Turkey Is Not Immune from Trump-Era Lawsuit Against Erdogan’s Guards for Assault on Streets of Washington, Court Rules

Turkey is facing new obstacles to improving her troubled relationship with US.  As Turkey’s purchase of Russian-made S-400s, US aid to pro-PKK Kurds in North Eats Syria and accusations of state-owned lender Halkbank helped launder money to Iran cast a deep shadow over the bilateral lateral relationship, new fissures emerged.

 

The Turkish government is not immune from a lawsuit brought by protesters suing strongman Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s security detail for allegedly assaulting them on the streets of Washington, a federal appeals court has ruled, reported Law and Crime judicial affairs news site.  It is noteworthy that the White House refused to defend Turkey’s side of the argument.  Turkey is now facing three-fold sanctions.  S-400 related CAATSA sanctions can be tightened by an angry Congress in winter.  The Halkbank trial is expected to accelerate after the appointment of a new district attorney by Biden administration.  And, now this…

 

 

Issued on Tuesday, the D.C. Circuit’s ruling reanimates one of the most highly publicized scandals in U.S.-Turkish relations during the Donald Trump era.

 

“Not Plausibly Related to Protecting President Erdogan”

 

When Erdogan first visited the Trump White House on May 16, 2017, protesters gathered outside of the Turkish Ambassador’s Residence and were besieged by the Turkish leader’s security detail. Voice of America broadcasts and other viral videos captured grisly scenes of guards punching, beating and kicking demonstrators, and the Trump White House stood silent in the face of the onslaught.

 

“The nature of the challenged conduct was not plausibly related to protecting President Erdogan, which is the only authority Turkey had to use force against United States citizens and residents,” U.S. Circuit Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson, a George W. Bush appointee, wrote for a unanimous three-judge panel.

 

U.S. Circuit Judges Patricia Millett and Robert Wilkins, both Barack Obama appointees, joined the opinion in full.

 

Summarizing what drove the demonstrators to protest Erdogan, the panel noted: “They consider him a strongman who rules by decree, violates civil rights, illegally detains and tortures his own citizens and terrorizes Turkey’s Kurdish population.”

 

A lawyer for the protesters applauded the ruling, which affirms the lower court’s decision denying immunity to Turkey.

 

“The district court, and the court of appeals, have both come to the same conclusion, that the attacks carried out under the gaze of President Erdogan by his security detail against innocent protesters, must proceed for adjudication on the merits,” attorney Andreas Akaras, from the firm Bregman, Berbert, Schwartz & Gilday, LLC, told Law&Crime.

 

Akaras had been referring to footage appearing to show Erdogan passively watching from afar as his guards beat up protesters. Turkey’s lawyer did not immediately respond to an email requesting comment.

 

“Peaceful Protesters Were Attacked”

 

The melee, which injured 11 people, and its aftermath established what critics detected as a pattern for U.S.-Turkish relations in the Trump era, tacit approval of Erdogan’s most authoritarian impulses.

 

In the aftermath, prosecutors brought charges against 15 Turkish security officials, and 11 of those cases were dropped days before former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s scheduled meeting in March 2018 with Erdogan and his foreign minister, Mevlüt Cavusoglu, an associate of Paul Manafort.

 

The lawsuit filed by Akaras’s clients, however, proceeded in the courtroom of U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, who rejected Turkey’s invocation of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act in 2020.

 

 

 

WATCH:  Turkey’s Albatross Around the Neck: Halkbank

 

 

“The Turkish security forces had the discretion to protect their president,” Kollar-Kotelly, a Bill Clinton appointee, wrote in her ruling. “They even had the discretion to err, to some degree, in their determination as to the nature of force required to protect President Erdogan. However, the Turkish security forces did not have the discretion to violently physically attack the protesters, with the degree and nature of force which was used, when the protesters were standing, protesting on a public sidewalk.”

 

WATCH:  Turkey and US: Final Countdown | Real Turkey

 

After Turkey appealed that decision, the D.C. Circuit asked the Biden administration to weigh in the matter, in a fateful test for U.S.-Turkish relations in the post-Trump era.

 

As Akaras noted, the Biden administration declined to defend Turkey from the lawsuit.

 

“It is significant that the court of appeals recognized that the Biden administration spoke through its lawyers, clearly calling for the Republic of Turkey to be held to account for these attacks,” Akaras said. “It is also significant that the court of appeals, noted 15 Turkish security agents were criminally charged. In upholding the district court, the court of appeals judges reviewed the video themselves, and could not escape the conclusion that the peaceful protestors were attacked.”

 

The D.C. Circuit emphasized that the judges have not yet reached any decision on the merits, as the case returns to the trial judge.

 

 

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Published By: Atilla Yeşilada

GlobalSource Partners’ Turkey Country Analyst Atilla Yesilada is the country’s leading political analyst and commentator. He is known throughout the finance and political science world for his thorough and outspoken coverage of Turkey’s political and financial developments. In addition to his extensive writing schedule, he is often called upon to provide his political expertise on major radio and television channels. Based in Istanbul, Atilla is co-founder of the information platform Istanbul Analytics and is one of GlobalSource’s local partners in Turkey. In addition to his consulting work and speaking engagements throughout the US, Europe and the Middle East, he writes regular columns for Turkey’s leading financial websites VATAN and www.paraanaliz.com and has contributed to the financial daily Referans and the liberal daily Radikal.