In a document dump late Friday by the Department of Justice, the CIA officials are revealed to have faced possible prosecution for "mistreatment" of prisoners.
F.B.I. agents who arrived at a secret C.I.A. jail overseas in September 2002 found prisoners “manacled to the ceiling and subjected to blaring music around the clock,” and a C.I.A. official wrote a list of questions for interrogators including “how close is each technique to the ‘rack and screw,”’ according to hundreds of pages of partially declassified documents released Friday by the Justice Department.
The documents also include handwritten notes, apparently prepared by Justice Department officials, discussing the possibility of prosecuting some personnel of the Central Intelligence Agency. The notes reveal that the Justice Department considered prosecuting a C.I.A. interrogator for a previously reported incident in which a detainee was threatened with a gun and a power drill, but it says Justice officials declined to prosecute the case.
The documents were released in the latest response to several Freedom of Information Act lawsuits filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and Judicial Watch, a Washington advocacy organization. ... The Caucus
So what's next? Anyone heard about John H. Durham lately?
In August, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. asked a Justice Department prosecutor, John H. Durham, to review the C.I.A. interrogation program, as well as the deaths of several prisoners in American custody, to see if prosecution is warranted.
Comments