Current:Home > NewsJudge rejects military contractor’s effort to toss out Abu Ghraib torture lawsuit -Elite Financial Minds
Judge rejects military contractor’s effort to toss out Abu Ghraib torture lawsuit
View
Date:2025-04-17 07:32:14
FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) — A federal judge has again refused to dismiss a lawsuit brought by former Abu Ghraib inmates against a military contractor they accuse of being complicit in torture at the infamous Iraqi prison.
The horrific mistreatment of prisoners there two decades ago sparked international outrage when photos became public of smiling U.S. soldiers posing in front of abused prisoners.
Virginia-based CACI, which supplied interrogators at the prison, has long denied that it engaged in torture, and has tried more than a dozen times to have the lawsuit dismissed. The case was originally filed in 2008 and still has not gone to trial.
The most recent effort to dismiss the case focused on a 2021 Supreme Court case that restricted companies’ international liability. In that case, the high court tossed out a lawsuit against a subsidiary of chocolate maker Nestle after it was accused of complicity in child slavery on African cocoa farms.
CACI argued that the Nestle case is one of several in recent years in which the Supreme Court has narrowed the scope of the Alien Tort Statute, an 18th-century law under which the plaintiffs filed their lawsuit.
The opinion Monday by U.S. Judge Leonie Brinkema in Alexandria, Virginia, is currently under seal; only her order rejecting CACI’s motion is public. But at an earlier hearing, the judge told CACI’s lawyers that she believed they were overstating the significance of the Nestle case.
Baher Azmy, a lawyer for the Center for Constitutional Rights, the law firm representing the Abu Ghraib plaintiffs, declined to discuss the opinion in detail because it was under seal. But he said Brinkema reiterated her view that “the law didn’t change as radically as CACI suggests.”
In a previous hearing, Brinkema said there is evidence implicating CACI in the torture regime at Abu Ghraib, including an email from a CACI employee assigned to Abu Ghraib that she described as a potential “smoking gun.”
The email, according to Brinkema, was sent by a CACI employee to his boss outlining abuses he had witnessed. The employee apparently resigned in protest, the judge said.
Brinkema said she was “amazed” that no one at CACI seemed to follow up on the employee’s concerns.
CACI lawyers have disputed that the email, which is not publicly available, is incriminating.
CACI has denied that any of its employees engaged in or sanctioned torture. And the three inmates who filed the suit acknowledge that they were never directly assaulted or tortured by any CACI employees.
But the lawsuit alleges that CACI was complicit and aided and abetted the torture by setting up the conditions under which soldiers brutalized inmates.
CACI’s legal arguments are just the most recent in a string of challenges to the lawsuit.
Earlier, CACI argued that because it was working at the U.S. government’s behest, it had immunity from a lawsuit just as the government would enjoy immunity. But Brinkema ruled that when it comes to fundamental violations of international norms like those depicted at Abu Ghraib, the government enjoys no immunity, and neither does a government contractor.
A status hearing is now set for September. Azmy said he is confident the case will go to trial, even after 15 years of delay.
In a written statement, one of the plaintiffs who says he was tortured at Abu Ghraib also expressed optimism.
“I have stayed patient and hopeful during the two years we have waited for this decision — and throughout the nearly two decades since I was abused at Abu Ghraib — that one day I would achieve justice and accountability in a U.S. court,” said plaintiff Salah Al-Ejaili, who now lives in Sweden.
In the lawsuit, Al-Ejaili alleges that he was beaten, left naked for extended periods of time, threatened with dogs and forced to wear women’s underwear, among other abuses.
A CACI spokeswoman, Lorraine Corcoran, declined to comment Monday.
In 2013, a different contractor agreed to pay $5.28 million to 71 former Abu Ghraib inmates.
___
For more AP coverage of Iraq: https://apnews.com/hub/iraq
veryGood! (7353)
Related
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Donald Glover cancels Childish Gambino tour dates after recent surgery
- Olivia Munn Details Journey to Welcome Daughter Méi Amid Cancer Battle
- Milton to become a major hurricane Monday as it heads for Florida | The Excerpt
- Trump's 'stop
- RHOSLC Star Whitney Rose's 14-Year-Old Daughter Bobbie Taken to the ICU
- Kansas City small businesses thank Taylor Swift for economic boom: 'She changed our lives'
- Billie Jean King named grand marshal for the 136th Rose Parade on Jan. 1
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Inside Daisy Kelliher and Gary King's Tense BDSY Reunion—And Where They Stand Today
Ranking
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- NASA, SpaceX delay launch to study Jupiter’s moon Europa as Hurricane Milton approaches
- Veterans of Alaska’s Oil Industry Look to Blaze a Renewable Energy Pathway in the State
- Two boys, ages 12 and 13, charged in assault on ex-New York Gov. David Paterson and stepson
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Milton to become a major hurricane Monday as it barrels toward Florida: Updates
- Al Pacino 'didn't have a pulse' during near-death experience while battling COVID-19
- Billie Eilish setlist: See the songs she's playing on her flashy Hit Me Hard and Soft tour
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Aaron Rodgers injury update: Jets QB suffers low-ankle sprain vs. Vikings
Here's When Taylor Swift Will Reunite With Travis Kelce After Missing His Birthday
Minnesota man arrested after allegedly threatening to ‘shoot up’ synagogue
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Amari Cooper pushes through frustrations, trade rumors as Browns continue to slide
Helene victims face another worry: Bears
RHOSLC Star Whitney Rose's 14-Year-Old Daughter Bobbie Taken to the ICU