Current:Home > My20 years later, Abu Ghraib detainees get their day in US court -CapitalWay
20 years later, Abu Ghraib detainees get their day in US court
View
Date:2025-04-27 23:47:22
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — Twenty years ago this month, photos of abused prisoners and smiling U.S. soldiers guarding them at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison were released, shocking the world.
Now, three survivors of Abu Ghraib will finally get their day in U.S. court against the military contractor they hold responsible for their mistreatment.
The trial is scheduled to begin Monday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, and will be the first time that Abu Ghraib survivors are able to bring their claims of torture to a U.S. jury, said Baher Azmy, a lawyer with the Center for Constitutional Rights representing the plaintiffs.
The defendant in the civil suit, CACI, supplied the interrogators who worked at the prison. The Virginia-based contractor denies any wrongdoing, and has emphasized throughout 16 years of litigation that its employees are not alleged to have inflicted any abuse on any of the plaintiffs in the case.
The plaintiffs, though, seek to hold CACI responsible for setting the conditions that resulted in the torture they endured, citing evidence in government investigations that CACI contractors instructed military police to “soften up” detainees for their interrogations.
Retired Army Gen. Antonio Taguba, who led an investigation into the Abu Ghraib scandal, is among those expected to testify. His inquiry concluded that at least one CACI interrogator should be held accountable for instructing military police to set conditions that amounted to physical abuse.
There is little dispute that the abuse was horrific. The photos released in 2004 showed naked prisoners stacked into pyramids or dragged by leashes. Some photos had a soldier smiling and giving a thumbs up while posing next to a corpse, or detainees being threatened with dogs, or hooded and attached to electrical wires.
The plaintiffs cannot be clearly identified in any of the infamous images, but their descriptions of mistreatment are unnerving.
Suhail Al Shimari has described sexual assaults and beatings during his two months at the prison. He was also electrically shocked and dragged around the prison by a rope tied around his neck. Former Al-Jazeera reporter Salah Al-Ejaili said he was subjected to stress positions that caused him to vomit black liquid. He was also deprived of sleep, forced to wear women’s underwear and threatened with dogs.
CACI, though, has said the U.S. military is the institution that bears responsibility for setting the conditions at Abu Ghraib and that its employees weren’t in a position to be giving orders to soldiers. In court papers, lawyers for the contractor group have said the “entire case is nothing more than an attempt to impose liability on CACI PT because its personnel worked in a war zone prison with a climate of activity that reeks of something foul. The law, however, does not recognize guilt by association with Abu Ghraib.”
The case has bouncedthroughthecourts since 2008, and CACI has tried roughly 20 times to have it tossed out of court. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2021 ultimately turned back CACI’s appeal efforts and sent the case back to district court for trial.
In one of CACI’s appeal arguments, the company contended that the U.S. enjoys sovereign immunity against the torture claims, and that CACI enjoys derivative immunity as a contractor doing the government’s bidding. But U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, in a first-of-its kind ruling, determined that the U.S. government can’t claim immunity when it comes to allegations that violate established international norms, like torturing prisoners, so CACI as a result can’t claim any derivative immunity.
Jurors next week are also expected to hear testimony from some of the soldiers who were convicted in military court of directly inflicting the abuse. Ivan Frederick, a former staff sergeant who was sentenced to more than eight years of confinement after a court-martial conviction on charges including assault, indecent acts and dereliction of duty, has provided deposition testimony that is expected to be played for the jury because he has refused to attend the trial voluntarily. The two sides have differed on whether his testimony establishes that soldiers were working under the direction of CACI interrogators.
The U.S. government may present a wild card in the trial, which is scheduled to last two weeks. Both the plaintiffs and CACI have complained that their cases have been hampered by government assertions that some evidence, if made public, would divulge state secrets that would harm national security.
Government lawyers will be at the trial ready to object if witnesses stray into territory they deem to be a state secret, they said at a pretrial hearing April 5.
Judge Brinkema, who has overseen complex national security cases many times, warned the government that if it asserts such a privilege at trial, “it better be a genuine state secret.”
Jason Lynch, a government lawyer, assured her, “We’re trying to stay out of the way as much as we possibly can.”
Of the three plaintiffs, only Al-Ejaili, who now lives in Sweden, is expected to testify in person. The other two will testify remotely from Iraq. Brinkema has ruled that the reasons they were sent to Abu Ghraib are irrelevant and won’t be given to jurors. All three were released after periods of detention ranging from two months to a year without ever being charged with a crime, according to court papers.
“Even if they were terrorists it doesn’t excuse the conduct that’s alleged here,” she said at the April 5 hearing.
veryGood! (96914)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Maple Leafs' Morgan Rielly objects to goal, cross-checks Senators' Ridly Greig in head
- Usher says he manifested Super Bowl performance by staying in Las Vegas when he heard the game was coming: I'm not leaving
- Pamela Anderson reveals why she ditched makeup. There's a lot we can learn from her.
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- 'Oppenheimer' wins top honor at 2024 Directors Guild Awards, a predictor of Oscar success
- Compound for sale in Naples, Florida is reportedly America's most expensive listing: See photos
- Drop Everything Now and See Taylor Swift Cheer on Travis Kelce at Super Bowl 2024
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Super Bowl 58 picks: Will 49ers or Chiefs win out on NFL's grand stage in Las Vegas?
Ranking
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- 5 Super Bowl ads I'd like to see (but won't) to bridge America's deep political divisions
- Sophie Turner and Peregrine Pearson Make Public Debut as a Couple
- Former officer pleads not guilty to murder in fatal police shooting
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Digital evidence leads to clues in deaths of two friends who were drugged and dumped outside LA hospitals by masked men
- Usher and Longtime Love Jenn Goicoechea Get Marriage License Ahead of Super Bowl Halftime Show
- A 'Super' wedding: Kansas City Chiefs fans get married in Las Vegas ahead of Super Bowl 58
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
King Charles III Breaks Silence After Cancer Diagnosis
How much does a Super Bowl commercial cost in 2024? 30-second ad prices through history
CBP dog sniffs out something unusual in passenger’s luggage -- mummified monkeys
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Reba McEntire Delivers Star-Spangled Performance at Super Bowl 2024
Wall Street marks a milestone as the S&P 500 closes above 5,000 for the first time
King Charles III expresses 'heartfelt thanks' for support after cancer diagnosis