Trial of 2 psychologists
over CIA torture pushed back
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/trial-of-2-psychologists-over-cia-torture-pushed-back/2017/03/24/5f0c130a-10bf-11e7-aa57-2ca1b05c41b8_story.html?utm_term=.ee630d0c6078
By Nicholas
K. Geranios | AP March 24
SPOKANE, Wash. — Disputes over access to top
secret information have led a federal judge in Washington state to push back
the civil trial of two psychologists who developed harsh interrogation methods
in the government’s war on terror.
U.S. District Court Judge Justin Quackenbush
set a Sept. 5 trial date for psychologists Bruce Jessen and James Mitchell.
Attorneys for the psychologists, whose company
was based in Spokane, argued in documents filed Wednesday that the Trump
administration’s decision to keep some documents secret hinders their defense.
“Defendants merely seek information evidencing
how the CIA exercised command and control” over the psychologists, defense
attorney Brian Paszamant wrote in court documents. “The government failed to
meet its burden to demonstrate that information was properly withheld under the
National Security Act.”
Specifically, the defendants want the judge to
let them interview CIA officials James Cotsana and Gina Haspel, saying they
would dispel the notion that Mitchell and Jessen designed interrogation
techniques that included torture and waterboarding, Paszamant wrote.
They “acted specifically at the government’s
direction and had no involvement in the creation and implementation of any CIA
program to capture, render, detail and/or interrogate any of the plaintiffs,”
the documents said.
The psychologists have said in court documents
that they used harsh tactics, but denied allegations of torture and war crimes.
Mitchell and Jessen ran a company that received
$81 million from the CIA to develop methods to extract information that
included waterboarding and sleep deprivation. President Barack Obama terminated
their contract in 2009.
Earlier this month, lawyers for the federal
government moved to prevent certain CIA officers from testifying in the lawsuit
and to prevent the release of certain documents in the case, contending that
would harm national security.
The American Civil Liberties Union sued the
psychologists in 2015 on behalf of three men who contend they were tortured
using techniques designed by the defendants.
Plaintiffs Suleiman Abdullah Salim, Mohamed
Ahmed Ben Soud and the estate of Gul Rahman seek unspecified damages.
The Justice Department became involved in the
case to represent the government’s interests in keeping classified information
secret.
Rahman, an Afghan, was taken from his home in
Pakistan in 2002 to a secret CIA prison in Afghanistan. He died of hypothermia
after being shackled to a floor.
The lawsuit says Salim and Ben Soud underwent
waterboarding, daily beatings and sleep deprivation while inside CIA “black
sites.” They were later released after officials determined they posed no
threat.
A U.S. Senate investigation in 2014 found that
Mitchell and Jessen’s techniques produced no useful intelligence in the war on
terror.
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