Rumsfeld Sued Over Torture
Former government and military officials join landmark lawsuit
from the ACLU
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld bears direct responsibility for the
torture and abuse of detainees in US military custody, the American
Civil Liberties Union and Human Rights First charged today in the
first federal court lawsuit to name a top US official in the ongoing
torture scandal in Iraq and Afghanistan that has tarnished America's
reputation.
The lawsuit was filed in federal court in Illinois on behalf of eight
men who were subject to torture and abuse at the hands of US forces
under Secretary Rumsfeld's command. The parties are seeking a court
order declaring that Secretary Rumsfeld's actions violated the US
Constitution, federal statutes and international law.
"Secretary Rumsfeld bears direct and ultimate responsibility for this
descent into horror by personally authorizing unlawful interrogation
techniques and by abdicating his legal duty to stop torture," said
Lucas Guttentag, lead counsel in the lawsuit and director of the
ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project. "He gives lip service to being
responsible but has not been held accountable for his actions. This
lawsuit puts the blame where it belongs, on the Secretary of Defense."
The groups are joined as co-counsel in the lawsuit by Rear Admiral
John D. Hutson (Ret. USN), former Judge Advocate General of the Navy;
Brigadier General James Cullen (Ret. USA), former Chief Judge of the
US Army Court of Criminal Appeals; and Bill Lann Lee, Chair of the
Human Rights Practice Group at Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein,
LLP and former Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights at the
Department of Justice. Admiral Hutson and General Cullen are "of
counsel" to Human Rights First.
"Since Abu Ghraib, we have vigorously campaigned for an independent
commission to investigate US policies that have led to torture and
cruel treatment of detainees. These calls have gone unanswered by the
administration and Congress, and today many of the illegal polices
remain in place," said Michael Posner, Executive Director of Human
Rights First. "We believed the United States could correct its policy
without resort to the courts. In bringing this action today, we
reluctantly conclude that we were wrong."
The men represented in the lawsuit were incarcerated in US detention
facilities in Iraq and Afghanistan, where they were subjected to
torture and other cruel and degrading treatment, including severe and
repeated beatings, cutting with knives, sexual humiliation and
assault, mock executions, death threats, and restraint in contorted
and excruciating positions. None of the men were ever charged with a
crime. All have been released.
"One of the greatest strengths of the US military throughout our
history has been strong civilian leadership at the top of the chain of
command," said Admiral Hutson. "Unfortunately, Secretary Rumsfeld has
failed to live up to that tradition. In the end, that imperils our
troops and undermines the war effort. It is critical that we return to
another military tradition: accountability."
In legal papers, the groups charged Secretary Rumsfeld with violations
of the US Constitution and international law prohibiting torture and
cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment. The lawsuit also seeks
compensatory damages for the harms suffered as a result of torture and
other abuse.
According to the complaint, Secretary Rumsfeld "authorized an
abandonment of our nation's inviolable and deep-rooted prohibition
against torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment of detainees in US military custody." The complaint further
charges that brutal and illegal interrogation techniques were
personally approved by Secretary Rumsfeld in December 2002. Those
techniques included the use of "stress positions," 20-hour
interrogations, the removal of clothing, the use of dogs, isolation,
and sensory deprivation.
Although some of these techniques were later rescinded, Rumsfeld
personally approved a new list in April 2003, which included dietary
manipulation, sensory deprivation and "false flag" (leading detainees
to believe that they have been transferred to a country that permits
torture). He also made clear that harsher techniques could be used
with his personal authorization.
"Human rights law and military rules prohibit torture at all times and
in every circumstance, a principle that applies to the highest
commander as well as the lowest subordinate," said co-counsel Lee, the
former Justice Department official.
Official government reports have documented many horrific abuses
inflicted on detainees in US custody. They have shown that the abuse
was ongoing and was not limited to the notorious Abu Ghraib prison.
The ACLU and other advocacy groups have obtained over 23,000 pages of
documents concerning abuses through a Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit, online at . As these documents
indicate, the FBI began to complain about the interrogation techniques
used by the military on detainees in Guantanamo as early as 2002,
techniques that spread to Afghanistan and Iraq. Media reports have
also brought many disturbing incidents to light, including the deaths
of detainees in custody.
The ACLU and Human Rights First have created a detailed timeline of
the various actions that Secretary Rumsfeld took and the points at
which he was informed of the abuses that resulted, online at
and .
"The effects of Rumsfeld's policies have been devastating both to
America's international reputation as a beacon of freedom and
democracy, and to the hundreds, even thousands of individuals who have
suffered at the hands of US forces," said ACLU Executive Director
Anthony D. Romero.
Details about the clients in the case can be found in the legal
complaint and in individual biographical statements online at the same
two websites.
The ACLU has also filed three similar complaints against Colonel
Thomas Pappas, Brigadier General Janis Karpinski and Lt. General
Ricardo Sanchez on behalf of the torture victims who were detained in
Iraq. These three additional complaints were filed in federal courts
in Connecticut, South Carolina and Texas, respectively, due to court
requirements regarding jurisdiction.
The case is Ali et al., v. Rumsfeld, filed in US District Court in the
Northern District of Illinois. In addition to Guttentag, Adm. Hutson,
Gen. Cullen, Posner and Lee, the attorneys in the case are: Steven R.
Shapiro, Cecillia Wang, Amrit Singh and Omar Jadwat of the ACLU;
Deborah Pearlstein and Fiona Doherty of Human Rights First; Chimene I.
Keitner and Nirej S. Sekhon of Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein LLP;
Paul Hoffman of Schonbrun DeSimone Seplow Harris & Hoffman LLP; Erwin
Chemerinsky of Duke University School of Law; David Rudovsky of
Kairys, Rudovsky, Epstein & Messing LLP; and Harvey Grossman, Legal
Director of the ACLU of Illinois.
All counsel are representing the plaintiffs on a pro bono basis.
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