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Excerpt: "Nearly 15 years after the United States adopted a program to interrogate terrorism suspects using techniques now widely considered to be torture, no one involved in helping craft it has been held legally accountable."

Mohamed Ahmed Ben Soud, a Libyan plaintiff, continues to suffer from psychological problems related to his torture. (photo: Holly Pickett//ACLU)
Mohamed Ahmed Ben Soud, a Libyan plaintiff, continues to suffer from psychological problems related to his torture. (photo: Holly Pickett//ACLU)


Lawsuit Aims to Hold Two Contractors Accountable for CIA Torture

By James Risen and Sheri Fink, The New York Times

28 November 16

 

early 15 years after the United States adopted a program to interrogate terrorism suspects using techniques now widely considered to be torture, no one involved in helping craft it has been held legally accountable. Even as President Obama acknowledged that the United States “tortured some folks,” his administration declined to prosecute any government officials.

But now, one lawsuit has gone further than any other in American courts to fix blame. The suit, filed in October 2015 in Federal District Court in Spokane, Wash., by two former detainees in C.I.A. secret prisons and the representative of a third who died in custody, centers on two contractors, psychologists who were hired by the agency to help devise and run the program.

One of them, James E. Mitchell, has written a book to be released Tuesday about his involvement in the program. In the book, he argues that he acted with government permission and that he and Bruce Jessen, the other psychologist and his co-defendant in the lawsuit, received medals from the C.I.A.

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