Community Corner
Judge Orders Damages Of More Than $2 Billion For Family Of Kidnapped Former Florida FBI Agent Levinson
U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Kelly has ordered the Islamic Republic of Iran to pay more than $2 billion in damages to Levinson's family.
By Lucy Morgan
October 4, 2020
U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Kelly has ordered the Islamic Republic of Iran to pay more than two billion dollars in damages to the family of former Florida FBI Agent Robert Levinson, who was kidnapped by Iranian officials in 2007 and apparently died in captivity.
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He was the longest held civilian hostage in American history when his family reported his death earlier this year.
The judge’s order, signed late last week, orders the Iranian government to pay Levinson, his wife, Christine, and each of their seven children $107-million apiece for a total of $963-million in compensatory damages and an additional $150-million each for a total of $1,350,000 000 in punitive damages as punishment for “outrageous behavior” and to deter such conduct in the future.
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His kidnapping caused “immeasurable suffering’’ to Levinson and his family,’’ the judge ruled. Iran’s conduct and torture of U.S. citizens is part of a longstanding pattern and policy, he added.
Levinson was kidnapped in early 2007 on the island of Kish, a resort in the Persian Gulf near Iran while helping the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency investigate a money laundering scheme that involved the sale of Iranian oil.
He was a career law enforcement agent who retired from the FBI and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in 1998 after 33 years with the two federal agencies and began working as a private investigator from his home near Fort Lauderdale. He worked internationally in many dangerous situations as a federal agent after after he opened his own private investigative business.
After his kidnapping in 1998 family members received a number of communications from Iran and pictures of Levinson in a bright orange jump suit. In a video, Levinson pleaded for help in a quivering voice. Once an Iranian news agency published a report that Levinson was being held by Iranian security forces and would be released “in a few days.” That never happened.
Mrs. Levinson and other family members announced his death on a web site they established as part of an effort to win his freedom.
The family has not recovered a body and does not know exactly how he died, but were told by Iranian officials it happened before the COVID-19 pandemic erupted around the world.
David L. McGee, a former federal prosecutor who worked with Levinson on a number of Florida drug smuggling cases, represented the family for more than 14 years and filed the civil suit in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. two years ago.
Florida Phoenix columnist Lucy Morgan wrote late last year about the Levinson kidnapping, the lawsuit and the suffering of Levinson’s family over all these years.
This story was originally published by the Florida Phoenix. For more stories from the Florida Phoenix, visit FloridaPhoenix.com.