Thursday, April 27, 2006

U.S.: More Than 600 Implicated in Detainee Abuse

Investigations Lag Two Years After Abu Ghraib Photos

Two years after the Abu Ghraib scandal, new research shows that abuse of detainees in U.S. custody in Iraq, Afghanistan, and at Guantánamo Bay has been widespread, and that the United States has taken only limited steps to investigate and punish implicated personnel.

A briefing paper issued today, “By the Numbers,” presents findings of the Detainee Abuse and Accountability Project, a joint project of New York University’s Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, Human Rights Watch and Human Rights First. The project is the first comprehensive accounting of credible allegations of torture and abuse in U.S. custody in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo.

“Two years ago, U.S. officials said the abuses at Abu Ghraib were aberrations and that people who abused detainees would be brought to justice,” said Professor Meg Satterthwaite, faculty director of the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law School. “Yet our research shows that detainee abuses were widespread, and few people have truly been brought to justice.”

The project has collected hundreds of allegations of detainee abuse and torture occurring since late 2001 – allegations implicating more than 600 U.S. military and civilian personnel and involving more than 460 detainees.

The project found that many abuses were never investigated, and investigations that did occur often closed prematurely, or stalled without resolution. In cases where abuses were substantiated and perpetrators identified by military investigators, military commanders often chose to use weak non-judicial disciplinary measures as punishment, instead of pursuing criminal courts-martial. Of the courts-martial that did take place, the majority resulted in either prison sentences of less than a year, or punishments that did not involve jail time (such as discharge or rank-reduction).

“We’ve seen a series of half-hearted investigations and slaps on the wrist,” said Tom Malinowski, Washington advocacy director for Human Rights Watch. “The government seems more interested in managing the detainee abuse scandal than in addressing the underlying problems that caused it.”

The project found that the vast majority of those who were investigated for abuse were enlisted military personnel, not officers. Under military law, officers can be held accountable for the abuses of their subordinates under the doctrine of command responsibility. The project did not find a single case in which an officer was held accountable under that doctrine.

“There’s been a failure of accountability for detainee abuse at the command level,” said Elisa Massimino, Washington director for Human Rights First. “Without accountability up the chain of command, there won’t be deterrence, and the torture and abuses we’ve documented likely will continue.”

The Detainee Abuse and Accountability Project (DAA) was initiated in March 2005 as a joint research effort to collect and analyze credible allegations of abuse of detainees in U.S. custody in Afghanistan, Iraq, and at the Guantánamo Bay detention facility, and to assess what actions, if any, the U.S. government has taken in response to these allegations. The project has also recorded investigations, disciplinary measures, or criminal prosecutions that are linked to abuse allegations.

Among the key findings released today:

• Detainee abuse has been widespread. The DAA Project has documented more than 330 cases in which U.S. military and civilian personnel are credibly alleged to have abused, tortured or killed detainees. These cases implicate more than 600 U.S. personnel and involve more than 460 detainees.

• Only a fraction of the more than 600 U.S. personnel implicated in these cases – 40 people – have been sentenced to prison time.

• Of the hundreds of allegations of abuse collected by the DAA Project, only about half appear to have been adequately investigated.

• In cases where courts-martial – the military’s equivalent of criminal trials – have convened, the majority of prison sentences have been for less than a year, even in cases involving serious abuse. Only 10 U.S. personnel have been sentenced to a year or more in prison.

• No U.S. military officer has been held accountable for criminal acts committed by subordinates under the doctrine of command responsibility. Only three officers have been convicted by court-martial for detainee abuse.

• Although approximately 20 civilians, including CIA agents, have been referred to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution for detainee abuse, the Department of Justice has shown minimal initiative in moving forward in abuse cases. The Department of Justice has not indicted a single CIA agent for abusing detainees; it has indicted only one civilian contractor.

Recommendations
In order to remedy the serious failures of accountability that the DAA Project research documents, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, Human Rights Watch and Human Rights First recommend that:

• Congress should appoint an independent commission to review U.S. detention and interrogation policy and operations worldwide.

• The secretary of defense and the attorney general should order their departments: (1) to move forward promptly with investigations of allegations of torture and other abuse of detainees in U.S. custody abroad; (2) to initiate prosecutions where the evidence warrants; and (3) to instruct relevant authorities to ensure that appropriate criminal action is taken against all persons implicated in killings, torture, and other abuse, whatever their rank or position.

• The secretary of defense should appoint a single, high-level, centralized authority who can convene and prosecute courts-martial across the branches of the military to investigate all U.S. military personnel – no matter their rank – who participated in, ordered, or bear command responsibility for war crimes or torture, or other prohibited mistreatment of detainees in U.S. custody.

• Congress should implement a check on officer promotions, by requiring that each branch of the military certify, for any officer whose promotion requires Senate confirmation, that the officer is not implicated in any case of detainee torture, abuse, or other mistreatment, including through the doctrine of command responsibility.

http://hrw.org/english/docs/2006/04/26/usint13268_txt.htm

Sadistic Bootcamps Booted

Fla. Lawmakers Agree to Close Boot Camps

Florida lawmakers agreed Wednesday to shut down the state's juvenile boot camps after the death of a 14-year-old boy who had been kicked and punched by guards.

The move, agreed to by House and Senate negotiators, is part of a state budget agreement that still requires both chambers' approval.

Under the deal, Florida's four remaining boot camps would be replaced with a new, less militaristic program. The state would pump an additional $32.6 million into juvenile justice programs, increasing total spending to $699.5 million.

"Unfortunately it has taken the death of a young man to get to this point," said Republican Rep. Gus Barreiro, chairman of the House Juvenile Justice Appropriations Committee.

The move was prompted by the death Jan. 6 of Martin Lee Anderson, who was roughed up in a videotaped scuffle at a Panama City boot camp. The camp was shut down after the boy's death, which remains under investigation and has drawn protests from civil rights leaders.

"Now there won't be any more children being abused while in the custody of the state," said attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Anderson's parents in a lawsuit against the state and the sheriff's office that ran the camp. "It is something good to have a legacy knowing that his death wasn't in vain."

Florida had nine juvenile boot camps at the height of the program but is now down to four, with about 130 offenders in all. The teenagers are sent there for mid-level crimes such as burglary and drugs, and usually stay for four to six months.

Guards operate like drill sergeants, typically waking up the teenagers at 5 a.m. for calisthenics, yelling in their faces, and using push-ups and running as punishment for breaking the rules.

Gov. Jeb Bush, who had been a strong supporter of the boot camps, has said he supports the new measures, which would take effect July 1.

The new juvenile programs, like the boot camps, would be run by sheriffs, but they would be closely monitored by the state. The programs would emphasize self-esteem and prohibit physical intervention between guards and youngsters. Under the old system, guards were legally allowed to physically intervene for disciplinary purposes.

A medical examiner concluded Anderson died of natural causes — a blood disorder. But the boy's family and others disputed that, and the body was exhumed for a second autopsy. The results have not been released, but the office of a special prosecutor has said Anderson did not die of natural causes.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006 9:07 PM EDT
The Associated Press
By BRENT KALLESTAD

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)

Saturday, April 22, 2006

Help, It's the Police!

Someone's lying in the latest DART cop beat-down. Can you tell us who?

Todd Lyon says DART cops beat him up again, this time for talking to the Observer.

Well, I guess I need your help. I have two very different versions here of a story about the DART police. The first version is that they beat up, Maced and jailed Todd Lyon again for no good reason. He's the guy I wrote about last year who said DART cops beat up him and his teenage son for jaywalking ("Bus Gestapo," December 8). The other take is that Lyon is crazy and he's been deliberately hanging around in front of DART cops trying to taunt them into beating him up and gassing him.
Somebody out there saw this second incident. Somebody knows what happened. I believe there are pictures. I badly want to see those pictures. This is now personal.

Not that I'm the only person worried about the DART cops. The FBI is looking into this too. I had to tell DART the FBI was investigating them. When I did, DART shrugged it off. Let me tell you: This is not an agency that worries a whole lot.

Lyon says two DART cops on bicycles spotted him in the West End on March 17, St. Patrick's Day. He says they recognized him as the man I had written about in my column, tossed him on the sidewalk, Maced him and took him to jail, laughing the whole time about how they wanted to see their names in the Dallas Observer. After serving several days, he pleaded "no contest" because he didn't have any money, and he wanted to get out of jail.

The names of the officers who arrested Lyon this second time are Louis Pacheco, 29, and Michael Schmidt, 37. I will give you their version and Lyon's.

The cops say Lyon was not where he told me he was. According to their report, they say they found him on the property of the DART West End Transit Station, where he had been forbidden to go after last year's incident. They say he identified himself to them as "Jim Bowles" (same name as the former Dallas County sheriff).

When they moved to arrest him for trespassing and giving a false name, they say Lyon ran from them.

Lyon agrees with that part. He says he did run. But he says they started hassling him far away from any DART property.

The cops say when they caught up with Lyon he went into a Mike Tyson routine, "both closed fists up in a fighting stance." So they threw him down, cuffed him and Maced him.

I left messages at DART for both cops. They didn't call back. I am relying on their official report for their version. I also tried to speak to DART police Chief James Spiller, and, as always, he refused to speak, according to DART spokesman Morgan Lyons. Spiller is the head of a major urban police agency, and he lacks the cojones to do a simple interview. That tells me a lot right there.

Here's a recap of the first incident: On October 27 of last year, DART cops arrested Lyon and his 14-year-old son on Pacific Avenue downtown. Witnesses told me they saw the police beat up Lyon and Mace him and saw the DART cops punch the kid around as well. The cops later uncuffed the boy and left him downtown alone at night.

A spokesman for DART told me that Lyon was arrested and sent to jail for 11 days for "resisting arrest." I asked, "Resisting arrest for what?" The spokesman said, "Resisting arrest." Later he amended that to jaywalking.

After that incident, Lyon was given a "criminal trespass warning" that effectively barred him from entering the West End DART Transit Station. He depends on DART for transportation. In order to get to the West End on St. Patrick's Day, he says he rode the DART train to Reunion Station and walked back across downtown to the West End.

He says two DART cops on bicycles spotted him just as he entered the West End, blocks away from the West End Transit Station.

"They said, 'Hey, you're the guy who told all those lies about us in the Observer.'

"My first response was, 'No, you got me confused.' Because I don't want any trouble. I'm not on DART property, and they're not even supposed to be talking to me.

"The Hispanic officer said, 'Well, I got a picture, I can compare it to you.' Well, hey, that got a rise out of me. That got a laugh. I said, 'Look, you carry a picture of me? Well, that explains why you're stalking me.'

"I'm trying to be funny at this point. I guess they don't see the humor in it. Then they say, 'Well, we want to be in the next story. We want our names in the paper.' I believe the bald officer is talking now. He says, 'I don't want to be listed as Officer Number One or Number Two. I want my name in the paper.'

"The Hispanic officer says, 'Let's make sure it's him. Let's put him face down on the pavement and pat him down.'

"Well, at that point, I'm not laughing. That's a threat, and I took off running, straight ahead. It wasn't like a sprint. It was like, 'Shoot, leave me alone.' I've come to a walk, and I probably had taken maybe three or four steps, and I hear the guy yell, 'Put your hands behind your back!'

"Well, again I'm trying to comply, because I thought, 'Oh, no. Now what?' The whole feeling of dread was through the whole situation. I'm stopped, and before I get my hands behind my back, they say, 'Get down on the pavement,' and I'm pushed on the pavement.

"They bang up my knees, and I get my elbows on the pavement. They've got one hand behind my back. I got my cell phone in my other hand. I'm trying to comply, and they Mace me again. They Mace me on the pavement. I'm offering no resistance.

"I'm hearing a few clicks of pictures. I see a big flash, which is to me a professional photographer. More officers have arrived on the scene. If I had to guess, I'd say there's at least four there, and they are all taunting and saying remarks about, 'Well, we finally got him.'

"And they were all saying various remarks about the Observer story. 'About time we got him back.' And everybody in that crowd heard the remarks."

Lyon says the DART cops then put him in a car and transported him to the West End Transit Station.

"One of the officers said, 'Hey, he's not supposed to be in the West End Transit Station. Don't we have him on the list?'

"I said, 'Well, I was in the eating area.' They said, 'Well, you're here now.'"

It's a key point. The official incident report says the arresting officers spotted Lyon already in the transit station and arrested him for violating the criminal trespass warning issued after the earlier incident. Lyon says they started in on him blocks away from the transit center and then moved him to the station.

Somebody's lying. And somebody saw it.

It looks as if this second incident may at least have had the good effect of drawing the attention of the FBI. Lori Bailey, a supervisory special agent and spokeswoman for the Dallas office of the FBI, confirmed to me last week that the FBI has opened an investigation of DART police, based on the Todd Lyon story.

Lyon's civil lawyer, Jay Lucas, confirmed to me that the FBI made an appointment to interview him and Lyon at Lucas' offices this week.

If the FBI finds jurisdiction here, it will be for civil rights violations. And, just between you and me, you really have to violate bad in order to do an FBI civil rights violation on a 49-year-old white guy. I mean, most old white guys, you can hang them up by their heels and write on them with a Magic Marker and still be well within the guidelines.

You might wonder--I know I do--why the cops working for the bus company would be such a particular problem. Lyon's case is one of dozens and dozens that people have called to tell me about involving sub-professional, subhuman behavior by DART cops.

I have a two-bit theory. I finally attended a DART board meeting a few months ago. I am ashamed to admit, I never did before because they seemed too boring.

And it was. Very boring. Except for this: I looked around, and there were no actual people there watching from the cheap seats, as in members of the public. Instead there was a tight-knit little claque of maybe a dozen nattily dressed special seekers, people who looked like lawyers and contractors and salesmen, nodding and winking to their favorite board members, even speaking up from the back of the room when an item of interest came up on the agenda.

The DART board is made up of political appointees from Dallas and the suburbs, and the only people they ever have to deal with are the butt-kissers who sit out there hoping to chisel a few million bucks out of them in contracts, jobs and favors.

Try calling a DART board member some day. Try finding a phone number for a DART board member. This is a fat, sassy agency, rolling in big, greasy gobs of tax money, and nobody has to run for office.

I think those cops out there are a perfect reflection of the inner culture of the agency. None of this happens by accident.

If you saw any of this, here are two phone numbers, one of which you must call. Lyon's lawyer, Lucas, is at 214-428-5342. Or if your version supports the cops and you don't want to talk to Lyon's lawyer, call the DART police at 214-749-5900.

You can tell I have a bias here. If I'm wrong, turn me around. With the truth.


By Jim Schutze
Article Published Apr 20, 2006

http://www.dallasobserver.com/Issues/2006-04-20/news/schutze_full.html

Thursday, April 20, 2006

JESUS Said

Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungred, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee? Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.

Matthew 25:37-40 (KJV)

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

An Intensifying Whirlpool Of Desperation

Justices Reject Gitmo Detainees' Appeal

The Supreme Court rejected an appeal Monday from two Chinese Muslims who were mistakenly captured as enemy combatants more than four years ago and are still being held at the U.S. prison in Cuba.

The men's plight has posed a dilemma for the Bush administration and courts. Previously, a federal judge said the detention of the ethnic Uighurs in Guantanamo Bay is unlawful, but that there was nothing federal courts could do.

Lawyers for the two contend they should be released, something the Bush administration opposes, unless they can go to a country other than the United States.

A year ago, the U.S. military decided that Abu Bakker Qassim and A'Del Abdu al-Hakim are not ``enemy combatants'' as first suspected after their 2001 arrests in Pakistan. They were captured and shipped to Guantanamo Bay along with hundreds of other suspected terrorists.

The U.S. government has been unable to find a country willing to accept the two men, along with other Uighurs. They cannot be returned to China because they likely will be tortured or killed.

President Bush meets with Chinese President Hu Jintao at the White House on Thursday.

German officials are being pressed to take the men, according to a report over the weekend in a newspaper there.

It would have taken an unusual intervention of the Supreme Court to deal with the case now.

Lawyers for Qassim and al-Hakim filed a special appeal, asking justices to step in even while the case is pending before an appeals court. Arguments at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit are next month.

Justices declined, without comment, to hear the case.

Bush administration Supreme Court lawyer Paul Clement told justices that there were ``substantial ongoing diplomatic efforts to transfer them to an appropriate country.''

Clement said that in the meantime, the men have had television, a stereo system, books and recreational opportunities: including soccer, volleyball and ping-pong.

The detainees' lawyers painted a different picture, saying that hunger strikes and suicide attempts at Guantanamo Bay are becoming more common and that the men are isolated.

``Guantanamo is at the precipice,'' Boston lawyer Sabin Willett wrote in the appeal. ``Only prompt intervention by this court to vindicate its own mandate can prevent the rule of law itself from being drowned in this intensifying whirlpool of desperation.''

About 500 foreigners are being held at Guantanamo Bay. Lawyers for more than 300 of the men filed a brief in Monday's case, saying that Qassim and al-Hakim ``are far from the only innocent non-combatants languishing at Guantanamo.''

Justices ruled two years ago that the detainees could use American courts to challenge their detentions. And the court this summer will rule on a case testing the goverment's plans to hold war-crimes trials at Guantanamo Bay.

Qassim and al-Hakim were captured as they fled a Taliban military training camp where they were learning techniques they planned to use against the Chinese government. They are Uighurs, Turkic-speaking Muslims who have a language and culture distinct from the rest of China.

The case is Qassim v. Bush, 05-892.

By GINA HOLLAND
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)

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On the Net:

Supreme Court: http://www.supremecourtus.gov/


http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-5760852,00.html