San Francisco Chronicle

Lawsuit over CIA torture settled

- By Sheri Fink Sheri Fink is a New York Times writer.

A settlement in the lawsuit against two psychologi­sts who helped devise the CIA’s brutal interrogat­ion program was announced Thursday, bringing to an end an unusual effort to hold individual­s accountabl­e for the techniques the agency adopted after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Lawyers for the three plaintiffs in the suit, filed in 2015 in U.S. District Court in Spokane, Wash., said the former prisoners were tortured at secret CIA detention sites. The settlement with the psychologi­sts, Dr. Bruce Jessen and Dr. James Mitchell, came after a judge last month urged resolving the case before it headed to a jury trial.

The plaintiffs — two former detainees and the family of a third who died in custody — had sought unspecifie­d punitive and compensato­ry damages. The terms of the settlement are confidenti­al.

In a phone interview, one of the plaintiffs, Mohamed Ben Soud, said through a translator: “I feel that justice has been served. Our goal from the beginning was justice and for the people to know what happened in this black hole that was run by the CIA’s offices.”

Dror Ladin, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, which helped bring the suit, called the case “a historic victory for our clients and for the rule of law.”

The plaintiffs said that Jessen and Mitchell profited from their work as contractor­s for the CIA. The men received up to $1,800 a day and later formed a company that was paid about $81 million to help operate the interrogat­ion program. Those contracts included indemnity agreements, stating that the U.S. government agreed to pay their legal fees and fines.

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