[lit-ideas] "concerned MP"

  • From: JulieReneB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 23 May 2004 15:49:43 EDT

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-prison23may23.story
By Richard A. Serrano and Greg Miller, Times Staff Writers


WASHINGTON â?? Military investigators who combed through the Abu Ghraib prison 
in Iraq this year were told that one detainee was slammed head-first into a 
wall and later died, and that another was dunked in urine.

They also encountered intelligence officers who said they never saw the abuse 
and humiliation that was occurring.

Only one intelligence team member acknowledged seeing any of the thousands of 
photographs and videos that were floating through the complex â?? images of 
naked detainees so accessible that some were visible on computers at an 
Internet 
cafe in the prison.

Six military prison guards are awaiting courts-martial on charges of abusing 
prisoners and a seventh has pleaded guilty. As they seek to determine how far 
up the chain of command responsibility lies, agents of the Army's Criminal 
Investigative Command are turning their attention to intelligence officers, 
civilian contractors and linguists who routinely had contact with detainees.

But their insistence that they were in the dark about prisoner abuse could 
make it difficult for investigators to seek criminal charges against 
intelligence unit members who the guards claim encouraged them to get rough 
with 
detainees in the first place.

Revelations about the intelligence squads and new forms of abuse are found in 
more than 100 pages of case files compiled by Army investigators. The 
material includes questionnaires, agents' handwritten notes, victim statements 
and 
prison flow charts. It is not clear how much of the material was seen by Maj. 
Gen. Antonio M. Taguba, who investigated the abuse and issued a highly critical 
report that became public this month.

The documents obtained by The Times also provide new details of the treatment 
of Iraqi prisoners.

Detainees were forced to participate in contests in which military police 
tried to see how many detainees they could make cry or urinate on themselves. 
Happy faces were drawn across the bare chest of one detainee, who was nicknamed 
"Happy Nipples."

Some of the documents are notes taken by an investigator as he worked his way 
down the cellblocks interviewing detainees. One prisoner told him he smelled 
alcohol on guards "many times." Another said he was whipped, beaten and held 
for 40 days in isolation. A third said "they beat me with a broom and stepped 
on my head with their feet."

Both victims and guards cited by Army investigators tended to confirm 
characterizations of Cpl. Charles A. Graner Jr. as the most violent on Tier 1A 
in 
what was known as the prison's "hard site," where inmates considered high risk 
were kept. A guard said Graner would beat prisoners and then encourage his 
colleagues to "come get some of this."

At one point Graner, who worked in a state prison in Pennsylvania before 
being deployed to Iraq, allegedly told another guard: "The Christian in me says 
it's wrong, but the corrections officer in me says, 'I love to make a grown man 
piss himself.' "

Another guard described in the investigative reports as particularly vicious 
was Staff Sgt. Ivan L. "Chip" Frederick II, who previously worked in a 
Virginia prison. After the investigation into the abuse was launched, he 
allegedly 
told a fellow soldier that this would ruin his civilian career. 

"Nineteen and a half years down the drain," he lamented.

The investigation began Jan. 13 when Spc. Joseph Darby, another member of the 
military police unit, slipped an anonymous, typewritten note under the door 
of the Army investigation command's office at the prison, along with a photo 
disc that Graner had given him.

"To Whom It May Concern," the note began. "I am writing this letter as a 
matter of moral ethics."

Darby said he recently had seen "some very disturbing photos of inmates in 
the hard site prison, Tier 1A to be specific. I had heard stories in the 
company 
about the incidents that were taking place but I did not believe them till I 
was given these photos." 

He identified Graner, Frederick, Pfc. Lynndie England, Spc. Sabrina Harman 
and Spc. Megan Ambuhl, all charged in the investigation, as key figures in the 
abuse, as well as Spc. Jeremy Sivits, who pleaded guilty last week to abusing 
prisoners and was sentenced to a year in prison. Sivits is expected to testify 
against the others. 

"I am writing this to try to right the wrongs that I have seen in these 
photos and video clips," Darby wrote. "Since no one will come forward â?¦ I 
feel 
something must be done. So I am giving this disc to you. Do with it as you 
wish."

He signed the note, "Concerned MP."

Much of the alleged abuse began last October, when the military was under 
mounting pressure to collect information regarding the whereabouts of Saddam 
Hussein and other potential threats to U.S. forces.

After being tipped off by Darby, agents first interviewed guards, then gave 
intelligence team members a one-page sheet with 11 questions. Twenty-five 
members filled them out.

Only seven acknowledged witnessing any mistreatment, and most of that 
consisted of minor incidents outside the prison. Only one said he saw a 
photograph of 
abuse. And while 15 said they had heard about abuse, only one reported it to 
a superior.

Of those who said they knew of mistreatment, Staff Sgt. Russell Henderson 
said he was told of two occasions in which "several" soldiers "used undue force 
with host nationals at the front gate" of the prison.

Capt. Tyler Craner said he had heard that three soldiers from the 519th 
Military Intelligence Battalion based at Ft. Bragg, N.C., were disciplined for 
having "a female detainee strip."

Torin Nelson, a civilian working with interrogators, said that an angry guard 
shoved a prisoner and that an interrogator "picked up [an elderly] detainee 
by the cuffs and dragged him to the interrogation booth, yelling at him because 
he had fallen to the ground."

Spc. Paul Son answered "yes" to whether he had witnessed abuse at Abu Ghraib, 
then used the back half of the questionnaire to lash out at his command for 
forcing interrogators to work in open areas while the compound was under nearly 
daily mortar attack.

Two soldiers died and 13 others were injured in an attack Sept. 20 "as a 
direct result of obeying the orders given by the chain of command to continue 
with 
night operations in tents rather than hardened facilities," Son wrote. 
"Hardened facilities were available, and efforts were made to convince the 
chain of 
command to allow soldiers to work in the bunkered buildings or to discontinue 
night interrogation operations."

Other interrogators acknowledged that they suggested that guards use tactics 
such as sleep deprivation and playing loud music to keep prisoners awake. The 
interrogators denied telling guards to hit detainees, strip them naked, pile 
them on the floor or force them to masturbate. They also denied requesting 
photographs of the humiliations to scare other detainees into talking, as has 
been 
reported.

The investigation documents include wrenching accounts from prisoners. In one 
case, a detainee said he was severely punished after guards accused him of 
planning to use a broken toothbrush to attack them.

The prisoner, identified as Abdoul Wahab Younes Ahmed, denied that the 
toothbrush was his. He said he was stripped, deprived of his mattress and 
cuffed to 
the cell floor.

"After that they took me to a closed room and more than five of the guards 
poured cold water on me and ordered me to put my head in someone's urine that 
was already in that room," he said. "They beat me with a broom and stepped on 
my 
head with their feet while it was still in the urine. They pressed my [rear 
end] with a broom and spit on it" while a female soldier stood on his legs.

He said a leader of the day shift crew would give him his clothes back, but 
that "at night Graner took them away." The treatment went on for three days, 
the prisoner said.

Another prisoner, identified as Solaiman Saadi Solaiman, said his hands were 
cuffed to a prison wall merely for asking a guard, Sgt. Hydrue S. Joyner, what 
time it was. When Graner came on duty that evening, the prisoner said, "he 
hit me hard on my chest and he cuffed me to the window of the room about five 
hours and did not give me any food that day."

During 67 days in the cellblock, the prisoner said he "saw lots of people 
getting naked." During the first days of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, 
guards 
came in "with two boys naked and they were cuffed together face to face and 
Graner was beating them." 

"Other guards were watching and taking pictures from top and bottom" of the 
prison tier, he said.

England told investigators that it was Graner's idea to stack naked prisoners 
in a pyramid, and that Frederick forced them to masturbate. Sgt. Javal S. 
Davis, another accused guard, said Graner "handled" the unidentified prisoner 
who 
was plowed into a wall, suffering cuts that required stitches. That prisoner 
is "deceased now," Davis said. 

It was not clear which prisoner Davis was referring to, although the Pentagon 
is investigating as possible homicides two cases involving blunt force 
injuries at the prison.

Lawyers for the six guards awaiting trial maintain that intelligence officers 
pressured their clients to abuse prisoners to extract more information. 

Graner's lawyer, Guy Womack of Houston, said recently published photos of the 
abuse prove it was engineered by military intelligence officers. He said 
guards did not know enough about Iraqi society to humiliate prisoners in such 
ways. 

Womack said they would not have known that licking the bottom of a shoe â?? 
which some prisoners were allegedly ordered to do â?? is seen as a particularly 
offensive act. 

"Only the intelligence officers who study the psyche of the prisoners know 
that there are certain poses and ways to stage them," Womack said. "They know 
what type of humiliation will be the most effective. The MPs would have had no 
way to understand the significance of that. It's a cultural thing."

Womack said intelligence officers ordered the construction of a plywood wall 
inside Abu Ghraib so there would be fewer witnesses to abuse, and he said they 
orchestrated the mistreatment so that almost all of it took place at night.

The Army investigators' notes also say that one of the accused guards, Davis, 
lied when he said that he unintentionally stepped on prisoners' fingers and 
toes. Davis told investigators that he and a detainee he was escorting "both 
fell as we stumbled over another prisoner" lying on the cellblock floor, and 
stepped on the prisoner as he was trying to help him up. 

Investigators did not believe that account and said in the report obtained by 
The Times that Davis "lied on first statement about abuse." 

In another incident in which detainees were piled naked in a pyramid and 
Graner posed for a photograph as if he were about to punch one of them, the 
notes 
say that Harman, another accused guard, "did not feel what happened was wrong."

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