A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by the parents of a New Jersey soldier who died by suicide in South Korea, ruling the court lacked jurisdiction over claims that the Army misled the family during its post-death investigation.
Camden, NJ – A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by the parents of Army Pfc. Noah Samuel-Siegel, who died by suicide while stationed in South Korea, rejecting claims that the U.S. Army provided misleading information during its investigation and briefing following his death.
In an opinion issued by U.S. District Judge Karen M. Williams O’Hearn, the court granted the United States’ motion to dismiss after concluding it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the claims brought by Margaret and Yehonatan Samuel-Siegel.
Parents challenged Army’s investigation
The New Jersey couple alleged the Army acted negligently during its post-death handling of their son’s case, particularly during the Army Regulation 15-6 investigation and a family briefing conducted in September 2022.
According to the complaint, the parents claimed the Army omitted or altered key information about their son’s mental health, alcohol use, behavioral history and the circumstances surrounding his death. They also alleged investigators failed to disclose information regarding disciplinary actions related to his refusal of the COVID-19 vaccine and overlooked inconsistencies between the Army’s administrative investigation and a separate Criminal Investigation Division report.
The lawsuit further alleged the Army’s briefing violated regulations requiring officials to provide families with a thorough and accurate explanation of investigative findings.
Federal court dismisses case
Judge O’Hearn ruled that the court lacked jurisdiction to hear the claims and granted the government’s motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1). Because the court found it lacked jurisdiction, it did not address the government’s alternative arguments seeking dismissal for failure to state a claim.
The ruling does not determine whether the parents’ factual allegations are true. Instead, it concludes the federal court lacks authority to consider the claims as presented.
Key Points
- A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by the parents of Army Pfc. Noah Samuel-Siegel.
- The family alleged the Army provided misleading information during its investigation and post-death briefing following the soldier’s suicide in South Korea.
- The court ruled it lacked jurisdiction over the claims and dismissed the lawsuit without reaching the merits of the allegations.
Army, Noah Samuel-Siegel, Margaret Samuel-Siegel, Yehonatan Samuel-Siegel, South Korea, U.S. Army, federal court, Camden NJ, Karen M. O’Hearn, military lawsuit, New Jersey