PDA

View Full Version : U.S. must release more Abu Ghraib photos: Federal judge




Suzanimal
03-21-2015, 10:55 PM
A federal judge ruled on Friday that the U.S. government must release photographs showing the treatment of detainees in U.S. custody at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and other sites.

Judge Alvin Hellerstein in Manhattan ruled that his order would not take effect for 60 days to give the U.S. Department of Defense time to decide whether to appeal.

The order is a victory for the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed a lawsuit against the government in 2004 seeking the release of the photographs.

"The photos are crucial to the public record," ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer said in a news release. "They're the best evidence of what took place in the military's detention centers, and their disclosure would help the public better understand the implications of some of the Bush administration's policies."

The Department of Defense did not immediately return an email seeking comment.

Hellerstein ruled last August that the government had failed to show why releasing the photographs would endanger American soldiers and workers abroad, but gave the government a chance to submit more evidence. In Friday's order, however, he said additional evidence had failed to change his decision.

The photographs would be released in redacted form to conceal the identities of any individuals, according to court documents.

Former Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut said in 2009 that there were nearly 2,100 photographs, according to Hellerstein's August opinion.

Hellerstein also wrote in August that he had reviewed many of the photographs and that some were "relatively innocuous while others need more serious consideration."

A handful of images depicting abuse at Abu Ghraib emerged in 2004, prompting a public debate over whether the United States had tortured prisoners.

Hellerstein first ordered the government to turn over the photographs in 2005, but while that order was being appealed, Congress passed a law allowing the Secretary of Defense to withhold the photographs by certifying their release would endanger U.S. citizens.

The government has argued that the photographs are still shielded by that law, but Hellerstein rejected that argument last August and again on Friday. He said the Defense Secretary must review each photograph individually, and that the government has not proven that the Secretary did so.

http://news.yahoo.com/u-must-release-more-abu-ghraib-photos-federal-230111158.html

enhanced_deficit
03-22-2015, 07:52 AM
Interesting.. SWC Obama had opposed release of abu ghraib photos. He also did Selma showboat march together with SWC Bush to show a united front.

enhanced_deficit
06-10-2020, 12:01 AM
Looking at the massive unrest following uncesored release of photo of George Floyd's torture killing, perhaps not releasing all photos/videos of Abu Ghrainb was a careful decision from social justice unrest/riots/peace management standpoint.


https://66.media.tumblr.com/990dbc1fac9bc485bce78d4c87871164/tumblr_inline_n2byfptwy51sa863v.png

Donald Rumsfeld, the US protests and the neoliberal hypocrites (https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/donald-rumsfeld-protests-neoliberal-hypocrites-200608090816597.html)

Donald Rumsfeld said 'freedom is untidy'. Why wouldn't neoliberals accept that in America?
by Andrew Mitrovica
8 Jun 2020

more on George Floyd protests (https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/events/george-floyd-death.html)



US Senate confirms first Black service chief in 'historic' vote (https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/06/senate-confirms-black-service-chief-historic-vote-200609212323656.html)today
Who was George Floyd, the man who sparked a movement? (https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/06/george-floyd-man-sparked-movement-200609175159156.html)today


America's neoliberal intelligentsia is a nest of shameless hypocrisy and historical revisionism.

That is the inescapable, but, predictably, overlooked conclusion to be drawn as the US is, once again, convulsed by the racial fissures that have been exposed, yet again, by yet another white police officer's homicide of yet another Black man.
In the turbulent aftermath of George Floyd's slow, sadistic killing by a thug brandishing a badge, the usual gallery of unrepentant neoliberal darlings has been invited on TV and other agreeable corporate media to muse about the overarching meaning of the mass protests.
In reaching for an appropriate historical marker to illustrate their near unanimous and gooey, sentimental fear that America and democracy itself rest perilously on the precipice, lazy neoliberal commentators point to 1968 as an instructive facsimile of today's "unrest".
America, they insist, is "burning", as it did in 1968, undone, in part, by confrontation and sporadic looting orchestrated by phantom "outsiders" and "anarchists", intent on disfiguring peaceful protests for malicious motives.





Related


'Dangerous'

Appeals court clears way for trial in Abu Ghraib suit
08/25/2019
A federal appeals court has cleared the way for a trial in a decade-old lawsuit accusing a military contractor of responsibility for torture of prisoners at the notorious, U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, but one judge assigned to the case warned the ruling (https://www.politico.com/f/?id=0000016c-cbf2-df1d-a96d-cbf7f0380002) could have “dangerous” results.
https://www.politico.com/blogs/under-the-radar/2019/08/25/appeals-court-clears-way-for-trial-in-abu-ghraib-suit-1475221


https://dehayf5mhw1h7.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/1311/2020/05/27111647/FACEBOOK-george-floyd-death-1120-818x467.jpg

CFR
Photos: How George Floyd’s Death Sparked Protests Worldwide

By Lindsay Maizland, Author and Sabine Baumgartner, Photo Editor
June 5, 2020

A U.S. police officer’s killing of George Floyd has sparked protests around the world against racial injustice and police brutality.

In the days since George Floyd, a Black man, died after a white police officer knelt on his neck, protests have erupted not only throughout the United States, but also around the world. Showing solidarity with those in the United States, hundreds to thousands of protesters in the streets of Amsterdam, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Nairobi, and Sydney, among other cities, have called for an end to racial injustice, systemic racism, and police brutality.
cfr.org/in-brief/photos-how-george-floyds-death-sparked-protests-worldwide

Sammy
06-10-2020, 05:07 AM
Torture is despicable,unconstitutional & un-american!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGuGGnEGs3k