June 21, 2004

Abu Ghraib A 'Crime Scene'

Judge In Abuse Case Says Prison Cannot Be Destroyed

  • Play CBS Video Video 2 Americans Killed In Iraq

    Elizabeth Palmer reports on a new round of lethal attacks Iraq, including a mortar barrage on a U.S. base in Baghdad that killed two Americans, one a soldier, the other a civilian contractor.

  • Video Words Of Mass Confusion

    From the president down, the Bush administration is engaged in a dispute over whether there was credible evidence of a cooperative relationship between Saddam and al Qaeda, Bill Plante reports.

  • Video CIA Employee Charged

    A civilian interrogator who worked for the CIA in Afghanistan was indicted today on federal charges of fatally beating a prisoner, David Martin reports.

    • Inside Abu Ghraib

      Inside Abu Ghraib  (AP)

    • Staff Sgt. Ivan 'Chip' Frederick, one of the accused soldiers.

      Staff Sgt. Ivan 'Chip' Frederick, one of the accused soldiers.  (Staff Sgt. Chip Frederick)

    • Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld ordered a detainee held without an ID number and without notifying the Red Cross, at CIA director Tenet's request.

      Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld ordered a detainee held without an ID number and without notifying the Red Cross, at CIA director Tenet's request.  (AP)

    Previous slide Next slide
  • Photo Essay Prisoner Photos

    Photos reveal more details of prisoner abuse. (Viewer Discretion)

  • Interactive Abuse At Abu Ghraib

    Investigation timeline, the chain of command, POW rules, global mistreatment of prisoners and video reports.

  • Interactive Military 101

    Basic training to learn all about America's fighting force.

(CBS/AP)  A military judge Monday declared the notorious Abu Ghraib prison a crime scene that cannot be dismantled — as President Bush had offered — and denied defense motions to move the trial of soldiers accused of abusing prisoners there out of Iraq.

Lawyers for three soldiers accused of mistreating prisoners at Abu Ghraib disputed allegations that their clients were involved in illegal torture. The lawyers insisted their clients were following orders by senior officers and military intelligence.

"We can't have American soldiers in a war zone questioning the legality of orders," Guy Womack, the civilian lawyer for one of the defendants, Spc. Charles A. Graner Jr., told reporters.

Womack said there was "a good chance" he would seek to question Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld although he doubted he would try to depose Mr. Bush, although "certainly we will be considering it."

The judge, Col. James Pohl, issued the orders in pretrial hearings for Graner, Sgt. Javal S. Davis and Staff Sgt. Ivan L. "Chip" Frederick II. They are among seven soldiers accused of abusing prisoners. One of them, Spc. Jeremy C. Sivits, pleaded guilty last month and was sentenced to a year in prison.

Mr. Bush had offered to dismantle the facility to help remove the stain of torture and abuse from the new Iraq — an offer Iraqi officials had already dismissed. Saddam Hussein used Abu Ghraib to torture and murder his opponents.

Civilian lawyers for Davis and Graner won permission to seek testimony from the top U.S. general in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez and from the chief of the U.S. Central Command, Gen. John Abizaid.

But the judge turned down a request to seek testimony from higher-ranking witnesses including Rumsfeld, at this time. Pohl left open the possibility of calling other senior figures if the defense could show their testimony was relevant — which Womack said the lawyers intended to do.

Defense lawyers for the soldiers have long maintained their clients were simply following orders and that instructions for harsh treatment to detainees came from the highest levels of the U.S. government.

Davis' civil lawyer, Paul Bergrin, told reporters during a recess that he thought the hearing had gone well. He said lower-echelon troops at the prison had worked under intense pressure from their commanders and the CIA and were using "Israeli methods" — including nudity — known to work against Arab prisoners.

Lawyers for Davis and Graner also sought unsuccessfully to have the trial moved to the United States or Germany. However, Pohl said he might reconsider his ruling if future events in Iraq precluded a fair trial.

The judge granted a request by Bergrin to declassify all parts of an Army investigation report conducted by Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba.

Davis' military lawyer, Capt. Scott Dunn, failed to win an order to reopen the Article 32 investigation, which would have in effect dismissed the current charges. Dunn had argued that the military failed to make available a witness during the Article 32 proceedings, which ended with a recommendation for court martial.

Dunn said he wanted to question an inmate at Abu Ghraib.

"We couldn't go to him. They wouldn't bring him to us. They said it was impossible to obtain any telephone testimony. We object to not obtaining his testimony at all," Dunn said.

The Army has argued that a sharp rise in violence around the Abu Ghraib prison in April, including the siege of nearby Fallujah, made the area around the detention center too dangerous.

But Dunn said his client still had a right to confront his accusers.

Bergrin, Davis' civilian lawyer, said last week in the United States that he would argue for a dismissal of charges because of "improper command influence" extending all the way to Mr. Bush.

Bergrin alleged that senior U.S. military officers sanctioned harsh treatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison and said he would seek evidence that Davis was simply following orders.

A hearing for Frederick was postponed because his civilian lawyer did not show. No date for a trial has been set but Womack said he did not believe it would begin before October.

Frederick's civilian lawyer, Gary Myers, has said he will ask the judge for an investigator to assist in his client's defense. Myers also said he would request a new Article 32 hearing because his client was not allowed to gather evidence or interrogate witnesses at his first session.

The abuse scandal broke in April when CBS News' 60 Minutes II aired photographs of hooded and naked prisoners. Since then other photographs showing sexual humiliation have surfaced in a scandal that has sparked massive international criticism and undercut the moral authority of the U.S.-led mission in Iraq.

A hearing for another soldier charged in the scandal, Pfc. Lynndie England, 21, will be held separately on Tuesday at Fort Bragg, N.C., where she is now stationed.

The military has not decided whether to refer the cases against two others — Spc. Sabrina Harman and Pfc. Megan Ambuhl — to courts martial.

In related developments:

  • Time Magazine reports Senate Armed Services Committee investigators are looking into the possible sexual abuse of female prisoners.

  • The New York Times reports military and intelligence officials claim — contrary to Bush administration assertions — that none of the hundreds of detainees at Guantanamo Bay are senior operatives of al Qaeda, and only a few dozen are sworn al Qaeda members.

  • Britain's Ministry of Defense said Monday that it would investigate a newspaper's allegations that the bodies of Iraqis killed in a firefight with British soldiers were mutilated and showed signs of torture.


    ©MMIV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    Share:
    • Share
    • Yahoo! Buzz
    • Mixx

    CBSNews.com On Digg

  • Exclusive Webshow

    Gen. Ray Odierno, head of multinational forces in Iraq, on progress there and plans for Afghanistan. Watch Now

    • MOST POPULAR
    Discussed
    1. Lieberman May Torpedo Health Care Reform

      (336 recent comments)

    Latest News
    News in Pictures
    Scroll Left Scroll Right
    Connect with CBS News

    Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: