Daily Press

Jury deliberati­ng in Iraq Abu Ghraib prison abuse civil case

Contractor casts blame on Army

- By Matthew Barakat

ALEXANDRIA — A lawyer for the military contractor being sued by three survivors of the notorious Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq told jurors Monday that the plaintiffs are suing the wrong people.

“If you believe they were abused ... tell them to make their claim against the U.S. government,” said John O’Connor, defense attorney for Reston-based military contractor CACI, during closing arguments at the civil trial in federal court. “Why didn’t they sue the people who actively abused them?”

The lawsuit brought by the three former Abu Ghraib detainees marks the first time a U.S. jury has weighed claims of abuse at the prison, which was the site of a worldwide scandal 20 years ago when photos became public showing U.S. soldiers smiling as they inflicted abusive and humiliatin­g treatment on detainees in the months after the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq.

The suit alleges that civilian interrogat­ors supplied by CACI to Abu Ghraib contribute­d to the torture the plaintiffs by conspiring with military police to “soften up” detainees for interrogat­ions.

CACI, in its closing arguments, relied in part on a legal theory known as the “borrowed servant doctrine,” which states an employer can’t be liable for its employees’ conduct if another entity is controllin­g and directing those employees’ work.

In this case, CACI says the Army was directing and controllin­g its employees in their work as interrogat­ors.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs disputed that CACI relinquish­ed control of its interrogat­ors to the Army. At trial, they introduced evidence that CACI’s contract with the Army required CACI to supervise its own employees. Jurors also saw a section of the Army Field Manual that pertains to contractor­s and states that “only contractor­s may supervise and give direction to their employees.

Muhammad Faridi, one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers, told jurors that the case is simpler than CACI’s lawyers are trying to make it.

He said that if CACI interrogat­ors conspired with military police to inflict abuse on detainees to soften them up for interrogat­ions, then the jury can find CACI liable even if CACI interrogat­ors never themselves inflicted abuse on any of the three plaintiffs.

All three plaintiffs testified to horrible treatment including beatings, sexual assaults, being threatened with dogs and forced to wear women’s underwear, but said the abuse was either inflicted by soldiers, or by civilians who couldn’t be identified as CACI workers. In some cases, the detainees said they couldn’t see who was abusing them because they had bags over their heads.

As evidence of CACI’s complicity, jurors heard testimony from two retired generals who investigat­ed the Abu Ghraib scandal in 2004; both concluded that CACI interrogat­ors engaged in misconduct.

Faridi told the jury that while many of the soldiers who abused detainees were convicted and sentenced to prison, CACI has not yet been held accountabl­e.

“When our country’s military found out about the abuse, they didn’t cover it up,” Faridi said. “Our country’s military held the military police members who were perpetrati­ng the abuse accountabl­e. CACI escaped liability.”

And Faridi said that even when the Army asked CACI to hold its its interrogat­ors responsibl­e, it still sought to evade responsibi­lity. In May 2004, the Army asked CACI to fire one of its interrogat­ors, Dan Johnson, after one of the Abu Ghraib photos showed Johnson interrogat­ing a detainee who was forced into an awkward crouching position that investigat­ors concluded was an illegal stress position.

CACI contested Johnson’s dismissal, writing that the “photo depicts what appears to be a relatively relaxed scene” and saying that “squatting is common and unremarkab­le among Iraqis.”

“I’ll leave that to you to consider whether you find that offensive,” Faridi told the jury Monday.

At trial, CACI employees testified they defended Johnson’s work because Army personnel had asked them through back channels to do so. O’Connor said that out of the many hundreds of photos of abuse at Abu Ghraib, the photo of Johnson is the only one depicting a CACI employee, and it shows him questionin­g not one of the plaintiffs but an Iraqi policeman after someone had smuggled a gun into the prison and shot at military police.

O’Connor also apologized for parts of his case that were “long, annoying and boring” but said he had no choice because the U.S. government claimed that some evidence, including the identities of interrogat­ors, was classified. So jurors, rather than hearing live testimony, were subjected to long audio recordings in which the interrogat­ors’ voices were doctored and their answers were often interrupte­d by government lawyers who instructed them to not answer the question.

The trial was delayed by more than 15 years of legal wrangling and questions over whether CACI could be sued. Some of the debate focused on the question of immunity — there had long been an assumption that the U.S. government would hold sovereign immunity from a civil suit, and CACI argued that, as a government contractor, it would enjoy derivative immunity.

But U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, in a first-of-its-kind ruling, determined that the U.S. government cannot claim immunity in cases involving fundamenta­l violations of internatio­nal norms, such as torture allegation­s. And, as a result, CACI could not claim any kind of derivative immunity, either.

 ?? DANA VERKOUTERE­N ?? This artist’s sketch depicts Salah Al-Ejaili, right, a former Al-Jazeera journalist, before U.S. District Court in Alexandria on April 16. Al-Ejaili, a former detainee at the Abu Ghraib prison, described to jurors beatings, being stripped naked and threatened with dogs, stress positions meant to induce exhaustion and pain.
DANA VERKOUTERE­N This artist’s sketch depicts Salah Al-Ejaili, right, a former Al-Jazeera journalist, before U.S. District Court in Alexandria on April 16. Al-Ejaili, a former detainee at the Abu Ghraib prison, described to jurors beatings, being stripped naked and threatened with dogs, stress positions meant to induce exhaustion and pain.

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