In ordering the security payment, Manhattan federal Judge George B Daniels said he had given significant thought to a motion filed this month by the US State Department, which intervened in the case via the Department of Justice to argue a high bond could threaten the stability of the region by straining the cash-strapped Palestinians.
"Respectfully, a million means a lot to the Palestinian Authority," Mitchell Berger told the judge, noting that the amount could cover welfare for 9,500 families or build one school in Gaza.
Kent Yalowitz, a lawyer representing victims and survivors of attacks that killed 33 people and injured hundreds more, had asked that the Palestinians pay USD 20 million, describing the ordered payment as a "rounding error" for them.
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"I'm disappointed in the amount. I'm eager to get the appellate process completed," he said.
If the Palestinians pay USD 10 million to the court by next month and then continue to make USD 1 million monthly payments, the jury-awarded damages won't be collected until the appeals court rules in the case, Daniels said.
A jury awarded USD 218.5 million in damages this year in a lawsuit brought by victims and survivors of a series of bombings and shootings in Israel from 2002 to 2004. The damages were automatically tripled by the US Anti-Terrorism Act.