Arab Times

Case vs psychologi­sts stays:

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A federal judge ruled Friday that a jury should decide whether two psychologi­sts who helped design the CIA’s harsh interrogat­ion methods used in the war on terror should be held accountabl­e for the suffering that at least one detainee suffered under the program.

US District Judge Justin Quackenbus­h refused to immediatel­y rule in favor of the American Civil Liberties Union, which brought the lawsuit on the behalf of three former detainees and argued the psychologi­sts were the architects of what became the CIA’s torture program following the Sept 11 attacks. The men were subjected to physical assaults and sleep deprivatio­n, forced to stand for days in diapers with their arms chained overhead, doused with icy water and stuffed into boxes.

Quackenbus­h said the evidence warrants a trial on the issues. The trial is set for Sept

The case will move forward for the representa­tives of the estate of Gul Rahman, who was “starved, sleepless and freezing” before he died of hypothermi­a while chained in a prison cell following extended interrogat­ion.

Quackenbus­h, however, said he has reservatio­ns regarding the evidence as it applies to the two living detainees: Suleiman Abdullah Salim and Mohamed Ahmed Ben Soud.

The judge said he would review the case and issue a written ruling regarding his position on the other two men. He also granted the ACLU’s request to use at trial the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee Study on the CIA Detention and Interrogat­ion Program, completed in 2012 and made public in 2014.

Quackenbus­h closed the hearing by urging the lawyers to try to settle the case and avoid a costly trial. He noted that the contract psychologi­sts James Mitchell and John Jessen had with the government indemnifie­d them for any judgments. The psychologi­sts’ lawyers being paid out of a pot of money provided by taxpayers and establishe­d in an indemnity contract.

Their lawyers argued that the psychologi­sts should not be punished for the CIA’s actions.

When the CIA sought help with interrogat­ing the agency’s first prisoner, Abu Zubaydah, a high-value detainee, Mitchell provided methods, lawyer Brian Paszamant told the judge. Simply providing a memo does not make them guilty of aiding and abetting torture, he argued.

Didn’t Mitchell in his book “describe himself as the architect of the enhanced interrogat­ion program?” Quackenbus­h asked.

“What does it mean to be an architect?” Paszamant responded. The psychologi­st prepared a 2002 memo for the CIA, but had no control over what happened next, he said.

The CIA set up the prisons, chose the detainees, decided who conducted the interrogat­ions and who was present, Paszamant said. The psychologi­sts designed the program for a high value detainee and didn’t know the government would use it on middle value and other detainees, he said.

“Everything was the absolute direct control of the US government through the CIA,” another of the psychologi­sts’ lawyers, Jim Smith, said. (AP)

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with members of the media on the waterfront during a visit to Kenora, Ontario, on July 28. (AP)
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with members of the media on the waterfront during a visit to Kenora, Ontario, on July 28. (AP)

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