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  • 17Jun

    Iraqi Policemen to Face Charges of Prison Abuse

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/17/world/middleeast/17iraq.html?ref=world

    BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq’s interior minister said Tuesday that more than 40 police officers would face charges after an investigation into prison abuse found that inmates had been incarcerated without warrants and others had their rights violated.

    The Iraqi government has been confronted with accusations of widespread torture in its prisons.

    The interior minister, Jawad al-Bolani, spoke during a tour of one of the most notorious prisons in eastern Baghdad, where dozens of prisoners were packed into small cells with clothes hung on the wall to dry and pillows on the floor.

    Politicians loyal to the radical Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr — many of whose supporters were detained last year as part of a crackdown against militia fighters — kept up their pressure on the government over prison conditions.

    A Sadrist lawmaker, Ali al-Miyali, told reporters on Tuesday that torture had been used to extract confessions in a prison in the southern city of Diwaniya and in other prisons.

    He also contended that inmates had been detained on false accusations from politically motivated informers and that some families had been forced to bribe police officers for the release of their relatives or even for visitation rights.

    “We demand that the government punish those officers and eliminate them from the security services,” Mr. Miyali said.

    More than 300 detainees from Mr. Sadr’s movement began a hunger strike over the weekend at the Rusafa prison in eastern Baghdad, hoping to draw attention to their situation, according to family members and aides to Mr. Sadr.

    A Sunni member of Parliament, Hairth al-Obaidi, who was an outspoken advocate of prisoners’ rights, was assassinated last week after delivering a sermon at a Baghdad mosque in which he discussed prisoner abuse.  

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  • 12Jun

    Oh word, we created a death squad in Iraq.  Luckily for American imperialism we have plenty of experience with this!  From Colombia to El Salvador to Guatemala, American advisors know exactly what they are doing.  This article is great, but too long to post here, be sure to check out the whole thing at its home site.

    Iraq’s New Death Squad

    The Iraq Special Operations Forces (ISOF) is probably the largest special forces outfit ever built by the United States, and it is free of many of the controls that most governments employ to rein in such lethal forces.

    The Iraq Special Operations Forces (ISOF) is probably the largest special forces outfit ever built by the United States, and it is free of many of the controls that most governments employ to rein in such lethal forces.

    http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090622/bauer/print

    [clip]

    The effective head of the American ISOF project is General Trombitas of the Iraq National Counter-Terror Transition Team. A towering man with a gray mustache and a wrinkled brow, Trombitas spent nearly seven of his over thirty years in the military training special forces in Colombia, El Salvador and other countries. On February 23 he gave me a tour of Area IV, a joint American-Iraqi base near the Baghdad International Airport, where US Special Forces train the ISOF. As we walk away from the helicopter, he cracks a boyish smile. Though he’s worked with special forces all over the world, he tells me the men we are about to meet are “the best.”

    Trombitas says he is “very proud of what was done in El Salvador” but avoids the fact that special forces trained there by the United States in the early 1980s were responsible for the formation of death squads that killed more than 50,000 civilians thought to be sympathetic with leftist guerrillas. Guatemala was a similar case. Some Guatemalan special forces that had been trained in anti-terrorism tactics by the United States during the mid-1960s subsequently became death squads that took part in the killing of around 140,000 people. In the early 1990s, US Special Forces trained and worked closely with an elite Colombian police unit strongly suspected of carrying out some of the murders attributed to Los Pepes, a death squad that became the backbone of the country’s current paramilitary organization. (Trombitas served in El Salvador from 1989-90 and in Colombia from 2003-2005, after these incidents took place.)

    “The standards get looser when the Americans aren’t with [the local special forces], and they can eventually become death squads, which I believe actually happened in Colombia,” says Mark Bowden, author of Black Hawk Down and Killing Pablo, a book about the hunt for Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar by CIA and US Special Forces. The tactics taught in each country are the same, Bowden says. “They teach the same kind of skills. They use the same equipment.”

    Trombitas told the official blog of the Defense Department that the training missions used in Latin America are “extremely transferable” to Iraq. Salvadoran Special Forces even helped train the ISOF, he tells me. “It’s a world of coalitions,” he says. “The longer we work together, the more alike we are. When we share our values and our experiences with other armies, we make them the same.”

    [clip]

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  • 28May

    Capitalists in America don’t want the world to see what the occupation really looks like!!  Malcolm-Che says “bring ‘em out!!”  Let them see what goes on in an occupation!  More than that, let them see what goes on in our own jails right here in America!!  This type of activity isn’t only happening at Abu Ghraib, its happening at Riker’s Island, San Quentin, etc!!  Whether Ameicans are administering a prison in Iraq or North Carolina the conditions are the same:  rape, brutality, violence, depravity and misery!!  End the war in Iraq (for real, not just renaming combat soldiers and redrawing city limits)!!  End the prison state here in America!!

    Photos show rape and sex abuse in Iraq jails: report

    abughraib

    http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE54R05220090528?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews

    LONDON (Reuters) – Photographs of Iraqi prisoner abuse which U.S. President Barack Obama does not want released include images of apparent rape and sexual abuse, Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper reported on Thursday.

     

    The images are among photographs included in a 2004 report into prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib prison conducted by U.S. Major General Antonio Taguba.

     

    Taguba included allegations of rape and sexual abuse in his report, and on Wednesday he confirmed to the Daily Telegraph that images supporting those allegations were also in the file.

     

    “These pictures show torture, abuse, rape and every indecency,” Taguba, who retired in January 2007, was quoted as saying in the paper.

     

    He said he supported Obama’s decision not to release them, even though Obama had previously pledged to disclose all images relating to abuses at Abu Ghraib and other U.S.-run prisons in Iraq.

     

    “I am not sure what purpose their release would serve other than a legal one,” Taguba said. “The sequence would be to imperil our troops, the only protectors of our foreign policy, when we most need them, and British troops who are trying to build security in Afghanistan.

     

    “The mere depiction of these pictures is horrendous enough, take my word for it.”

     

    The newspaper said at least one picture showed an American soldier apparently raping a female prisoner while another is said to show a male translator raping a male detainee.

     

    Others are said to depict sexual assaults with objects including a truncheon, wire and a phosphorescent tube.

     

    The photographs relate to 400 alleged cases of abuse carried out at Abu Ghraib and six other prisons between 2001 and 2005.

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  • 27Apr

    “Their claim of friendship and early withdrawal from our dear land, according to the security agreement signed by the two Iraqi and US parties, is meaningless,” he said.

    Iraq says US raid violated pact

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/8019778.stm

    A US raid in the south of Iraq, in which two people died, was a crime and those responsible should be tried, says Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki.

    He said the raid in the town of Kut was a breach of the security pact governing US military actions in the country.

    The US has said the raid was carried out in full agreement with the Iraqis.

    The BBC’s Jim Muir in Baghdad says it is the most serious dispute between the US and Iraq since the agreement came into force at the start of the year.

    One senior local official said the actions had rendered the pact “meaningless”.

    US forces stormed buildings in Wasit province early on Sunday morning.

    A policeman and a woman were shot dead and six people detained.

    The US military said the raid, against a weapons smuggler and “network financier”, had been “fully coordinated and approved by the Iraqi government”.

    They said soldiers had shot and killed “an individual with a weapon” outside the house and that the woman who died had “moved into the line of fire”.

    Two senior Iraqi army officers were arrested for permitting an American operation to go ahead without the knowledge of the Iraqi authorities.

    Pact ‘meaningless’

    In a statement read on state TV, Mr Maliki said he condemned the killings as a “breach of the security pact”.

    He called on the US to “release the detainees and hand over those responsible for this crime to the courts”.

    The incident caused uproar in Wasit, where provincial governor Latif Hamad al-Turfah echoed Mr Maliki’s condemnation.

    He said local government and officials had been “surprised that these forces carried out the raid in breach of the agreement signed between the Iraqi and US governments”.

    The chairman of the provincial council, Mahmud Abd al-Rida, said the raid had embodied the “meaning of the occupation”.

    “Their claim of friendship and early withdrawal from our dear land, according to the security agreement signed by the two Iraqi and US parties, is meaningless,” he said.

    The complicated Status of Forces Agreement was signed in November last year and came into force in early 2009.

    It requires all military operations in Iraq to have the government’s approval and allows for US soldiers to face trial if they commit crimes off base.

    The US currently has more than 140,000 troops in Iraq, and combat troops are due to pull out of Iraq’s cities by the end of June.

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  • 16Apr

    “Some were warned by officers not to go to the latrine by themselves. “

    Book tells of female U.S. soldiers raped by comrades

    her biggest enemy might be one of her fellow soldiers

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090416/us_nm/us_usa_military_rape

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Female U.S. soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan have more to fear than roadside bombs or enemy ambushes. They also are at risk of being raped or sexually assaulted by fellow soldiers.

    “The Lonely Soldier: The Private War of Women Serving in Iraq,” a book based on 40 in-depth interviews, recounts the stories of female veterans who served in combat zones and tells of rape, sexual assault and harassment by male counterparts.

    Some were warned by officers not to go to the latrine by themselves. One began carrying a knife in case she was attacked by comrades. Others said they felt discouraged to report assaults.

    “The horror of it is that it is their own side that is doing this to them,” said the book’s author, Helen Benedict, a journalism professor at Columbia University in New York. The book was released in the United States on Wednesday.

    One in 10 U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are female, and more women have fought and died in the Iraq war than any since World War Two, according to U.S. Department of Defense statistics cited in the book.

    Benedict said the book’s title comes from the isolation female U.S. soldiers experience when combining the trauma of their combat duties with sexual harassment by fellow soldiers.

    “Because women are under so much more danger now and actually in the battle, it’s a particularly tragic situation because all soldiers are supposed to be able to rely on one another to watch their backs,” Benedict said.

    “And how can you feel that way if your fellow soldiers are harassing you all day or trying to rape you or actually even raping you?”

    One such soldier, Marti Ribeiro, was a third-generation Air Force sergeant who served in Afghanistan in 2006 as a combat correspondent with the Army’s all-male 10th Mountain Division. Her story includes an account of being attacked and raped by a U.S. soldier in uniform while guarding a post.

    After completing the shift and not showering to substantiate the attack, she reported it to authorities, only to be told if she filed a claim she would be charged with dereliction of duty for leaving her weapon unattended. She left the military.

    “I had dreams of becoming an officer one day, like my father and grandfather,” she says in the book. “Unfortunately, because I’m female, those dreams will not come true.”

    SURVEYS UNDERSCORE PROBLEM

    The number of reports of sexual assault in the U.S. military rose by 8 percent in fiscal 2008 from the previous year and by 25 percent in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a report released by the Pentagon in March.

    There were 2,908 reports overall of sexual assault by members of the military. Such assaults include rape, indecent assault and attempted rape, the report said.

    Of the 40 women Benedict interviewed who served between 2003 and 2006, 10 said they had been raped, five said they were sexually assaulted including attempted rape, and 13 reported sexual harassment.

    A new play based on Benedict’s work was performed in New York and may tour the United States. After a recent performance, real soldiers hugged the actors who portrayed them. Some wiped away tears.

    U.S. officials said the increase in assaults was due to efforts to make it easier to report them.

    Cynthia Smith, a Department of Defense spokeswoman, said the department was committed to eliminating sexual assault from the military through prevention and response policies and eliminating barriers to reporting assaults.

    “The Department of Defense’s goal is to establish a climate of confidence that encourages victims to report sexual assault and get the care they need,” she said in an e-mail.

    Benedict and some researchers say U.S. government figures are much lower than their findings because the government only counts those brave enough to report the assaults.

    The problem is not new to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    A 2003 survey of more than 550 female veterans who served in wars from Vietnam to the first Gulf war found that 30 percent said they suffered from rape or attempted rape and 79 percent reported being sexually harassed, according to the American Journal of Industrial Medicine.

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  • 16Apr

    GI guilty in detainees’ deaths in Iraq

    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/04/15/GI-guilty-in-detainees-deaths-in-Iraq/UPI-77621239771080/

    VILSECK, Germany, April 15 (UPI) — A U.S. Army sergeant was found guilty in Germany Wednesday of having killed four prisoners while on duty in Iraq.

     

    A military jury deliberated nearly 4 hours before convicting Master Sgt. John Hatley of premeditated murder and conspiracy in the 2007 slayings of the four bound and blindfolded detainees, whose identities were never determined and whose bodies haven’t been found since they allegedly were dumped in a canal near Baghdad, Stars and Stripes reported.

    The military panel acquitted Hatley on an unrelated count that he murdered or wounded another detainee on a Baghdad street earlier in 2007, the newspaper said. He also was acquitted of trying to cover up the canal killings.

    Hatley faces either life with the chance for parole or life without when the jury considers sentencing Thursday.

    Hatley, 40, is the third soldier from the 172nd Infantry Brigade to be convicted in the detainees’ deaths. The other two, Sgt. 1st Class Joseph P. Mayo, 27, and Sgt. Michael Leahy, 28, were convicted earlier and sentenced to prison.

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  • 01Apr

    Suprised to see this headline?  You shouldn’t be!  The occupation is still in effect!!  Bring the troops home now!!

    Iraq’s Shiites call for end of US occupation

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jCmSv-PbnXxzS4811dy_O-Yr37cQ

    BAGHDAD (AFP) — Thousands of followers of the radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr called for an end to US occupation of Iraq on Friday, but the government ignored the sixth anniversary of the invasion.

    Death tolls have tumbled since Iraq’s deadliest days in late 2007, and in just three months time American forces are to withdraw from major cities and towns in a prelude to a total pullout in 2011.

    Neither the Iraqi authorities nor the US military marked the March 20, 2003 invasion that toppled president Saddam Hussein and his totalitarian Baath party from power.

    But Sadr’s devotees used Friday prayers to call for an end to the American presence.

    “We reject occupation… occupiers out,” the faithful chanted, fists raised, in Sadr City, an impoverished district of northeast Baghdad, as a US flag was set ablaze.

    Sheikh Haidar al-Jaberi, a member of Sadr’s politburo, called for a major demonstration on April 9, anniversary of the fall of Saddam’s Sunni regime.

    “March 20 should be a festival, but after what the Americans have done, it’s a sad day,” Jaberi said, referring to the start of spring.

    “They never kept their promises,” added Qassem Zamel, who came to pray.

    “The Americans came to liberate us from a dictator but they have destroyed the country,” said Zamel, who is in his 60s.

    He said his three sons were arrested in March 2003 and were still in jail, although he did not know why.

    Shiites — the majority in Iraq — suffered repeated purges under Saddam’s brutal 35-year reign and had at first welcomed the “Iraqi Freedom” invasion.

    The campaign that ousted Saddam was supposed to bring democracy and a better life, but most Iraqis were caught in the maelstrom of violence that swept the country. Sunni insurgents and Al-Qaeda fought US troops and unleashed sectarian warfare with Shiite militia such as Sadr’s Mahdi army.

    Meanwhile in Tokyo, about 500 Japanese demonstrated to call for an early withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, as well as from Afghanistan.

    They carried banners that read: “Weapons can’t solve the Iraqi and Afghan wars.”

    “If we remain silent, I don’t think the troops will withdraw” from Iraq and Afghanistan, said organiser Ken Takada.

    A report released on the eve of the sixth anniversary of the invasion underscored the plight of Iraqis.

    “Millions of civilians are still facing hardship every day,” said International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) President Jakob Kellenberger.

    “Indiscriminate attacks continue to leave dozens of people killed or injured on a daily basis despite improvements in the security situation in many parts of Iraq.”

    In 2007, 17,430 Iraqis died in violence, but in a sign of progress this fell to 6,772 in 2008. The first two months of 2009 saw 449 die, the lowest official toll since the invasion.

    “The humanitarian situation in many areas of the country remains serious despite the Iraqi authorities’ considerable efforts to provide basic services such as water and health care,” Kellenberger said.

    Two major bomb blasts this month killed more than 60 people and maimed scores more, serving as grim reminders of the risks.

    Despite such precariousness, US and Iraqi officials offer repeated assurances of a smooth transition as American troops pull out and fledgling Iraqi forces take control.

    Fears of a return to high levels of sectarian strife or even all-out civil war are played down by both sides, with the authorities working towards a semblance of something like normal life amid the ruins and countless concrete blast walls that litter Baghdad.

    The tourism ministry announced on Thursday that the first official Western tour group to enter Iraq since the invasion was visiting historic and religious sites.

    “This visit is a positive sign for the return of touristic activity to Iraq,” ministry spokesman Abdul Zahra al-Telagani said of the five Britons, two Americans and a Canadian on an organised two-week trip.

    “It reflects the improvement in the security situation.”

    Iraq, under UN sanctions for much of the 1990s, has been off limits to all but the most adventurous of Western tourists for many years.

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  • 09Mar

    Female soldier’s family questions military’s explanation of her death

    http://www.insidebayarea.com/ci_11867484?source=most_viewed

    FLORISSANT, Mo. — Inside the tidy suburban home of John and Linda Johnson, no photos of their eldest daughter grace the walls. Army Pfc. LaVena Johnson was just 19 when she died in Iraq in 2005; to this day her parents cannot bear to display reminders of her life.

    John Johnson does possess other photos of his daughter — explicit color shots of her autopsy and death scene. He shows them to a visitor. They are horrifying: LaVena Johnson in a pool of blood. LaVena Johnson’s corpse on a coroner’s table.

    John Johnson does not let his wife, Linda, or four children see these images, but he studies the photos for hours at a time, trying to determine how his daughter died.

    Army investigators ruled that LaVena Johnson committed suicide by firing her M-16 automatic rifle into her mouth. Her body was found beside the rifle inside a contractor’s storage tent on a U.S. military base in Balad, Iraq, on July 19, 2005.

    There was no suicide note, no recovered bullet and no significant gunshot residue on her hands. But the Army cited fellow soldiers’ reports that she was depressed and had spoken of killing herself.

    John Johnson says his daughter was raped and murdered, with her death scene staged to make it appear that she shot herself. He accuses the Army of covering up for a killer or killers to conceal a soldier-on-soldier murder, explaining that military personnel would have had unrestricted access to the area where his daughter died and therefore would not have attracted undue attention.

     

    If LaVena Johnson’s death were investigated as a homicide, John Johnson added, it would raise questions about base security and discourage women from enlisting.

    In 2005, in response to concerns about sexual assaults against female service members, the Pentagon established the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office. Citing a reluctance to report rape for fear of stigma or reprisals, the office does not share information with law enforcement or the military command.

    Like the Johnsons, other families have questioned the military’s findings of suicide in the deaths of their daughters in Iraq or Afghanistan. They too accuse the military of jumping to conclusions and ignoring evidence of murder. But these grieving families have discovered that there are no clear answers and few conclusive facts — only murky evidence that can be interpreted more than one way. The result is a climate of mistrust and suspicion that leaves the military on the defensive and the families feeling deceived.

    Christoper Grey, a spokesman for the Army’s Criminal Investigation Command, called its investigation of the Johnson case “thorough and complete.” He said the command is ready to reopen any investigation in which “new credible information warranting further investigation is brought to our attention.”

    Of the 115 female service member deaths in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, 16 have been ruled suicides. Overall, 205 of the 4,868 military deaths in those wars through Jan. 31, were ruled suicides. The 128 reported Army suicides in 2008 was the highest annual level since the Pentagon began tabulating suicides in 1980.

    The Johnson case, and several others involving female service members, have been championed by retired Army Col. Ann Wright, a former U.S. diplomat.

    Wright accuses the military of withholding evidence pointing to sexual assaults and other attacks on female service members. She contends that the military has been too quick to close some women’s deaths as suicides without first conducting thorough homicide investigations. She accuses the military of stonewalling families who question its findings.

    “What the military is doing is egregious,” she said. “In many cases, they have the information the families want but refuse to release it. These families are really fighting upstream.”

    For the Johnsons, the circumstance of their daughter’s death has become an obsession. It is a wound that may never heal.

    For more than three years, John Johnson has studied every aspect of his daughter’s death. He keeps cross-referenced stacks of investigative reports, crime scene photographs, lab reports and angry letters sent to the Army, the Pentagon and Congress.

    The Johnsons, both former Army employees, say they feel betrayed by a military they and their daughter served honorably. In his family room, John Johnson stabbed his finger at an Army autopsy report, his voice rising in indignation.

    “I’m not just a grieving father guessing at things,” he said. “I’m going strictly by the facts. I’m going by the Army’s own evidence.”

    After John Johnson filed a Freedom of Information Act request and enlisted the aid of his congressman, the Army provided original color autopsy and crime scene photos in June 2007.

    As he studied the photos, he said, he saw blood inside and outside the contractor’s tent. Other evidence suggested to him that LaVena Johnson was killed elsewhere and her body dumped in the tent: Bootprints in blood and on a bag of cement, the absence of blood and brain spatter on the tent, and the Army’s failure to find the fatal bullet.

    A small fire next to the body was evidence, he said, that someone tried to cover up her murder. A caustic substance appears to have been poured on her genitals, he said, to eliminate signs of rape.

    The abrasions on LaVena Johnson’s face suggest to John Johnson that she was beaten, and scratches on her arms are likely defensive wounds, he said. And he does not believe his 5-foot-1 daughter’s arms were long enough to pull the trigger of an M-16 cradled between her legs, as described in the Army report.

    A gunshot residue test, performed on the woman’s hands to determine whether she had fired a weapon, found “insignificant” residue, the report said.

    The report quoted three soldiers as saying LaVena Johnson seemed depressed and spoke of suicide. But two of them also said she told them she was only joking and would never take her own life. “She didn’t want to hurt her family,” one soldier said.

    A statement by her company commander, Capt. David Woods, said: “This soldier was clearly happy and seemingly very healthy physically and emotionally.”

    One soldier said LaVena Johnson was upset over a breakup with a soldier she had met in the U.S., the report said. She learned 10 days before her death that she had genital warts, according to the report.

    Grey, the Army spokesman, said the only blood found outside the tent was on a bench that had been removed after LaVena’s Johnson’s body was discovered. Investigators are not aware of any boot prints in blood or on a cement bag, and found no cuts, bruises or abrasions “that would have led us to believe that they had been created by suspicious means,” Grey said.

    Investigators believe the bullet exited through an open tent flap window, Grey said. They concluded that LaVena Johnson had burned pages from her journal before she shot herself, starting a small fire inside the tent.

    Grey said investigators demonstrated that it was “easily possible” for a person of LaVena Johnson’s stature to shoot herself through the mouth with her M-16. And because investigators found no evidence of sexual assault, Grey said, there was no reason to collect vaginal or fingernail swabs.

    Paul Stone, a spokesman for the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, said the damage to LaVena Johnson’s face is consistent with the rapidly expanding gases discharged by an M-16, which he said can break bones and leave bruises and abrasions. The Institute also concluded that LaVena Johnson committed suicide.

    After John Johnson met in April with U.S. Rep. Ike Skelton, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee reviewed the case. It concluded that further review “would not find anything to change the findings and conclusions” of the Army.

    John Johnson called the committee’s conclusions “insulting.”

    The Johnsons had their daughter’s body exhumed in 2007 for an autopsy, conducted by Dr. Michael Graham, the St. Louis city medical examiner.

    Graham concluded that she died of a gunshot wound fired through her mouth. In an interview, Graham said he could not determine whether the wound was self-inflicted because John Johnson did not provide him with crime scene photos and other material. John Johnson had not yet received the crime scene photos from the Army at the time of the autopsy.

    “I saw no evidence that it was not self-inflicted,” Graham said.

    John Johnson called Graham’s conclusions “disappointing” and said a lawyer is advising him on what to do next.

    Linda Johnson wept as she recounted her final phone conversation with her daughter, two days before she died.

    “She was her normal jubilant self,” Linda Johnson said. “She talked about coming home and Christmas plans. She loved Christmas — she told me make sure her father didn’t start decorating till she got home. This was not a girl getting ready to harm herself.”

    The family has not celebrated Christmas since LaVena Johnson’s death, she said.

    John Johnson was stoic as he thumbed through his daughter’s autopsy photos. With his shaved head and black mustache, he appeared resolute, unbowed.

    He spread the photos before him once more, convinced they contain the answers he is seeking. “I’m not giving up,” he said, “until somebody tells me the truth about what happened to my baby girl.”

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  • 07Mar

    This article points out a glaring contradiction of U.S. policy.  First, they are short on military recruits, so they often use criminal charges to force a member of the lower classes into signing up for war.  But on the other hand, they villify gang members a lot, and it is widely known that there are many gang members (i.e. members of street organizations) that are in the military, so they would rather not allow this.  How will it be solved?  Which tendency will win?  The tendency to villify street organizations or the tendency that needs recruits and doesn’t care who they are?  What’s funny about this article is that it practically states that there will be members from opposing ‘gangs’ serving next to each other:  members of the Police Department gang and a member of the Crips street organization. 

    G.I. CRIP: Could He Serve With Cops?

    12274

    http://www.wweek.com/wwire/?p=22929

    Portland Police Sgt. Pete Simpson brought up an interesting point during an interview with WW for this week’s story about a convicted gangbanger who may be deployed to Iraq.

     

    Simpson points out there are Portland cops who serve in the Oregon National Guard, and it’s the Guard that is seeking to send Levell Peters to Iraq this summer after Peters was convicted of a felony for a gang-related shooting last year.

     

    “He could be serving right next to a police officer who’s on the other side of the law and who’s supposed to trust this guy with his life,” Simpson says.

     

    Police Bureau records indicate there are 18 uniformed officers who are members of the National Guard or reserves, says Detective Mary Wheat, a police spokeswoman.

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  • 27Aug

    Sexism that runs in our society is also in effect in our military:

    U.S. Military Keeping Secrets About Female Soldiers’ ‘Suicides’?

    http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080826_us_military_keeping_secrets_about_female_soldiers_suicides/?ln

    By Col. Ann Wright

    Since I posted on April 28 the article “Is There an Army Cover Up of the Rape and Murder of Women Soldiers,” the deaths of two more U.S. Army women in Iraq and Afghanistan have been listed as suicides—the Sept. 28, 2007, death of 30-year-old Spc. Ciara Durkin and the Feb. 22, 2008, death of 25-year-old Spc. Keisha Morgan. Both “suicides” are disputed by the families of the women.

    Since April 2008, five more U.S. military women have died in Iraq—three in noncombat-related incidents. Ninety-nine U.S., six British and one Ukrainian military women and 13 U.S. female civilians have been killed in Iraq, Kuwait and Bahrain, as well as probably hundreds of thousands of Iraqi women and girls. Of the 99 U.S. military women, 64 were in the Army active component, nine in the Army National Guard, seven in the Army Reserve, seven in the Marine Corps, nine in the Navy and three in the Air Force. According to the Department of Defense, 41 of the 99 U.S. military women who have been killed in Iraq died in “noncombat-related incidents.” Of the 99 U.S. military women killed in the Iraq theater, 41 were women of color (21 African-Americans, 16 Latinas, three of Asian-Pacific descent and one Native American—data compiled from the Web site www.nooniefortin.com).

    Fourteen U.S. military women, including five in the Army, one in the Army National Guard, two in the Army Reserves, three in the Air Force, two in the Navy (on ships supporting U.S. forces in Afghanistan) and one in the Marine Corps, one British military woman and six U.S. civilian women have been killed in Afghanistan. According to the Department of Defense, four U.S. military women in Afghanistan died in noncombat-related incidents, including one now classified as a suicide. Four military women of color (three African-Americans and one Latina) have been killed in Afghanistan. (Data compiled from www.nooniefortin.com.)

    The deaths of 14 U.S. military (13 Army and one Navy) women and one British military woman who served in Iraq, Kuwait or Afghanistan have been classified as suicides.

    Two Army women in Iraq (Pfc. Hannah Gunterman McKinney, a victim of vehicular homicide, and Pfc. Kamisha Block, who was shot five times by a fellow soldier who then killed himself) and two Navy women in Bahrain (MASN Anamarie Camacho and MASN Genesia Gresham, both shot by a male sailor who then shot, but did not kill, himself) have died at the hands of fellow military personnel.

    Several more military women have died with unexplained “noncombat” gunshot wounds (U.S. Army Sgt. Melissa Valles, July 9, 2003: gunshot to the abdomen; Marine Lance Cpl. Juana Arellano, April 8, 2006: gunshot wound to the head while in a “defensive position”). Most of the deaths of women who have died of noncombat gunshot wounds have been classified as suicides, rather than homicides.

    The Army, the only military service to release annual figures on suicides, reported that 115 soldiers committed suicide in 2007. According to Army figures, 32 soldiers committed suicide in Iraq and four in Afghanistan. Of the 115 Army suicides, 93 were in the Regular Army and 22 were in the Army National Guard or Reserves. The report lists five Army women as having committed suicide in 2007. Young, white, unmarried junior enlisted troops were the most likely to commit suicide, according to the report (Pauline Jelinek, “Soldier suicides hit highest rate, 115 last year,” Associated Press, May 29, 2008, abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=4955043).

    From 2003 until August 2008, the deaths of 13 Army women and one Navy woman in Iraq and Afghanistan (including Kuwait and Bahrain) have been classified as suicides (numbers confirmed with various media sources):

    2008—Spc. Keisha Morgan (Taji, Iraq)
    2007—Spc. Ciara Durkin (Bagram, Afghanistan), Capt. (medical doctor) Roselle Hoffmaster (Kirkik, Iraq)
    2006—Pfc. Tina Priest (Taji, Iraq), Pfc. Amy Duerkson (Taji, Iraq), Sgt. Denise Lannaman (Kuwait), Sgt. Jeannette Dunn (Taji, Iraq), Maj. Gloria Davis (Baghdad).
    2005—Pvt. Lavena Johnson (Balad, Iraq), 1st Lt.  Debra Banaszak (Kuwait), USN MA1 Jennifer Valdivia (Bahrain)
    2004—Sgt. Gina Sparks (it is unclear where in Iraq she was injured, but she died in the Fort Polk, La., hospital)
    2003—Spc. Alyssa Peterson (Tal Afar, Iraq), Sgt. Melissa Valles (Balad, Iraq)

    The demographics of those Army women who allegedly committed suicide are as intriguing as the circumstances of their deaths: 
    – Seven of the women, being between the ages of 30 and 47, were older than the norm (Davis, 47; Lannaman, 46; Dunn, 44; Banaszak, 35; Hoffmaster, 32; Sparks, 32; and Durkin, 30).  (Most military suicides are in their 20s).
    – Three were officers:  a major (Davis), a captain and medical doctor (Hoffmaster) and a first lieutenant (Banaszak).
    – Five were noncommissioned officers (Lannaman, Dunn, Sparks, Valles and Valdivia).
    – Five were women of color (Morgan, Davis, Johnson, Lannaman, Valles).
    – Four were from units based at Fort Hood, Texas, and were found dead at Camp Taji, Iraq (Dunn, Priest, Duerkson, and Morgan).
    – Two were found dead at Camp Taji, Iraq, 11 days apart (Priest and Duerkson).
    – Two were found dead at Balad, Iraq (Johnson and Valles).
    – Two had been raped (Priest, 11 days prior to her death; Duerksen, during basic training).
    – One other was probably raped (Johnson, the night she died).
    – Two were lesbians (Lannaman and Durkin).
    – Two of the women were allegedly involved in bribes or shakedowns of contractors (Lannaman and Davis).
    – Two had children (Davis and Banaszak).
    – Three had expressed concerns about improprieties or irregularities in their commands (Durkin’s concerns were financial; Davis had given a seven-page deposition on contracting irregularities in Iraq the day before she died; Peterson was concerned about methods of interrogation of Iraqi prisoners).
    – Several had been in touch with their families within days of their deaths and had not expressed feelings of depression (Morgan, Durkin, Davis, Priest, Johnson).

    The Death of Lavena Johnson

    As discussed in my article “Is There an Army Cover Up of Rape and Murder of Women Soldiers?,” 19-year-old Army Pvt. Lavena Johnson was found dead on the military base in Balad, Iraq, in July 2005, and her death was characterized by the Army as suicide from an M-16 rifle gunshot. From the day their daughter’s body was returned to them, the parents, both of whom have had a long association with the Army—the father, a medical doctor, is an Army veteran and worked 25 years as a Department of the Army civilian and the mother, too, worked for the Department of the Army—harbored grave suspicions about the Army’s investigation into Johnson’s death and the Army’s characterization of her death as suicide. As she had been in charge of a communications facility, Johnson was able to call home daily; in those calls, she gave no indication of emotional problems or being upset. In a letter to her parents after her death, Johnson’s commanding officer, Capt. David Woods, wrote, “Lavena was clearly happy and seemed in very good health both physically and emotionally.”
    In viewing his daughter’s body at the funeral home, Dr. John Johnson was concerned about the bruising on her face. He was puzzled by the discrepancy in the autopsy report on the location of the gunshot wound.  As an Army veteran and a long-time Army civilian employee who had counseled veterans, he was mystified how the exit wound of an M-16 shot could be so small. The hole in Lavena’s head appeared to be more the size of a pistol shot rather than an M-16 round. But the gluing of military uniform white gloves onto Lavena’s hands, hiding burns on one of her hands, is what deepened Dr. Johnson’s concerns that the Army’s investigation into the death of his daughter was flawed.

    Over the next two and a half years, Dr. and Mrs. Johnson and their family and friends, through the Freedom of Information Act and congressional offices, relentlessly and meticulously requested documents concerning Lavena’s death from the Department of the Army. Gradually, with the Army’s response to each request for information, another piece of evidence about Johnson’s death emerged.

    The military criminal investigator’s initial drawing of the death scene revealed that Johnson’s M16 was found perfectly parallel to her body. The investigator’s sketch showed that her body was found inside a burning tent, under a wooden bench with an aerosol can nearby. A witness, an employee of the defense contractor Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR), stated that he heard a gunshot and when he went to investigate, he found a KBR tent on fire. When he looked into the tent, he saw a body. The official Army investigation did not mention a fire, nor that Johnson’s body had been pulled from the fire.

    KBR Women Employees Raped in Iraq

    The fact that Lavena Johnson’s body was discovered in a KBR tent raises questions. 

    Many KBR women employees have been raped in Iraq. One law firm in Houston has 15 clients with sexual assault, sexual harassment or retaliation complaints against Halliburton and its former subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root LLC (KBR), as well as against the Cayman Island-based Service Employees International Inc., a KBR shell company (Karen Houppert, “Another KBR Rape Case,” The Nation, April 3, 2008).

    Two female employees of KBR who were raped while in Iraq have testified before Congress. On her fourth day in Iraq, July 28, 2005, Jamie Leigh Jones was gang-raped by seven fellow KBR employees at Camp Hope in Baghdad. Jones’ rape occurred nine days after Lavena Johnson was found dead in a KBR tent at Balad Air Base. Jones was drugged, raped and beaten, and the injuries she suffered were so severe that she had to have reconstructive surgery on her chest (“Democracy Now,” April 18, 2008, “Two Ex-KBR Employees Say They Were Raped by Co-Workers in Iraq,” www.democracynow.org/2008/4/8/exclusivein_their_first_joint_interview_two).

    Jones reportedly was taken back to the KBR area, where she was placed into an empty shipping container under KBR armed guard for almost 24 hours without food or water or the ability to communicate with anyone. The military doctor who examined her turned over the “rape kit” photographs and statement to KBR. Jones persuaded a guard to allow her a phone call, which she made to her father. Her father promptly called their Texas congressional representative, Ted Poe, who then called the State Department in Iraq and demanded her immediate release. Jones was rescued shortly thereafter and quickly left Iraq. Congressman Poe again contacted the State Department and the Department of Justice in an effort to launch an investigation, but both departments ignored the requests and even refused to contact Poe for the next two years. The “rape kit” and the photographs of and statement from Jones taken by a military doctor disappeared (ABC News, “KBR Employees: Company Covered Up Sexual Assault and Harassment,” abcnews.go.com/Blotter/popup?id=3948132&contentIndex=1&start=false&page=1).

    Jones testified Dec. 17, 2007, before the House Judiciary Committee on “Enforcement of Federal Criminal Law to Protect Americans Working for U.S. Contractors in Iraq” (judiciary.house.gov/hearings/hear_121907.html).

    The nonprofit foundation Jones created after her ordeal, the Jamie Leigh Jones Foundation, has been contacted by 40 U.S. contractor employees alleging that they are the victims of sexual assault or sexual harassment on the job and that Halliburton, KBR and Service Employees International Inc. have not helped them or have obstructed their claims (Karen Houppert, “Another KBR Rape Case,” The Nation, April 3, 2008). 

    Dawn Leamon was another civilian contractor employed by KBR who was raped allegedly by KBR employees. She was the sole medical provider at Camp Harper, a base near Basra in southern Iraq. Leamon reported being raped anally by a U.S. soldier in January 2008 while a KBR employee forced his penis into her mouth. She says she was told to keep quiet by her KBR supervisor and by the military liaison officer. Her laptop computer was seized within hours after she e-mailed a civilian lawyer. She testified on April 9, 2008, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in the hearing “Closing Legal Loopholes: Prosecuting Sexual Assaults and Other Violent Crimes Committed Overseas by American Civilians in a Combat Environment” (foreign.senate.gov/hearings/2008/hrg080409a.html).

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