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                <text>Department of Justice Emails</text>
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                <text>The Department of Justice received more than 11,000 e-mails in response to the agency's public solicitation for comments upon its plans to distribute the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund of 2001 established by Congress to benefit the victims of September 11 and their families.  These e-mails have been organized here by date.</text>
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    <name>September 11 Email</name>
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            <text>Monday, January 21, 2002 8:39 PM
Sep. 11th Victims Compensation Fund

Dear Mr. Feinberg,

Attached is Rep. Meehan's Jan 14th letter.  

Our nephew,    , age 21, was murdered on Sept. 11th in the World
Trade Center disaster.

We argee with Rep. Meehan's concerns and hope that you will give his
correspondance every consideration.

Thanking you in advance,

Individual Comment
Westbury,
NY       

REP. MEEHAN'S 1/14/02 LETTER TO MR. FEINBERG: 

Dear Mr. Feinberg: 

I am writing to provide comment on the interim final rules for the 
September 11th Victim Compensation Fund ("the Fund"). 

I appreciate the hard work you, your staff, and the Justice Department put 
into assembling the interim final rules. I also appreciate the fact that, 
under the interim final rules, charitable contributions to persons injured in 
the September 11th terrorists attacks or the relatives of those who lost their 
lives in this tragedy will not offset Fund awards. I had weighed in on that 
particular issue during the prior notice-and-comment period, in correspondence 
dated November 26th, 2001. 

At the same time, I strongly and respectfully request that the interim 
final rules be modified to provide truly full and fair compensation for 
economic and non-economic harm incurred by victims of the September 11th 
terrorist attacks and their loved ones. I had emphasized the moral and 
practical imperative of providing full and fair economic and non-economic 
damage awards through the Fund during our meeting of December 13th, 2001. 
Unfortunately, I do not believe the interim final rules achieve this 
objective. More importantly, those directly affected by the September 11th 
terrorist attacks consider the interim final rules to be seriously deficient 
and are -- quite understandably -- angry, hurt, and frustrated. 

A combination of unjustifiably low presumed non-economic damages awards, a 
flawed presumed economic damages formula, the collateral source offset rule, 
and an inappropriately steep evidentiary hurdle to securing modifications to 
presumed Fund awards will operate in many instances to prevent victims and 
their loved ones from receiving full and fair compensation -- and, on 
occasion, any compensation -- through the Fund. This would frustrate 
Congress's intent, deprive some families of resources critical to their 
economic security, encourage litigation, and send entirely the wrong signal to 
these families regarding our government's and society's estimation and 
appreciation of the magnitude of their loss. 

In the airline relief and airline security bills, Congress limited the 
courtroom liability of airlines, the airline industry, the World Trade Center, 
and other parties. It recognized that these liability limits -- operating 
alone -- might deprive victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks and 
their loved ones of full and fair compensation for the terrible harms they 
have suffered. Thus, Congress created a government-funded program to provide 
full and fair compensation for the economic and non-economic harm suffered by 
victims and their loved ones, minus a narrow range of collateral source 
payments. Notably, it did not subject the program to the annual 
appropriations process. Rather, it funded the program through mandatory 
spending. In other words, the manifest intent of Congress was to ensure that 
the program fully and fairly valued the economic and non-economic harm 
suffered by victims and their loved ones -- federal budgetary and cost 
considerations notwithstanding. Indeed, this would not only benefit victims 
and their loved ones but also reduce litigation arising from the September 
11th attacks. 

Along these lines, the fact that courtroom litigation may be less 
attractive to victims and their loved ones due to the liability limits imposed 
by recently enacted federal law certainly does not support valuing economic 
and non-economic damages incurred by victims or their loved ones for purposes 
of the Fund at levels significantly lower than what one would secure in a 
successful courtroom action. Those liability limits instead make it 
particularly imperative that damages estimates under the Fund be full and 
fair. Again, this is not only good policy but also the clear intent of 
Congress. 

To achieve this objective, I respectfully urge you to modify the interim 
final rules to increase presumed non-economic damage awards to amounts that 
fully reflect the damages that Congress listed as compensable, correct any and 
all methodological and statutory interpretation flaws in the setting of 
presumed economic damages, and allow increases to presumed awards based simply 
upon a showing that such awards do not accurately reflect the damages incurred 
by victims and their loved ones (as opposed to requiring a showing of 
"extraordinary circumstances" for increases to presumed awards). 

First, the presumed non-economic damages awards provided under the interim 
final rules are substantially lower than those paid in comparable cases. Non- 
economic damage awards in considerable excess of $1 million are typical for 
other airline crashes and terrorism cases, but in this instance, presumed non- 
economic damages awards are limited to $250,000 per victim and $50,000 for a 
spouse and each dependent. This dramatic undervaluation of presumed non- 
economic damages runs contrary to Congress's general intent to provide full 
and fair compensation and, significantly, to the specific language of the law 
establishing the Fund, which lists an extremely broad array of non-economic 
damages for which victims and their loved ones are to be compensated 
(regardless of what may be allowable under state law). This problem bears 
considerable responsibility for the fact that many victims or their loved ones 
would reportedly be severely undercompensated or even receive no compensation 
under the Fund - potentially driving them to pursue litigation which, due to 
statutorily imposed liability limits, may shortchange them as well. The 
interim final rules can and should be fixed to increase presumed non-economic 
damages awards to amounts which properly reflect Congress's intent and are a 
more realistic assessment of the considerable pain and suffering endured by 
the victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks and their loved ones. 

Second, a number of economists or experts have pointed out flaws in the 
interim final rules' methodology for calculating presumed economic damages. 
The use of outdated and improperly aggregated federal government data and the 
underestimation of household services performed by victims and of real 
increases in earnings by administrative support and clerical workers, among 
other things, has resulted in the unjustified and unnecessary undervaluation 
of presumed economic damages. The interim final rules' cap on the level of 
income a victim may be considered to have earned per year for the purpose of 
calculating presumed economic damages awards serves to exacerbate this 
problem. I strongly urge you to provide interested parties with all 
information that is necessary and useful to further evaluate the propriety of 
the interim final rules' presumed economic damages methodology and then 
correct all flaws that would tend to undervalue such damages. 

The fact that these are merely presumed economic and non-economic damages 
amounts - purportedly subject to upward adjustment based on specific evidence 
of loss presented at hearings or through supplemental evidentiary submissions 
by victims or their loved ones - does not excuse flaws in their calculation. 
Rather, presumed awards should be based on the best available data and 
methodologies regardless of the hearing or evidentiary submission option. 
Indeed, the goal of providing accurate compensation expeditiously through the 
Fund is furthered by having properly justified presumed Fund awards, as this 
may diminish the need for hearings or supplemental evidentiary submissions in 
each and every case. It also may be overly optimistic to assume that each 
Fund claimant will be able and willing to present evidence at a hearing to 
correct inaccuracies in the presumed Fund awards in light of their individual 
circumstances. Indeed, one can reasonably expect that some victims or their 
loved ones may, upon viewing inadequate presumed Fund awards, have little 
faith in the ultimate fairness of the hearing or supplemental evidentiary 
submission process and decide to forsake the Fund altogether. 

More importantly, the misplaced requirement contained in the interim final 
rules (though not contained in the statute establishing the Fund) that a Fund 
claimant demonstrate "extraordinary circumstances" through supplemental 
evidentiary submissions or at a hearing to justify increases to presumed Fund 
awards could serve essentially to "lock in" the unfair presumed economic and 
non-economic damage awards in any given case. Whether or not the presumed 
awards are fair, upward adjustments should be possible simply upon a showing 
by a claimant that a presumed award does not accurately reflect the economic 
and non-economic damages he or she has endured. But this degree of 
flexibility is particularly essential if the presumed economic and non- 
economic damage awards would in many cases provide less than fair and full 
compensation. The "extraordinary circumstances" threshold, however, may 
prevent the accurate and individualized Fund awards intended by Congress, 
because while all victims and their loved ones have endured extraordinary 
hardships, it may be difficult for a single Fund claimant to establish that 
his or her circumstances are "extraordinary" relative to all other victims and 
their loved ones. 

The hearing or supplemental evidentiary submission opportunities for 
victims and their loved ones must certainly be structured so as to afford them 
ample time and a convenient way to make their case. But even a properly 
structured hearing or evidentiary submission process would not remedy the 
difficulties arising from the inappropriately stringent "extraordinary 
circumstances" standard. Congress did not erect or envision any such obstacle 
to the award of accurate and individualized compensation to victims and their 
loved ones. Indeed, as Congress has considered bankruptcy reform legislation 
over the past few years, it has moved away from using an "extraordinary 
circumstances" threshold for permitting deviations from a grid of allowable 
expenses for debtors in favor of a standard that more readily accounts for 
debtors' particular economic circumstances. Accordingly, the "extraordinary 
circumstances" threshold should be modified. 

I do appreciate the fact that the interim final rules will not offset Fund 
awards by the amount of charitable contributions received by a victim or his 
or her loved ones. I believe the collateral source offset provision of the 
law is misguided. To the extent the final rules do offset Fund awards by 
virtue of certain collateral source payments, I strongly urge that you 
construe the collateral source offset provision of the law narrowly, 
consistent with the tenets of proper statutory interpretation. In particular, 
amounts paid by victims or their loved ones to secure certain types of 
collateral source compensation -- for example, life insurance premium payments 
-- should be deducted from any amount considered to offset a potential Fund 
award. Likewise, where collateral source payments trigger new income or 
estate tax liability, that new tax liability should be deducted from any 
amount considered to offset a potential Fund award. 

Thank you as always for your consideration and attention to these matters. 

Sincerely, 


Marty Meehan 
Member of Congress 
01/15/2002 


 
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        <name>September 11 Email: Date</name>
        <description>The local time and date when the message was written.</description>
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            <text>2002-01-21</text>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="386502">
              <text>dojN002195.xml</text>
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      <name>911DA Item</name>
      <description>Elements describing a September 11 Digital Archive item.</description>
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          <description>The process status of this item.</description>
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              <text>approved</text>
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          <name>Consent</name>
          <description>Whether September 11 Digital Archive has permission to possess this item.</description>
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              <text>full</text>
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          <description>Whether the contributor gave permission to post this item.</description>
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          <name>Copyright</name>
          <description>Whether the contributor holds copyright to this item.</description>
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          <description>The source of this item.</description>
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              <text>born-digital</text>
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          <name>Media Type</name>
          <description>The media type of this item.</description>
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              <text>email</text>
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        <element elementId="59">
          <name>Created by Author</name>
          <description>Whether the author created this item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="386509">
              <text>yes</text>
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        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Described by Author</name>
          <description>Whether the description of this item was submitted by the author.</description>
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              <text>no</text>
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        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Date Entered</name>
          <description>The date this item was entered into the archive.</description>
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              <text>2002-01-21</text>
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