A suit over Abu Ghraib getting to ‘what actually happened’

September 22, 2017
Washington Post

Thirteen years after leaving Abu Ghraib prison, and nine years after filing suit in federal court, a group of former Iraqi detainees got to make the case before a judge in Alexandria, Va., on Friday that they were tortured and that the contractor CACI International is partly to blame.

U.S. District Court Judge ­Leonie M. Brinkema declined a request by CACI to dismiss the case Friday, saying she would like to develop a full record of which employees were “on the scene, and what was going on.” She concluded that there is sufficient evidence for the lawsuit to proceed toward a pretrial judgment from the court or come before a jury.

Interrogators working for the contractor, which is based in Arlington, Va., are accused of directing beatings, starvation, sexual violations, sleep deprivation and other abuse of prisoners in the detention facility. The three former detainees who are plaintiffs in the suit say they were shackled in contorted positions for over a day at a time, left in freezing temperatures in winter, and attacked or threatened with dogs.

“Each Plaintiff — terrified, alone, freezing, beaten, contorted, naked, exhausted, humiliated and degraded continuously over a sustained period — suffered severe physical and mental harm, and still do,” attorneys with the Center for Constitutional Rights argued in a court filing.

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Last modified 

September 25, 2017