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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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To: Ilaine who wrote (41978)5/4/2004 5:28:24 PM
From: Bill Ulrich  Read Replies (2) of 793896
 
The muddy water is getting murkier:

reuters.com
25 Prisoners Died While Held by U.S. Forces
Tue May 4, 2004 04:24 PM ET
By Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Twenty-five prisoners have died
while being held by U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan and two
of them were murdered in Iraq by Americans, U.S. Army
officials said on Tuesday.

An Army official said one soldier was convicted of murder in the
U.S. military justice system for shooting a prisoner to death in
September 2003 at a detention center in Iraq, and another prisoner
was killed at the Abu Ghraib jail near Baghdad in November 2003
by a private contractor who worked as an interrogator for the
CIA.


The soldier was reduced in rank to private and thrown out of the
service but did not serve any jail time, the official said. The
official said the soldier shot the prisoner after the prisoner had
thrown rocks at the soldier, and the soldier was found to have
used excessive force.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said because the CIA contractor was not in
the U.S. military no legal action was taken because of lack of jurisdiction, but Army officials
referred the case to the Justice Department for possible action.
The official did not offer
details of this killing.

The official did not identify the Americans involved in the murders or the victims.. Most of
the deaths took place in Iraq.

Word of these investigations came as the Pentagon investigated the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by
U.S. forces at the Abu Ghraib jail outside Baghdad, which has inflamed anti-American
sentiment, especially in the Arab world.

The official said a third death among the 25 being investigated was ruled a justifiable
homicide, saying it occurred while a prisoner was attempting to escape.

Of the other 22 death investigations involving prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan, 12 prisoners
were found to have died either by natural or undetermined causes and a further 10 deaths were still being investigated. The Army did not say in which countries the 25 killings occurred but said the vast majority were in Iraq not Afghanistan.

In addition, the official said another 10 abuse cases are being investigated, nine involving allegations of assault and one involving allegations of sexual assault.
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