Monday, August 20, 2007

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) — The former director of the Abu Ghraib prison’s interrogation center, accused of approving the use of dogs and nudity to intimidate inmates, is the last person charged in the scandal to face a court-martial.

Army Lt. Col. Steven L. Jordan, due to stand trial today at Fort Meade, is the only officer of 12 defendants charged in an investigation triggered by photographs showing low-ranking U.S. soldiers assaulting and humiliating naked detainees at the prison in Iraq in late 2003 and early 2004.

Col. Jordan, who isn’t in any of the pictures, has pleaded not guilty to six charges, which could bring a 16½-year prison sentence if he is convicted.



Prosecutors, led by Lt. Col. John P. Tracy, plan to call witnesses including Maj. Gen. George R. Fay, who investigated the abuses. Gen. Fay concluded in his report that Col. Jordan’s tacit approval of violence during a weapons search on Nov. 24, 2003, “set the stage for the abuses that followed for days afterward.”

The weapons search, known as the “roundup,” followed an episode in which a Syrian detainee fired at Col. Jordan and other soldiers with a handgun he obtained from Iraqi police officers, according to investigative records.

Col. Jordan’s defense, led by Capt. Samuel Spitzberg, argues that although he was the titular head of the interrogation center, he spent most of his time trying to improve U.S. soldiers’ deplorable living conditions. At a hearing in October, the defense contended that interrogation conditions were set by two other officers: Col. Thomas Pappas, an intelligence brigade commander who was the highest-ranking officer at Abu Ghraib, and Capt. Carolyn Wood, leader of a unit within the interrogation center called the Interrogation Command Element.

Neither Col. Pappas nor Capt. Wood has been charged with crimes. Col. Pappas was reprimanded and fined $8,000 for once approving the use of dogs during an interrogation without higher approval.

Col. Jordan and lawyers for both sides declined to be interviewed by the Associated Press about the court-martial.

Three of the counts refer to the treatment of prisoners: cruelty and maltreatment; dereliction of duty for failing to stop the abuse; and failure to obtain permission to use dogs. But the harshest penalties — totaling 13 years — are for two counts saying he lied to Gen. Fay about his knowledge of abuses and one count accusing him of disobeying the general’s order barring him from discussing the investigation with others.

Eleven enlisted soldiers have been convicted of crimes at Abu Ghraib. The longest prison term was given to former Cpl. Charles Graner Jr., of Uniontown, Pa., who was sentenced in January 2005 to 10 years for assault, battery, conspiracy, maltreatment, indecent acts and dereliction of duty.

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