US Court Allows Parents' Lawsuit Over Daughter Secretly Brought from Pakistan

A US federal court has denied the government's motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed by parents whose minor daughter was removed from Pakistan and brought to the United States without their knowledge. The parents allege officials mishandled the case and caused them emotional distress by keeping them in the dark for weeks. The court rejected the government's arguments that the Federal Tort Claims Act's exceptions applied, noting the Privacy Act permitted but did not require withholding information from the parents. This ruling allows the negligence and emotional distress claims to proceed against the United States and other defendants.

Key Points: US Court Clears Lawsuit Over Teen Removed from Pakistan

  • Lawsuit alleges negligence & emotional distress
  • Teen secretly brought to US from Pakistan
  • Court rejects government's motion to dismiss
  • Privacy Act did not mandate withholding information
4 min read

​US court clears lawsuit over teen brought from Pakistan without parents' knowledge

A US federal court allows a lawsuit by parents whose minor daughter was brought from Pakistan to the US without their knowledge, alleging negligence and emotional distress.

"The government fails to establish any legal basis for reconsideration and instead merely seeks to relitigate the merits. - Judge Frederic Block"

Washington, Dec 26

A US federal court has cleared the way for a lawsuit filed by New York-based parents who allege negligence and emotional distress after their minor daughter was removed from Pakistan and brought to the United States without their knowledge, rejecting the government's effort to have the case dismissed.

In an order issued on December 11, Senior US District Judge Frederic Block denied a motion by the United States seeking reconsideration of an earlier ruling that allowed the parents' claims to proceed.

"The United States's motion is DENIED," Judge Block said in his memorandum and order issued by the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York.

The case was brought by Mussarat Bano and Bashir Rahee against the United States, the City of New York, senior officials of the New York City Administration for Children's Services (ACS), and a private child welfare agency. The parents allege that officials mishandled their daughter's case and kept them in the dark for weeks after she left Pakistan and returned to the United States.

According to the court record, the girl, identified as FB, was a minor and a US citizen who was in Pakistan with her parents in June 2020. While there, she contacted US consular officials, alleging that her family was abusing her and preventing her from returning to the United States.

With assistance from US officials, FB fled her family on June 23, 2020, while still in Pakistan. She boarded a flight and arrived in the United States on June 26.

For several days, the parents said they had no information about what had happened to their daughter. On June 29, the government informed them that FB had left Pakistan and was safe. The parents allege they were not told where she was. It was not until July 20, 2020, that they learned from New York State police that their daughter was back in New York.

After her return, child welfare authorities in New York became involved. The case later included ACS and Little Flower Children and Family Services, a private foster care provider, indicating that FB's care was handled through New York's child protection system rather than by her parents.

The Justice Department asked the court to reconsider its earlier decision denying a motion to dismiss, arguing that the parents' claims were barred under exceptions to the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and that the complaint failed to state valid claims for negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Judge Block rejected all three arguments.

Reconsideration, the court said, is an "extraordinary remedy" that cannot be used simply because a party disagrees with an earlier ruling. To succeed, the government had to show a change in controlling law, new evidence, or a clear error that would result in manifest injustice. It failed to do so, the judge wrote.

The government argued before the court that the FTCA's foreign country exception applied because the relevant conduct occurred in Pakistan. The court disagreed, reaffirming its earlier finding that the parents had plausibly alleged tortious acts that took place in the United States.

"The government may disagree with this conclusion," Judge Block wrote, "but it fails to identify any legal basis for reconsideration."

The court also rejected the government's claim that federal officials were protected by the FTCA's due care exception. The government argued that officials were required by the Privacy Act to withhold information about the child's whereabouts after she returned to the United States because she refused to consent to disclosure.

Judge Block found that the Privacy Act did not mandate that course of action. While the law generally restricts disclosure of personal records, it also allows a parent to act on behalf of a minor. As a result, the statute permitted - but did not require - officials to withhold information.

"The government had discretion to share information with the Plaintiffs," the court held, concluding that the due care exception did not apply. The judge also rejected the government's argument that the parents failed to state valid legal claims.

"The government fails to establish any legal basis for reconsideration and instead merely seeks to relitigate the merits," the judge wrote in the order that allowed the lawsuit to move forward against the federal government and other defendants.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The judge made the right call. The government can't just whisk away a minor from another country and then hide behind legal technicalities. If the alleged abuse happened in Pakistan, that's one thing, but the handling after she landed in the US seems negligent. The parents deserve their day in court. 🇮🇳
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David E
Reading this from an international perspective, it highlights the huge cultural and legal gaps between nations. What the US sees as a child protection operation, the family likely sees as a kidnapping by the state. The court allowing the lawsuit is a step towards accountability.
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Ananya R
Very troubling. The girl is a US citizen, so the authorities had some duty, but to not inform the parents for nearly a month? That's just heartless. Even if there were allegations, basic humanity demands you tell a mother her child is safe. Hope the parents find some justice.
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Siddharth J
As an NRI, this hits close to home. There's often a lack of understanding of family dynamics in South Asian cultures. Immediate intervention might be needed, but the complete lack of communication afterwards is where the system failed. The judge's point about the Privacy Act allowing discretion is key.
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Kavya N
A respectful criticism: While I sympathize with the parents, we must also consider the daughter's side. She reached out alleging abuse. The authorities had to act on that. The real failure seems to be in the follow-up and coordination between US and Pakistani systems. A very sad situation for all.

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