Judge Hints at Trial for Lawsuit on Harsh CIA Interrogation
AP JAN. 19, 2017
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2017/01/19/us/ap-us-cia-interrogation-lawsuit.html?_r=0
SPOKANE, Wash. — Psychologists who designed the CIA's harsh
interrogation methods for the war on terror want a lawsuit from three former
detainees dismissed, but a federal judge said Thursday that he was inclined to
allow it to move to a trial that was expected to include classified
information.
The American Civil Liberties Union sued the psychologists on behalf of
Gul Rahman, who died in custody, and Suleiman Abdullah Salim and Mohamed Ahmed
Ben Soud, who claim they were tortured in CIA prisons. The lawsuit says
interrogation methods such as waterboarding were developed by James Mitchell and
John "Bruce" Jessen, whose Spokane, Washington, company contracted
with the CIA.
U.S. District Judge Justin Quackenbush heard arguments on whether
Mitchell and Jessen acted as agents of the federal government, which could make
them immune from lawsuits, or as independent contractors. Lawyers for both
sides also debated whether the former detainees were considered enemy
combatants, blocking them from pursuing a claim.
"They were explicitly identified as enemy combatants," said
James T. Smith, a lawyer for the psychologists. "If an individual supports
the Taliban, they are an enemy combatant."
But Dror Ladin, an attorney for the ACLU in New York City, said none
of the three was officially found to be an enemy combatant. Even so, Rahman
died two weeks after being detained.
"He was left to die of hypothermia chained to a floor in a
dungeon," Ladin said. "He was not an enemy combatant."
The other two detainees were never charged with any crimes and are now
free.
The judge said he would issue a written decision later but added,
"I am inclined to deny the motion to dismiss." A trial is set for
June.
Mitchell and Jessen designed the interrogation methods and took part
in sessions with CIA prisoners, according to the Senate Intelligence
Committee's investigation into the torture program.
Techniques included slamming the three men into walls, stuffing them
inside coffin-like boxes, exposing them to extreme temperatures, starving them,
inflicting various kinds of water torture, chaining them in stress positions
designed for pain and keeping them awake for days, the ACLU said.
The psychologists have said in court documents that they used harsh
tactics but denied allegations of torture and war crimes.
"Every action taken by our clients was taken at the direction of
the principal, which was the United States of America," said Smith, lawyer
for Mitchell and Jessen.
But the ACLU's attorney argued that the psychologists were independent
contractors, paid millions of dollars for their work, and could face lawsuits.
"Independent contractors are not ordinarily agents," Ladin
said.
The Justice Department got involved in the case to represent the
government's interests in keeping classified information secret but has not
tried to block the lawsuit. Experts called the government's stance
unprecedented but also a recognition that a once-secret program is now largely
out in the open.
The defendants founded Mitchell, Jessen & Associates in Spokane in
2005 and contracted with the CIA to run the interrogation program. The government
paid the company $81 million over several years.
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