Command's Responsibility: Detainee Deaths in U.S.
Custody in Iraq and Afghanistan
Overview
Executive Summary
Full
Report (PDF-1MB)
Press Release
Press Conference Statements:
Fact
Sheet: Deaths in Custody By the Numbers (PDF -35KB)
Fact Sheet: The Role of the Commanders
Table: Charges and Punishments
Sample Case Profiles
Appendices: Some of the Original
Source Documents
The Path Ahead: Recommendations
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Command's Responsibility: Detainee Deaths in U.S. Custody in Iraq and
Afghanistan
Nagem Sadoon Hatab
Nagem Sadoon Hatab, a 52-year-old Iraqi, was killed in U.S. custody at a Marine-run
temporary holding camp close to Nasiriyah. Soon after his arrival at the camp
in June 2003, a number of Marines beat Hatab, including allegedly “karate-kicking” him
while he stood handcuffed and hooded. A day later, Hatab reportedly developed
severe diarrhea, and was covered in feces. Once U.S. forces discovered his condition,
Hatab was stripped and examined by a medic, who thought that Hatab might be faking
sickness. At the base commander’s order, a clerk with no training in handling
prisoners dragged Hatab by his neck to an outdoor holding area, to make room
for a new prisoner.
The clerk later testified to the ease with which he was able to drag the prisoner:
Hatab’s body, covered by sweat and his own feces, slid over the sand. Hatab
was then left on the ground, uncovered and exposed in the heat of the sun. He
was found dead sometime after midnight. A U.S. Army medical examiner’s
autopsy of Hatab found that he had died of strangulation – a victim of
homicide. The autopsy also found that six of Hatab’s ribs were broken and
his back, buttocks, legs and knees covered with bruises.
The guards at the detention center to which Hatab had been brought were ill-prepared
for their duty at best. The previous commander of the facility, Major William
Vickers, would later testify that none of the approximately 30 Marines at the
camp had been trained to run a jail before their assignment: “Not then
or even after.” Most were reservists and according to Major Vickers’ testimony,
the Marines, members of the 2nd Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment, were assigned
to the guard role after Army and other Marine units refused it. The base commander
at the time, Major Clarke Paulus, had been in that position for a week before
Hatab’s death, and had spent only a day observing the prison operations
before taking command. His predecessor, Major Vickers, added that the camp had
originally been designated a temporary holding facility, where Marines would
interrogate prisoners for a day or two before their release or transfer. Instead,
prisoners were kept for longer, resulting in overcrowding and a strain on guards.
The treatment of Hatab’s body did not improve after his death. A Navy surgeon,
Dr. Ray Santos, testified that when Hatab’s body arrived at the morgue: “It
kept slipping from my hands so I did drop it several times.” The U.S.
Army Medical Examiner, Colonel Kathleen Ingwersen, who performed the autopsy,
reportedly acknowledged that Hatab’s body had undergone decomposition because
it was stored in an unrefrigerated drawer before the autopsy. In fact, testimony
at a later court martial indicated that a container of Hatab’s internal
organs was left exposed on an airport tarmac for hours; in the blistering Iraqi
heat, the organs were destroyed. Hatab’s ribcage and part of his larynx
were later found in medical labs in Washington, D.C. and Germany, due to what
the Medical Examiner, Colonel Ingwersen, described as a “miscommunication” with
her assistant. Hatab’s hyoid bone – a U-shaped throat bone located
at the base of the tongue – was never found, and Colonel Ingwersen testified
that she couldn’t recall whether she removed the bone from the body during
the autopsy or not. The bone was a key piece of evidence, because it supported
the Army Medical Examiner’s finding that Hatab died of strangulation.
Although eight Marines were initially charged in the case, only two were actually
court-martialed. Major Paulus, who ordered Hatab dragged by his neck and permitted
him to lie untreated in the sun, was originally charged with a number of offenses,
including negligent homicide, while Sergeant Gary P. Pittman was charged with
five counts of assault for beating prisoners (including Hatab) and two counts
of dereliction of duty. Neither was sentenced to any prison time, however, in
part because of the lax handling of the medical evidence. The judge in the court
martial proceedings, Colonel Robert Chester, ruled that the autopsy findings
and other medical evidence – evidence which was also Hatab’s remains – could
not be considered, because it had been lost or destroyed and thus could not be
examined by the defense. The judge’s decision eliminated the possibility
that prosecutors could win conviction on the most serious charges they had brought.
In addition, at Sergeant Pittman’s court martial, prosecutors acknowledged
that the military had either lost or destroyed photos of Hatab being interrogated
in the days before his death.
As a result, prosecutors were unable to win conviction on any charges relating
to culpability for Hatab’s death: Paulus was convicted of dereliction of
duty and maltreatment for ordering a subordinate to drag Hatab by the neck, and
for allowing Hatab to remain unmonitored in the sun. Sergeant Pittman was acquitted
of abusing Hatab, though he was sentenced for assaulting other detainees. Charges
against Lance Corporal Christian Hernandez (who dragged Hatab by the neck), including
negligent homicide, were dropped, and the cases against the other Marines similarly
did not proceed to trial. One Marine, William Roy, accepted a reduction in rank
from a lance corporal to a private first class in exchange for his testimony.
But because the demotion was a non-judicial punishment, and the basis for it
is not public, the precise contours of his culpability remain unclear.
Source: Command's Responsibility: Detainee Deaths in U.S. Custody in Iraq
and Afghanistan (2006)
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