Jury Finds US Military Contractor CACI Guilty of Abu Ghraib Torture
NOVEMBER 14, 2024
By Kevin Gosztola / The Dissenter
raqi torture survivors won a major jury verdict against CACI, a United States military contractor that was responsible for their cruel and inhuman treatment at Abu Ghraib more than twenty years ago.
The jury awarded the three survivors—Salah Al-Ejaili, a journalist, Suhail Al-Shimari, a middle school principal, Asa’ad Zuba’e, a fruit vendor—$3 million in compensatory damages and $11 million in punitive damages.
This was the second trial for Iraqi torture survivors. As The Dissenter previously covered, the first trial in August ended in a mistrial. But more crucially, the verdict marked the first time that any U.S. military contractor was held liable for torture that occurred after the September 11th attacks as part of the global “war on terrorism.”
Salah Al-Ejaili, a plaintiff and reporter for Al Jazeera who was detained at Abu Ghraib for six weeks, said it was “difficult to find the words” for this incredible moment. But he added, “We won a big victory” after 16 years of litigation. “Finally, we [reached] some justice for some of the Abu Ghraib detainees.”
A lawsuit [PDF] on behalf of Iraqi torture survivors was filed by Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) in 2008. It claimed that CACI employees had inflicted “severe pain” while interrogating Al-Ejaili, Suhail Al-Shimari, a middle school principal, Asa’ad Zuba’e, a fruit vendor.
The men were tortured in a part of Abu Ghraib that was known as the “hard site,” which was a “relatively small section of the complex controlled by American military forces that housed detainees who were suspected to be of ‘military intelligence value.’”
From the fall 2003 to spring 2004, CACI employees assumed de facto authority over U.S. military police at the hard site. “They created and set in place the extreme and abusive conditions in which detainees were to be confined at the Hard Site location, where Plaintiffs were detained,” CCR alleged.
Baher Azmy, the legal director for CCR, said, “We just feel enormously gratified that our clients were able to tell their story after 16 years to a jury in a U.S. courtroom, and we’re awed by their courage and resilience to keep fighting for justice and maintaining their dignity in the face of 16 years of relentless attempts by the defendant in this case, CACI Premier Technology, to deflect blame on to every entity but itself.”
The jury concluded that the “evidence indisputably showed that this military contractor, CACI, was central to organizing, ordering, participating, and perpetuating the torture and and other forms of ill treatment at the hard site of the Abu Ghraib prison.”
Azmy continued, “It recognized that CACI interrogators played an “integral” role in “working with military police to soften up and set the conditions for abuses in Abu Ghraib, to make it easier for CACI interrogators to exploit our clients for information,” and that “this kind of corporate malfeasance and neglect and recklessness and deflection is outrageous and deserves to be punished.”
What unfolded was a “rare instance” in the past 20 years since 9/11, “where torture survivors were heard and vindicated in a U.S. court.”.....'
https://scheerpost.com/2024/11/14/jury-finds-us-military-contractor-caci-guilty-of-abu-ghraib-torture/