New Documents Provide Further Evidence That Senior Officials Approved Abuse of Prisoners at Guantánamo (2/23/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
FBI Memorandum Details Guantánamo Commander’s Repeated Refusal to Abandon
Illegal and Ineffective Interrogation Techniques
NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union today released newly obtained
documents showing that senior Defense Department officials approved aggressive
interrogation techniques that Federal Bureau of Investigation agents deemed
abusive, ineffective and unlawful. “We now possess overwhelming evidence that political and military leaders
endorsed interrogation methods that violate both domestic and international
law,” said Jameel Jaffer, an attorney with the ACLU. “It is entirely
unacceptable that no senior official has been held accountable.” Included in today’s release is a memorandum prepared by FBI personnel on May
30, 2003, which supplies a detailed discussion of tensions between FBI and
Defense Department personnel stationed at Guantánamo in late 2002.
According to the memo, Defense Department interrogators were encouraged by their
superiors to “use aggressive interrogation tactics” that FBI agents believed
were “of questionable effectiveness and subject to uncertain interpretation
based on law and regulation.” The May 2003 memo specifically names Maj.
Gen. Geoffrey D. Miller, who was then Commander of Joint Task Force-Guantánamo,
as having favored interrogation methods that FBI agents believed “could easily
result in the elicitation of unreliable and legally inadmissible
information.” The memo states that FBI personnel brought their concerns to
the attention of senior Defense Department personnel but that their concerns
were brushed aside. Other documents released by the ACLU today provide more evidence that abusive
interrogation methods used at Guantánamo were endorsed by senior
officials. One FBI e-mail, dated May 5, 2004, states that “hooding
prisoners, threats of violence, and techniques meant to humiliate detainees”
were “approved at high levels w/in DoD.” Another FBI e-mail states that
certain techniques alleged to be abusive by some FBI agents were “approved by
the Deputy Secretary of Defense.” Today's release comes only days after the release by the New Yorker magazine
of a memorandum from Alberto Mora, General Counsel of the United States Navy,
describing Mora's unsuccessful efforts in late 2002 and early 2003 to convince
the Pentagon to renounce the abuse of prisoners at Guantánamo.
Collectively, the Mora memorandum and the documents released by the ACLU today
show conclusively that Pentagon officials at the highest levels authorized the
abuse of prisoners and persisted in their endorsement of unlawful interrogation
methods even after FBI and Navy personnel objected to those methods orally and
in writing. Still other documents released today by the ACLU provide FBI agents’
descriptions of interrogations they witnessed at Guantánamo. One such
document states: “Last evening I went to observe an interview of REDACTED with
REDACTED. The adjoining room, observable from the monitoring booth, was
occupied by 2 DHS investigators showing a detainee homosexual porn movies and
using a strobe light in the room. We moved our interview to a different
room. We’ve heard that DHS interrogators routinely identify themselves as
FBI agents and then interrogate a detainee for 16-18 hours using tactics as
described above and others (wrapping in Israeli flag, constant loud music,
cranking the A/C down, etc.) The next time a real Agent tries to talk to
that guy, you can imagine the result.” While some of the documents indicate that FBI personnel objected to Defense
Department interrogation policies at Guantánamo, others raise serious questions
about the FBI’s own policies – and particularly about the agency’s response to
the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. In one e-mail, dated Jan. 24,
2004, the FBI’s on scene commander in Baghdad discusses whether the FBI should
investigate the abuse or whether it should leave the task to military
investigators. The e-mail, which was sent to senior FBI officials at FBI
headquarters, advises that the FBI should decline to investigate. “We need
to maintain good will and relations with those operating the prison,” the e-mail
states. “Our involvement in the investigation of the alleged abuse might
harm our liaison.”
The FBI documents released today were previously released to the ACLU on
December 15, 2004, with most of their contents redacted. The less-redacted
versions released by the ACLU today were made available by the FBI after the
ACLU challenged the FBI’s redactions in court. The ACLU’s challenge to
other redactions in FBI documents is pending before the United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York. A hearing has been scheduled
for April 5.
“More than two years after we filed our Freedom of Information Act request,
the FBI continues to withhold documents that the public clearly has a right to
see,” said Jaffer. “As we’ve been saying from the outset, the public has a
right to know what the government’s policies were and who put them in
place.” In a related case, the ACLU yesterday filed a friend-of-the-court brief
supporting the appeal of Qassim v. Bush which argues that two detainees who have
been cleared of charges by the Guantánamo tribunal, whose continued military
detention has been declared unlawful by a federal court and who cannot be
repatriated, are legally entitled to be released under appropriate conditions of supervision.
Today’s documents come in response to a Freedom of Information Act request
filed by the ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human
Rights, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for Peace. The New York Civil
Liberties Union is co-counsel in the case.
The FOIA lawsuit is being handled by Lawrence Lustberg and Megan Lewis of the
New Jersey-based law firm Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger & Vecchione,
P.C. Other attorneys in the case are Jaffer, Amrit Singh, and Judy Rabinovitz of
the ACLU; Arthur Eisenberg and Beth Haroules of the NYCLU; and Barbara Olshansky
of the Center for Constitutional Rights. To date, more than 90,000 pages of government documents have been released in
response to the ACLU's Freedom of Information Act lawsuit. The ACLU has been
posting these documents online at www.aclu.org/torturefoia
The friend-of-the-court brief in Qassim v. Bush is available online at www.aclu.org/intlhumanrights/gen/24248lgl20060223.html
The documents released today are available online at http://action.aclu.org/torturefoia/released/022306/
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