ALEXANDRIA, Va. — A decide declared a mistrial Thursday after a jury stated it was deadlocked and couldn’t attain a verdict within the trial of a army contractor accused of contributing to the abuse of detainees on the Abu Ghraib Jail in Iraq 20 years in the past.
The mistrial got here within the jury’s eighth day of deliberations.
The eight-member civil jury in Alexandria deadlocked on accusations the civilian interrogators who had been provided to the U.S. Army at Abu Ghraib in 2003 and 2004 had conspired with troopers there to abuse detainees as a method of “softening them up” for questioning.
The trial was the primary time a U.S. jury heard claims introduced by Abu Ghraib survivors within the 20 years since images of detainee mistreatment — accompanied by smiling U.S. troopers inflicting the abuse — shocked the world throughout the U.S. occupation of Iraq.
Reston, Virginia-based CACI had argued that it wasn’t complicit within the detainees’ abuse. It stated that its workers had little to any interplay with the three plaintiffs within the case and that any legal responsibility for his or her mistreatment belonged to the federal government, not CACI.
The jury despatched out a be aware Wednesday afternoon saying it was deadlocked, and indicating specifically that it was hung up on a authorized precept often called the “borrowed Servants” doctrine.
The plaintiffs can search a retrial.
Requested if they’d accomplish that, Baher Azmy with the Heart for Constitutional Rights, considered one of their attorneys, stated: “The work we put into this case is a fraction of what they endured as survivors of the horrors of Abu Ghraib, and we need to honor their braveness.”
Through the trial that started April 15, attorneys for the three plaintiffs argued that CACI was liable for his or her mistreatment even when they could not show that CACI’s interrogators had been those who straight inflicted the abuse.
They argued that the interrogators had entered right into a conspiracy with the army police who inflicted the abuse by instructing troopers to “soften up” detainees for questioning.
The proof included stories from two retired Army generals, who documented the abuse and concluded that a number of CACI interrogators had been complicit within the abuse.
These stories concluded that one of many interrogators, Steven Stefanowicz, lied to investigators about his conduct, and that he seemingly instructed troopers to mistreat detainees and used canines to intimidate detainees throughout interrogations.
Stefanowicz testified for CACI at trial by a recorded video deposition and denied mistreating detainees.
CACI officers initially had severe doubts about his potential to work as an interrogator, in accordance with proof launched at trial. An e-mail despatched by CACI official Tom Howard earlier than the corporate despatched interrogators to Iraq described Stefanowicz as a “NO-GO for filling an interrogator place.”
CACI initially despatched Stefanowicz over to Iraq not as an interrogator however as a screener, however he testified that the Army — desperately wanting interrogators at a jail with a quickly increasing inhabitants — promoted him to interrogator inside a day of his arrival.
Trial proof confirmed that CACI defended the work of one other of its interrogators, Dan Johnson, even after the Army sought his dismissal when images of the Abu Ghraib abuse grew to become public, and one of many images confirmed Johnson questioning a detainee in a crouched place that Army investigators decided to be an unauthorized stress place.
Story Continues
© Copyright 2024 Related Press. All rights reserved. This materials is probably not printed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.