of North Korea for 11 months in 1968.18

9 See General Declaration, supra footnote 8, at ¶11, 20 I.L.M. at 224.
10 Exec. Order No. 12,283, 46 Fed. Reg. 7927 (January 19, 1981).
11 P.L. 95-223, codified at 50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.
12 Exec. Order No. 12,283 at ¶1-101.
13 See 31 C.F.R. 535.216 (1981).
14 Exec. Order No. 12,285, 46 Fed. Reg. 7931 (January 19, 1981).
15 See FINAL REPORT, supra footnote 2, App. A (Charter), September 21, 1981.
16 The value of benefits received is set forth in an appendix to the report. The Commission estimated the total aggregate
benefits, including compensation for property losses and benefits mentioned above that amounted to extra benefits (that
is, excluding pay or medical benefits to which they were already entitled), to amount to $2,243,792 as of August 15,
1981. Id. appendix H.
17 Id. preface (Commission letter to President); see also id. at 35-36 (“The Commission recommends that the United
States Government make no payment to the Iranian hostages or their family members of any compensation intended to
be the equivalent to compensatory damages for injuries incurred as the result of the unlawful detention of the hostages
by the Iranian Government.”).
18 Id. preface; id. at 33. The U.S. Navy vessel Pueblo and 82 members of its crew (one was killed during the capture)
were captured and detained by North Korea on the basis of an alleged incursion into that state’s territorial waters for
purposes of espionage. The crew was released after the United States negotiated an apology. Several members of the
crew sued North Korea in 2006 for torture and hostage-taking and were awarded a $65 million judgment. See Massie v.
Government of Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, 592 F. Supp. 2d 57 (D.D.C. 2008); see also Del Quentin
Wilber, USS Pueblo’s William Massie Seeks Retribution From N. Korea, WASH. POST, October 8, 2009, available at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/07/AR2009100703890.html?sid=ST2009100703955.
It does not appear that the plaintiffs have succeeded in enforcing their judgment.
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In making this recommendation, the Commission was mindful of the fact that the Algiers Accords
precluded the former hostages from suing Iran for damages,19 but agreed with the government’s
position that this did not constitute a “taking” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment
because
(1) the President had statutory and constitutional authority to settle the potential hostage
claims;
(2) the hostages could not establish for purposes of a taking claim that they suffered an actual
uncompensated loss since (a) their claims were settled for considerable value, i.e., their
release and (b) their right of action against Iran was of dubious value because of the
unlikelihood that the U.S. courts would have been available as a forum in which to sue Iran
in light of certain provisions of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.20
The Commission recommended that the government “assume the costs of restoring the hostages
to health, provide disability compensation if their health cannot be restored, provide
compensation for material losses and safeguard their employment rights and career prospects.”21
Court Actions
Notwithstanding the Algiers Accords’ provision barring lawsuits, many of the former hostages
brought suit against Iran for damages.22 These lawsuits failed for lack of jurisdiction under the
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA)23 or because of the Algiers Accords, or both.
In Persinger v. Islamic Republic of Iran,24 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit initially
found jurisdiction based on the non-commercial tort exception to the FSIA,25 on the notion that
U.S. embassy grounds are within the jurisdiction of the United States. On the merits, however, the
court found that the President’s order implementing the Algiers Accords extinguished any claim
the plaintiff may have had. Despite having won the case, the U.S. government petitioned for
rehearing on the foreign sovereign immunity question. The court granted the motion and vacated
its earlier opinion, agreeing with the government that the tort exception to sovereign immunity
applies only to injuries occurring within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, which did

19 FINAL REPORT, supra footnote 2, at 29-31; see also Id. app. F, 110-11 (explaining that the primary purpose of
previous legislation for the benefit of prisoners of war and civilian internees since World War II had been to provide
token payments as “a symbolic gesture ... expressing recognition of the hardship suffered by the beneficiaries” that was
“not to be commensurate with the actual injury”).
20 Id. at 31.
21 Id.
22 See, e.g., Persinger v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 729 F.2d 835 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 881 (1984); McKeel
v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 722 F.2d 582 (9th Cir. 1983), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 880 (1984); Williams v. Iran, 692 F.2d
151 (D.C. Cir. 1982); Lauterbach v. Iran, 692 F.2d 150 (D.C. Cir. 1982); Ledgerwood v. State of Iran, 617 F. Supp. 311
(D.D.C. 1985).
23 28 U.S.C. §§1602 et seq.
24 729 F.2d 835.
25 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(5) provides that a foreign state shall not be immune in cases in which “money damages are sought
against a foreign state for personal injury or death, or damage to or loss of property, occurring in the United States and
caused by the tortious act or omission of that foreign state or of any official or employee of that foreign state while
acting within the scope of his office or employment.... ”
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not include U.S. embassies abroad. The court held it could not, without jurisdiction over the case,
reach the question regarding the legitimacy of the President’s action.26
Some of the former hostages brought suit against the United States seeking compensation for
what they viewed as an unconstitutional taking of their claim against Iran, but were ultimately
unsuccessful.27 In Belk v. United States,28 the United States Claims Court entered summary
judgment in favor of the government, holding that the signing of the Algiers Accords did not
effect a “taking” of private property because it primarily benefited the plaintiffs, the barring of
claims was not novel or unexpected or outside the recognized authority of the President, and
alternatively, that the presidential decision to bar claims amounted to a political question. The
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed, agreeing that the extinguishment of the
plaintiffs’ claims was not novel or unexpected,29 and “cannot be said to have ‘interfered with
distinct investment-backed expectations.’”30 The appellate court also agreed that the matter was
non-justiciable as a political question:
It involves a policy decision made by the President during a time of crisis. The appellants
apparently contend that the President should not have entered into the Algiers Accords
because he could have obtained better terms, and that the Accords themselves were illegal
because the President was coerced into agreeing to them. The determination whether and
upon what terms to settle the dispute with Iran over its holding of the hostages and obtain
their release, necessarily was for the President to make in his foreign relations role. That
determination was “of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion,” and there are no “judicially
discoverable and manageable standards” for reviewing such a Presidential decision. A
judicial inquiry into whether the President could have extracted a more favorable settlement
would seriously interfere with the President’s ability to conduct foreign relations.31
The court concluded that if any compensation of the plaintiffs for their mistreatment and suffering
were to be forthcoming, it would have to be provided by “one of the other ‘coordinate branches of
government.’”32
The Omnibus Diplomatic Security
and Anti-Terrorism Act of 1986

When Congress returned to the issue of compensation for former hostages in 1985, the House
Foreign Affairs Committee rejected the amount recommended by the Commission in favor of a
per diem payment based on the average government allowance for travel.33 As referred to the
House floor, Section 802 of the Omnibus Diplomatic Security and Anti-Terrorism Act of 1986

26 729 F.2d at 838.
27 McKeel, 722 F.2d at 590 (finding lack of jurisdiction over taking action); Cooke v. United States, 1 Cl. Ct. 695
(1983).
28 Belk v. United States, 12 Cl. Ct. 732 (1987), aff’d, 858 F.2d 706 (Fed. Cir. 1988).
29 858 F.2d at 709.
30 Id. at 710 (citing Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S. 104, 124 (1978)).
31 Id. (citation omitted).
32 Id.
33 H.R. 4151 (99th Cong.).
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provided for compensation in an amount deemed appropriate by the President taking into account
the treatment the hostages received during captivity or other factors, but not less than the
worldwide per diem rate under 5 U.S.C. Section 5702.34 The committee explained that
In determining a level of cash compensation for civilian captives, the committee attempted to
weigh the issues presented in the debate over the rate of compensation for the Iran hostages.
At the time that the President’s Commission on Hostage Compensation presented its
findings, many felt that the Commission’s recommendation that the hostages receive $12.50
per day for every day in captivity vastly underestimated both the captivity itself and the
sympathy of the American people for the captives’ plight. Others suggested that any cash
award should be upward of $100 per day or more. The per diem rate chosen by the
committee is a uniform rate which is a reliable gauge of the Government’s obligation to its
employees when they are engaged in official business away from the normal duty station.35
This formula would have provided compensation in the amount of $66 per day for each former
hostage. A floor amendment to reduce the amount to $20 failed,36 but the provision was amended
in conference to provide $50 per day to the Iran hostages and to reduce the minimum per-diem
based rate for future victims by half.37 The conference report provides no explanation for the
substitution.38
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act Amendment
After Congress amended the FSIA in 199639 to include a new exception to immunity for acts of
terrorism conducted or sponsored by designated terrorist states, the former hostages again brought
suit against Iran.
Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran
In late 2000 a suit was filed in federal district court on behalf of the 52 embassy staffers and on
behalf of their families. Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran40 sought both compensatory and

34 See 132 CONG. REC. 5248 (March 18, 1986).
35 H.Rept. 99-494, at 31 (1986). During hearings on a similar measure, the Family Liaison Action Group (FLAG—an
advocacy group formed by the hostages’ families) suggested that an amount equal to or greater than $192.50 per day
would be adequate, a sum that corresponded to the amount the members of the President’s Commission were paid per
day at the going consultancy rate. H.R. 1956 and H.R. 2019, Benefits to Federal Employees who are Victims of
Terrorism, Joint Hearings before the subcommittee on Civil Service and the Subcomm. on Compensation and employee
Benefits of the Comm. on Post Office and Civil Service and the Subcomm. on International Operations of the Comm. on
Foreign Affairs
, 99th Cong. at 31 (1985) (statement of Katherine Keough).
36 132 CONG. REC. 5257 (March 18, 1968). Rep. McCain introduced the amendment, arguing that the bill under
consideration strayed from precedent and the Commission’s recommendation to such an extent that it would be
perceived as unfair among those held prisoner during the Vietnam conflict, and that government employees and service
members do not expect such compensation. Id. at 5253.
37 Victims of Terrorism Compensation Act §802, P.L. 99-399, Title VIII. The act extended benefits similar to those
enacted in the Hostage Relief Act of 1981 to cover future terrorist acts, and provided for cash compensation for future
hostages in the amount of “not less than half of the amount of the world-wide average per diem rate.... ” 5 U.S.C.
§5569(d)(1).
38 Conference report to accompany H.R. 4151, H.Rept. 99-738, at 82. There was no similar provision in the Senate
version of the bill.
39 P.L. 104-132, Title II, §221 (April 24, 1996); 110 Stat. 1241; previously codified at 28 U.S.C. §1605(a)(7).
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punitive damages from Iran. In August of 2001, the trial court granted a default judgment to the
plaintiffs and scheduled a hearing on the damages to be awarded. In October 2001, however, the
U.S. government intervened in the proceeding and moved that the judgment be vacated and the
case dismissed. The government contended that the suit did not meet all of the requirements of
the terrorist State exception to the FSIA (notably, that Iran had not been designated as a state
sponsor of terrorism at the time the U.S. personnel were held hostage) and that the suit was barred
by the explicit provisions of the 1981 Algiers Accords that led to the release of the hostages.
While that motion was pending before the court, Congress passed as part of the Hollings
amendment to the FY2002 Appropriations Act for the Departments of Commerce, Justice, and
State a provision specifying that Roeder should be deemed to be included within the terrorist
State exception to the FSIA. As amended, the pertinent section of the FSIA excluded suits against
terrorist states from the immunity generally accorded foreign states but directed the courts to
decline to hear such a case (with the amendment in italics): “if the foreign state was not
designated as a state sponsor of terrorism ... at the time the act occurred, unless later so
designated as a result of such act or the act is related to Case Number 1:00CV03110 (ESG) in the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
.”41
The conference report on the bill explained the provision as follows: “Subsection (c) quashes the
State Department’s motion to vacate the judgment obtained by plaintiffs in Case Number
1:00CV03110 (ESG) in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Consistent
with current law, subsection (c) does not require the United States government to make any
payments to satisfy the judgment.”42
In signing the appropriations act into law on November 28, 2001, however, President George W.
Bush took note of this provision and commented as follows:
[S]ubsection (c) ... purports to remove Iran’s immunity from suit in a case brought by the
1979 Tehran hostages in the District Court for the District of Columbia. To the maximum
extent permitted by applicable law, the executive branch will act, and will encourage the
courts to act, with regard to subsection 626(c) of the Act in a manner consistent with the
obligations of the United States under the Algiers Accords that achieved the release of U.S.
hostages in 1981.43
The government continued to pursue its motion to dismiss the case, arguing, inter alia, that the
suit was barred by the Algiers Accords. During the course of the proceeding the judge expressed
concern regarding the lack of clarity of the recent congressional enactment with respect to
whether Congress had intended to abrogate the Algiers Accords. A week later, in the fiscal 2002
appropriations act for the Department of Defense, the 107th Congress included a provision making
a minor technical correction in the reference to the Roeder case.44 The accompanying conference

(...continued)
40 Case Number 1:00CV03110 (ESG) (D.D.C., filed December 29, 2000).
41 P.L. 107-77, Title VI, §626(c) (November 28, 2001), amending 28 U.S.C. §1605(a)(7)(A).
42 H.Rept. 107-278 (2001).
43 Statement on Signing the Departments of Commerce, Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies
Appropriations Act, 2002, 37 WEEKLY COMP. PRES. DOC. 1723, 1724 (November 28, 2001).
44 The amendment inverted two letters in the case reference to Roeder that had been contained in P.L. 107-17, changing
“1:00CV03110 (ESG)” to “1:00CV03110 (EGS).” See P.L. 107-117, Title II, §208 (January 10, 2002). This technical
correction had originally been included in the Department of Defense appropriations bill as reported and adopted by the
(continued...)
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report elaborated on what it said was the effect and intent of the earlier amendment of the FSIA
with respect to Roeder, seemingly in response to the judge’s expression of concern. The
conference report explained that
The language included in Section 626(c) of P.L. 107-77 quashed the Department of State’s
motion to vacate the judgment obtained by plaintiffs in Case Number 1:00CV03110(EGS)
and reaffirmed the validity of this claim and its retroactive application.... The provision
included in Section 626(c) of P.L. 107-77 acknowledges that, notwithstanding any other
authority, the American citizens who were taken hostage by the Islamic Republic of Iran in
1979 have a claim against Iran under the Antiterrorism Act of 1996 and the provision
specifically allows the judgment to stand for purposes of award damages consistent with
Section 2002 of the Victims of Terrorism Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-386, 114 Stat. 1541).45
Nonetheless, in signing the Department of Defense appropriations measure into law on January
10, 2002, President Bush asserted that
Section 208 of Division B makes a technical correction to subsection 626(c) of P.L. 107-77
(the FY2002 Commerce, Justice, State, the Judiciary and Related Agencies Appropriations
Act), but does nothing to alter the effect of that provision or any other provision of law.
Since the enactment of sub-section 626(c) and consistent with it, the executive branch has
encouraged the courts to act, and will continue to encourage the courts to act, in a manner
consistent with the obligations of the United States under the Algiers Accords that achieved
the release of U.S. hostages in 1981.46
The judge granted the government’s motion to vacate the default judgment against Iran and to
dismiss the suit.47 In a lengthy opinion the court concluded that
• at the time it entered a default judgment for plaintiffs on August 17, 2001, it did
not have jurisdiction over the case and should not have entered a judgment;48
• the cause of action which Congress had adopted in late 1996 did not apply to
suits against terrorist states but only against the officials, employees, and agents
of those states who perpetrate terrorist acts;49

(...continued)
Senate but without explanation. See H.R. 3338 as reported by the Senate Appropriations Committee (S.Rept. 107-109
(2001)) and Senate floor debate at 147 CONG. REC. S12476-S12529 (daily ed. December 6, 2001), S12586-S12676 and
S12779-S12812 (daily ed. December 7, 2001).
45 H.Rept. 107-350 (2001).
46 Remarks on Signing the Department of Defense and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Recovery from
and Response to Terrorist Attacks on the United States Act, 2002, in Arlington, Virginia, 38 WEEKLY COMP. PRES.
DOC. 44 (January 10, 2002).
47 Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 195 F. Supp. 2d 140 (D.D.C. 2002).
48 The court said that it did not have jurisdiction over the suit until Congress amended the FSIA by means of Section
626(c) of the FY2002 appropriations act for the Departments of Justice, Commerce, and State, which was signed into
law on November 28, 2001. Prior to that amendment, it said, the suit did not fall within the terrorist state exception to
the FSIA because Iran had not been declared to be a terrorist state at the time it seized and held the American personnel
hostage. The court said also that, absent an “express statement of intent by Congress,” it could not apply §626(c)
retroactively.
49 The court stressed that the terrorist state exception which Congress had added to the FSIA in 1996 meant only that
U.S. courts could exercise jurisdiction over such cases. Traditional foreign state immunity, in other words, was
eliminated as a jurisdictional barrier. But that amendment to the FSIA did not in itself, the court said, provide a cause of
action for such suits. The specific statute providing for such a cause of action which Congress enacted later in 1996, it
(continued...)
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• the provision of the Algiers Accords committing the United States to bar suits
against Iran for the incident constitutes the substantive law of the case, and
Congress’s two enactments specifically concerning the case were too ambiguous
to conclude that Congress specifically intended to override this international
commitment.50
In addition, the court in dicta suggested that Congress’s enactments on the Roeder case might
have interfered with its adjudication of the case in a manner that raised constitutional separation
of powers concerns.51 It also chastised the plaintiffs’ attorneys for what it said were serious
breaches of their professional and ethical responsibilities.52
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia affirmed the decision of the lower court,
placing emphasis on the fact that the legislative history plaintiffs sought to use—the joint
explanatory statement prepared by House and Senate conferees—is not part of the conference
report voted on by both houses of Congress and thus does not carry the force of law.53
Executive agreements are essentially contracts between nations, and like contracts between
individuals, executive agreements are expected to be honored by the parties. Congress (or the
President acting alone) may abrogate an executive agreement, but legislation must be clear to
ensure that Congress—and the President—have considered the consequences. The
“requirement of clear statement assures that the legislature has in fact faced, and intended to
bring into issue, the critical matters involved in the judicial decision.” The kind of legislative
history offered here cannot repeal an executive agreement when the legislation itself is silent.
[Citations omitted].

(...continued)
said, provided only for a cause of action against an official, employee, or agent of a terrorist state, not against the
terrorist State itself. (See P.L. 104-208, Div. A, Title I, §101(c) (September 30, 1996) (“Flatow Amendment”); 110 Stat.
3009-172; 28 U.S.C. §1605 note).
50 The court stressed that an act of Congress “ought never to be considered to violate the law of nations, if any other
possible construction remains.” None of the statutes Congress had adopted relating to a cause of action generally or to
Roeder itself, the court said, unambiguously declared an intent either to override the Algiers Accords or to preserve it.
They, and their “scant” legislative history, were ambiguous on the question, it held, and, consequently, must be
construed not to conflict with the Accords. Roeder, 195 F. Supp. 2d at 177. The court also rejected the argument that
the United States had entered into the Algiers Accords under duress, making the Accords “an unenforceable illegal
contract.” “Whatever emotional appeal and rhetorical flourish this argument contains,” the court said, “it is absolutely
without basis in law.” Id. at 168.
51 The court did not base its decision on any separation of powers considerations. It said, however, that if it had
construed Section 626(c) to apply retroactively, Congress’s “post-judgment retroactive imposition of jurisdiction
[would raise] serious separation of powers concerns” and might be “an impermissible encroachment by Congress into
the sphere of the federal courts.... ” Id. at 161. “By expressly directing legislation at pending litigation, Congress has
arguably attempted to determine the outcome of this litigation,” it said. Id. at 163.
52 In commenting on what it called the “repeated ethical failures by class counsel,” the court stated that “[p]laintiffs’
counsel in this case repeatedly presented meritless arguments to this Court, repeatedly failed to substantiate their
arguments by reference to any supporting authority, and repeatedly failed to bring to the Court’s attention the existence
of controlling authority that conflicted with those arguments.” Id. at 185.
53 Roeder v. The Islamic Republic of Iran, 333 F.3d 228, 238 (D.C. Cir. 2003) (“While legislative history may be useful
in determining intent, the joint explanatory statements here go well beyond the legislative text of §208, which did
nothing more than correct a typographical error.”).
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The appellate court denied that its interpretation rendered any act of Congress futile. On the
contrary, it stated that, “[i]f constitutional ... the amendments had the effect of removing Iran’s
sovereign immunity, which the United States had raised in its motion to vacate.”54
Efforts to Abrogate the Algiers Accords
Subsequent to the trial court’s original decision in Roeder, efforts were made in the 107th through
the 111th Congresses to enact legislation that would explicitly abrogate the provision of the
Algiers Accords barring the hostages’ suit. On July 24, 2002, the Senate Appropriations
Committee reported the Fiscal 2003 Appropriations Act for the Departments of Commerce,
Justice, and State (S. 2778). Section 616 of that bill proposed to amend the FSIA as follows:
SEC. 616. Section 1605 of title 28, United States Code is amended by adding a new
subsection (h) as follows:
(h) CAUSE OF ACTION FOR IRANIAN HOSTAGES- Notwithstanding any provision of
the Algiers Accords, or any other international agreement, any United States citizen held
hostage in Iran after November 1, 1979, and their spouses and children at the time, shall have
a claim for money damages against the government of Iran. Any provision in an international
agreement, including the Algiers Accords that purports to bar such suit is abrogated. This
subsection shall apply retroactively to any cause of action cited in 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(7)(A).
In explaining the provision, the report of the committee stated that “Section 616 clarifies section
626 of P.L. 107-77 that the Algiers Accord is abrogated for the purposes of providing a cause of
action for the Iranian hostages.”55 The measure received no further action prior to the
adjournment of the 107th Congress.
In the 108th Congress the Senate added amendments to three appropriations bills that expressly
would have abrogated the Algiers Accords, but in each case the amendment was deleted in
conference.56 The 109th Congress did not take up any legislation to abrogate the Algiers Accords.
One bill, H.R. 3358, would have declared the Algiers Accords abrogated and inapplicable, and
would have directed the Secretary of the Treasury to pay the Roeder plaintiffs $1,000 per day of
captivity (family members were to be awarded $500 per day of captivity of the hostages), to be
paid out of Iran’s Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Fund57 and frozen assets belonging to Iran. No
action was taken on the bill, but new versions were introduced in the 110th Congress as H.R. 394
and in the 111th Congress as H.R. 4025.

54 The court noted, but did not decide, whether the amendments were an impermissible intrusion by Congress into the
role of the courts. Id. at 237 & n.5.
55 S.Rept. 107-218 at 167 (2002).
56 H.J.Res. 2149 (108th Cong.); S. 762 (108th Cong.); S. 1689 (108th Cong.).
57 A Foreign Military Sales Fund is a Treasury holding account established to facilitate the sale of military items to
foreign countries or international organizations, pursuant to the Arms Control Export Act, 22 U.S.C. §§2751 et seq.
Foreign purchasers place monies in the fund under individual sub-accounts from which the Department of Defense
pays for military equipment and services provided to the purchaser by the Department of Defense or private suppliers.
Iran’s FMS account held about $377 million as of 2000. The account originally contained funds deposited by Iran to
pay for military equipment and services during the reign of the Shah. However, Congress also provided funds for the
account in order to continue to pay contractors for goods and services after Iran terminated contracts under the FMS
program. Disposition of military equipment procured for Iran through the FMS fund and the money remaining in the
FMS account is an unresolved issue between the United States and Iran before the U.S.-Iran Claims Tribunal.
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There were also some efforts to provide compensation for the former hostages without abrogating
the Algiers Accords. H.R. 6305/S. 3878, 109th Congress, would have provided up to $500,000 for
victims of hostage-taking, including specifically the Iran hostages and family members named in
the Roeder case, who would have been eligible for additional compensation from the FMS
account. The bill did not mention the Algiers Accords, and it would have prohibited recipients
from commencing or maintaining a civil action in U.S. court against a foreign state. Similar
legislation was introduced in the 110th Congress as H.R. 3369 and H.R. 3346. The Justice for the
American Diplomats Held Hostage in Tehran Act, H.R. 5796 (112th Congress), would not have
directly abrogated the Algiers Accords, but would have found that liquidating any property in
which Iran or its surrogates has an interest in order to pay compensation to former hostages is
consistent with the Algiers Accords. It would have barred prosecution of hostage claims against
Iran only after such payments were made. None of these bills received committee action. H.R.
5796 has been introduced in the 113th Congress as H.R. 904 (see below).
Roeder II
When Congress again amended the FSIA in 200858 to overhaul the terrorist state exception to
immunity, it retained the language granting jurisdiction to the Roeder plaintiffs but did not

58 P.L. 110-181, §1083. The act created 28 U.S.C. Section 1605A, which provides in pertinent part:
(a) In General.—(1) No immunity.—A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of
courts of the United States or of the States in any case not otherwise covered by this chapter in
which money damages are sought against a foreign state for personal injury or death that was
caused by an act of torture, extrajudicial killing, aircraft sabotage, hostage taking, or the provision
of material support or resources for such an act if such act or provision of material support or
resources is engaged in by an official, employee, or agent of such foreign state while acting within
the scope of his or her office, employment, or agency.
(2) Claim heard.—The court shall hear a claim under this section if—
(A)(i) (I) the foreign state was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism at the time the act
described in paragraph (1) occurred, or was so designated as a result of such act, and, subject to
subclause (II), either remains so designated when the claim is filed under this section or was so
designated within the 6-month period before the claim is filed under this section; or
(II) in the case of an action that is refiled under this section by reason of section 1083(c)(2)(A) of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 or is filed under this section by reason
of section 1083(c)(3) of that Act, the foreign state was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism
when the original action or the related action under section 1605 (a)(7) (as in effect before the
enactment of this section) or section 589 of the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related
Programs Appropriations Act, 1997 (as contained in section 101(c) of division A of Public Law
104–208) was filed;
...
(B) the act described in paragraph (1) is related to Case Number 1:00CV03110 (EGS) in the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia.
(b) Limitations.—An action may be brought or maintained under this section if the action is
commenced, or a related action was commenced under section 1605 (a)(7) (before the date of the
enactment of this section) or section 589 of the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related
Programs Appropriations Act, 1997 (as contained in section 101(c) of division A of Public Law
104–208) not later than the latter of—
(1) 10 years after April 24, 1996; or
(2) 10 years after the date on which the cause of action arose.
(c) Private Right of Action.—A foreign state that is or was a state sponsor of terrorism as described
in subsection (a)(2)(A)(i), and any official, employee, or agent of that foreign state while acting
within the scope of his or her office, employment, or agency, shall be liable to—
(continued...)
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mention the Algiers Accords or clearly indicate whether the refiling of a suit no longer pending in
any court would be permitted.59 Nothing in the statute expressly abrogated the Algiers Accords,
and the conference report explained only that “The provision would also provide for courts to
hear a claim under this section if the terrorist act is related to Case Number 1:00CV03110 (EGS)
in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. The conferees intend that nothing
in this section would prejudice the claimants or their representatives in that case.”60
The former hostages and their families attempted to revive their suit61 on the basis that the new
exception permitted pending suits against state sponsors of terrorism to be refiled under certain
conditions.62 Plaintiffs sought to persuade the district court that the 2008 amendment, by
providing a cause of action and permitting revival of the lawsuit, unambiguously conflicted with
the terms of the agreement and should therefore be read to abrogate them, but the district court
disagreed, declaring “with an equal measure of frustration, regret, and compassion,” that
“Congress has failed to provide plaintiffs with a cause of action against Iran.”63 The standard for
clarity necessary for abrogation of the Algiers Accords was not met.
The appellate court affirmed the decision on the basis that language describing how “pending
cases” and “related actions” are to be treated does not clearly permit the plaintiffs to revive their
lawsuit,64 and that language in the new exception covering jurisdiction over the hostages’ claim
does not differ meaningfully from the version in effect when that court dismissed the suit in 2003.
While the 2008 amendment to the FSIA preserved jurisdiction for the case, it did not include the
case in the language providing for a cause of action. Thus, the statute was found too ambiguous to
overcome the bar presented by the Algiers Accords. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in May
2012.

(...continued)
(1) a national of the United States,
(2) a member of the armed forces,
(3) an employee of the Government of the United States, or of an individual performing a contract
awarded by the United States Government, acting within the scope of the employee’s employment,
or
(4) the legal representative of a person described in paragraph (1), (2), or (3),
for personal injury or death caused by acts described in subsection (a)(1) of that foreign state, or of
an official, employee, or agent of that foreign state, for which the courts of the United States may
maintain jurisdiction under this section for money damages. In any such action, damages may
include economic damages, solatium, pain and suffering, and punitive damages. In any such action,
a foreign state shall be vicariously liable for the acts of its officials, employees, or agents.
...
59 Section 1083(c) permitted the refiling of prior actions or the filing of new suits related to pending actions, under
certain circumstances. 28 U.S.C. §1605A note.
60 H.Rept. 110-477, at 1001 (2007).
61 Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 742 F. Supp. 2d 1 (D.D.C. 2010), aff’d, 646 F.3d 56 (D.C. Cir. 2011), cert.
denied
, 132 S. Ct. 2680 (2012) (“Roeder II”).
62 For an explanation of the law, see CRS Report RS22094, Lawsuits Against State Supporters of Terrorism: An
Overview
, by Jennifer K. Elsea.
63 Roeder II, 742 F. Supp. 2d at 3.
64 Roeder II, 646 F.3d at 62.
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Current Legislative Proposals
S. 559
The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations reported favorably on S. 559, the Justice for Former
American Hostages in Iran Act of 2013, which would establish a fund to compensate the former
hostages (S.Rept. 113-104). The American Hostages in Iran Compensation Fund would pay to
each former hostage65 or estate of a former hostage $150,000 plus $5,000 per each day of
captivity ($2.37 million total per former hostage). The Secretary of State would administer
claims, and each recipient would be required to “waive and forever release all existing claims
against Iran and the United States” arising out of the hostage crisis. It appears that the Secretary
of State would have some discretion to deny claims or reduce the amount of the award, although
the bill does not clarify the basis for such an action. An individual whose claim is denied or who
receives a reduced award would be entitled to submit further information, but would not be
permitted to challenge the decision in court. The Secretary of State would be required to submit to
Congress an annual report describing the status of the fund, including deposits, payments, and the
rules and processes established to administer the fund.
The bill would finance the fund through a 30% surcharge on “any fine or monetary penalty
assessed, in whole or in part, on a person for a violation of a law or regulation” or “the monetary
amount of a settlement entered into by a person with respect to a suspected violation of a law or
regulation” that “provides for a civil or criminal fine or other monetary penalty for any economic
activity relating to Iran that is administered by the Department of the Treasury, the Department of
Justice, or the Department of Commerce.” It is unclear which entity would be responsible for
regulating the payment of surcharges into the fund. Surcharges would cease five years after
enactment or, if later, once all payments to recipients are completed, with any surplus to be
deposited into the general fund of the Treasury.
In order to assess how much revenue the fund could likely be expected to accrue, CRS has
compiled data available from several sources in order to estimate the total revenue from penalties
and settlement agreements connected with violations of regulations proscribing economic activity
with Iran for the calendar years 2005-2012. Information was obtained from the Department of the
Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) website; the Department of Commerce,
Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) Annual Reports to Congress for the years 2005-2012; and
a report of major violations from the Department of Justice. CRS identified 321 penalties
stemming at least in part from violations of sanctions against Iran (there may be more than one
penalty per violation). The data include criminal fines, forfeitures, special assessments, and civil
penalties that were reported to have some connection with Iran. Because the data sets are not
complete through the time covered, and because it is not always easily ascertained whether the
enforcement action summarized pertained to Iran, the following should be considered an estimate
only.

65 “Former hostage” refers to those held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran for the duration of the hostage crisis (444 days),
but apparently excludes those three hostages held at locations other than the embassy, as well as the 14 hostages who
were released prior to January 20, 1981. See supra footnote 2. Former hostages must also have been listed as plaintiffs
in the Roeder case.
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Table 1. Proceeds from Iran Sanctions Violations
2005-2012
Total Penalties and Settlements,
Year
and Forfeitures in USD
30% surcharge
2005 $7,360,417.25

$2,208,125.18

2006 $41,862,309.32

$12,558,692.80

2007 $4,202,142.19

$1,260,642.66

2008 $3,951,951.80

$1,185,585.54

2009 $766,444,618.50

$229,933,385.55

2010 $195,207,477.00

$58,562,243.10

2011 $95,626,867.72

$28,688,060.32

2012 $1,162,033,172.00

$348,609,951.60

Total $2,279,049,115.65

$683,006,686.73

Source: CRS.
Notes: Information was obtained from the website of the Treasury Department, Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC), Civil Penalties and Enforcement Information, http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/
sanctions/CivPen/Pages/civpen-index2.aspx; the annual reports of the Department of Commerce, Bureau of
Industry and Security (BIS) to Congress for the years 2005-2011, available at http://www.bis.doc.gov/news/
indexnewsarchives.html; and a report from the Department of Justice entitled Summary of Major U.S. Export
Enforcement, Economic Espionage, Trade Secret and Embargo-Related Criminal Cases
(January 2007 to the present:
updated February 14, 2013), available at http://www.pmddtc.state.gov/compliance/documents/
OngoingExportCaseFactSheet022013.pdf.
It should be noted that a few large penalties against banks account for the bulk of the total, as
shown in Table 2. These large penalties involved violations of other sanctions programs in
addition to the Iran sanctions. All of them resulted from settlement agreements. The imposition of
a 30% surcharge could result in a restructuring of future similar settlement agreements in order to
isolate the violations related to Iran.
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Table 2. Major Penalties for Iran Sanctions Violations
Name Violation Penalty
Date
HSBC Holdings, PLC
violation of Cuban, Burmese, Sudanese,
$375,000,000.00 12/11/2012
Libyan, and Iranian sanctions programs by
processing wire transfers
Standard Chartered
violation of Iranian, Burmese, Sudanese,
$132,000,000.00 12/10/2012
Bank
Libyan, and Foreign Narcotics Kingpin
sanctions regulations by processing wire
transfers
ING Bank, NV
conspiring to violate Iranian, Burmese,
$619,000,000.00 6/12/2012
(Amsterdam)
Sudanese, Libyan, and Cuban sanctions
programs as well as New York State laws by
moving funds through U.S. financial system
Barclays Bank PLC of
“a systemic pattern of conduct giving rise to
$176,000,000.00 8/10/2010
United Kingdom
apparent violations of OFAC sanctions
involving Burma, Cuba, Iran, and Sudan."
Lloyds TSB Bank PLC
violation of Iran, Sudan, and Libya sanctions
$217,000,000.00
12/22/2009
of London, United
Kingdom
Credit Suisse of
payments involving Iran, Sudan, Burma, Cuba,
$536,000,000.00 12/16/2009
Zurich, Switzerland
North Korea, and persons whose property
is blocked pursuant to OFAC regulations
Total

$2,055,000,000.00
Source: CRS.
Notes: See note to Table 1 for source materials.
For 2013, OFAC reports a total of $7,569,303.00 in penalties for Iran sanctions through the end
of October. (The offenses themselves occurred in prior years.)
H.R. 3200
The Justice for Former American Hostages in Iran Act of 2013, a companion bill to S. 559, was
introduced on September 27, 2013, and referred to the Subcommittee on the Constitution and
Civil Justice. The bill would establish a fund based on the same 30% surcharge proposed by S.
559, but it would cover penalties for activities that began prior to enactment of the bill so long as
the activities continue past that date, and would cover settlement agreements entered into after the
date of enactment regardless of when the illegal activity took place. The bill specifies that
terrorism judgments against Iran would not be subject to the surcharge. The House bill would
award each former hostage or estate of a former hostage (including those held at locations other
than the U.S. Embassy in Tehran) the amount of $4.59 million, and to each qualifying spouse or
child of a former hostage the amount of $2.22 million. The bill would require the President to
propose an alternative program for financing the fund if the surcharges are insufficient to satisfy
the awards within two years or if the President were to determine that the relevant laws and
regulations are reduced in scope or effect.
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H.R. 904
The Justice for the American Diplomats Held Hostage in Tehran Act, H.R. 904, was introduced in
the House of Representatives and referred to the Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil
Justice. It would require the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State,
to establish a common fund to be administered by the class representatives and agents for the
former hostages, their survivors, and their family members—all of whom were identified as
plaintiffs in Roeder I. Each former hostage or estate of a former hostage would receive $10,000
for each day of captivity ($4.44 million each); each spouse or child of a former hostage would
receive half that amount.
The fund would have two possible sources for financing: half of all amounts collected from
certain fines and penalties imposed for violations related to Iran; or, at the President’s discretion,
the vesting and liquidation of property with certain connections to Iran. After the amounts
described above have been collected and disbursed to claimants, the President could use any
excess in the fund to reimburse those whose assets were seized; otherwise, such excess remaining
two years after enactment or the date on which payments to claimants is complete would be paid
to the Treasury. Claimants would thereafter be barred from prosecuting any claims against Iran
related to the hostage crisis. The President would be required to pursue the subrogated rights of
claimants against the government of Iran, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or its affiliates
or agents, apparently even to the extent that Iran’s assets are used to augment the common fund.
In order to provide a source for the common fund, H.R. 904 would double the maximum fines
and penalties authorized “in whole or in part, for violations of any conduct or activities with
respect to any government or person by reason of their connection with or sponsorship by Iran.”
Half of the amounts collected on or after the date of enactment, apparently irrespective of when
the conduct occurred, would be paid to the fund administrator until the total of all claims are paid.
It is not clear which fines or penalties are meant to be covered. It appears to cover sanctions
violations with respect to persons and governments subject to sanctions by reason of their
connection with Iran, but not violations with respect to sanctions against Iran itself. It does not
appear to cover settlements between the government and violators, and may not cover forfeitures.
(The bulk of amounts listed in Table 1 are the result of settlement agreements.)
The President would be authorized—but not required—to pay into the common fund any funds or
property in which Iran has an interest or in which any person or entity subject to any Iran-related
sanctions law has an interest that is held by the United States or that is subject to any prohibition
or regulation with respect to transactions. The President would be authorized to vest and liquidate
such property not later than 60 days after enactment or after the property becomes subject to such
treatment. However, if the President determines that the claims can be satisfied through fines and
penalties within one year of enactment, he would be able to defer payments of any property that is
held by the United States in the form of a trust until one year after enactment, but must ensure
that any such funds are not transferred, disbursed, or otherwise constrained for payment in the
meantime.

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Author Contact Information
Jennifer K. Elsea
Legislative Attorney
jelsea@crs.loc.gov, 7-5466

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