Houston Chronicle

U.S. court over turns Black water contractor’s murder conviction

Panel also orders new sentences for others involved

- By Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court on Friday overturned the first-degree murder conviction of a former Blackwater security contractor, ordering a new trial for the man prosecutor­s say fired the first shots in the 2007 slayings of 14 Iraqi civilians at a crowded traffic circle in Baghdad.

In a split opinion, the three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia Circuit ruled a lower court erred by not allowing Nicholas Slatten to be tried separately from his three co-defendants in 2014. The 33-year-old contractor from Tennessee is serving a life sentence for his role in the killings, which strained internatio­nal relations and drew intense scrutiny of the role of American contractor­s in the Iraq War.

The court also ordered new sentences for the three other contractor­s, Paul Slough, Evan Liberty and Dustin Heard. Each of them was found guilty of manslaught­er and firearms charges carrying mandatory 30-year terms.

The judges determined those sentences violated the constituti­onal prohibitio­n of cruel and unusual punishment because prosecutor­s charged them with using military firearms while committing another felony. That statute, typically employed against gang members or bank robbers, had never before been used against overseas security contractor­s working for the U.S. government.

A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington said prosecutor­s were still reviewing the decision and had no immediate comment.

It’s not clear that any new sentences for the defendants will be significan­tly different from the ones originally imposed. At the April 2015 sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth said he was “very satisfied with a 30-year sentence.”

At the weekslong trial held in 2014, federal prosecutor­s and defense lawyers presented much different versions of what triggered the September 2007 massacre in Nisour Square.

The government described the killings as a one-sided ambush of unarmed civilians, while the defense said the guards opened fire only after a white Kia sedan seen as a potential suicide car bomb began moving quickly toward their convoy. After the shooting stopped, no evidence of a bomb was found.

In issuing their ruling benefiting the defendants, the judges said they were not excusing the horror of events they said “defies civilized descriptio­n.”

“In reaching this conclusion, we by no means intend to minimize the carnage attributab­le to Slough, Heard and Liberty’s actions,” said U.S. Circuit Judge Karen L. Henderson, writing for the court. “Their poor judgments resulted in the deaths of many innocent people.”

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Slatten
 ??  ?? Liberty
Liberty
 ??  ?? Heard
Heard
 ??  ?? Slough
Slough

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