MIAMI, Dec. 6, 2006

Ex-Liberian Head's Son Indicted On Torture

Son Of Charles Taylor Charged In U.S. With Committing Torture Overseas

    • The son of former Liberian President Charles Taylor, picture here at the left, was indicted on U.S. charges of committing torture.

      The son of former Liberian President Charles Taylor, picture here at the left, was indicted on U.S. charges of committing torture.  (AP)

    • Then-Liberian President Charles Taylor records an address to the nation on the eve of his expected departure from office, in the Liberian capital Monrovia in this Aug. 10, 2003, file photo.

      Then-Liberian President Charles Taylor records an address to the nation on the eve of his expected departure from office, in the Liberian capital Monrovia in this Aug. 10, 2003, file photo.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP)  The son of former Liberian President Charles Taylor was indicted Wednesday on U.S. charges of committing torture as chief of a violent paramilitary unit during his father's regime, marking the first time a 12-year-old federal anti-torture law has ever been used, U.S. officials said.

Charles McArthur Emmanuel, also known as Charles "Chuckie" Taylor Jr. and Roy M. Belfast Jr., was charged in a three-count federal indictment with committing torture overseas as a U.S. citizen as well as conspiracy. He was born in Boston in 1977 to a former girlfriend of Taylor, who was a college student there at the time.

Because Emmanuel, 29, was born in the United States, prosecutors charged him under a 1994 law making it a crime for a U.S. citizen to commit torture or war crimes abroad. Emmanuel is already in custody in Miami awaiting sentencing for falsifying his father's name to get a passport he used to enter the United States from Trinidad in March.

"This marks the first time the Justice Department has charged a defendant with the crime of torture," Assistant Attorney General Fisher said in a statement. "Crimes such as these will not go unanswered."

Emmanuel headed the Anti-Terrorist Unit in Liberia after his father became president in 1997. The indictment says that on July 24, 2002, the unit and National Police abducted an unnamed man from his home, and Emmanuel was seen interrogating him at Taylor's presidential residence, known as Whiteflower.

Later, according to the indictment, the man was taken to another residence where Emmanuel and others allegedly burned him with a hot iron, forced him at gunpoint to hold scalding water, used electric shocks on his genitalia and other body parts and rubbed salt into this wounds.

Emmanuel's court-appointed lawyer, Miguel Caridad, declined comment on the new charges.

Human Rights Watch, a nonprofit international rights group, and Liberian witnesses have said the unit was involved in many other murders, torture, abuse of civilians, recruitment of child soldiers and looting.

Emmanuel's father, meanwhile, faces trial next spring in The Hague, Netherlands, on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for allegedly overseeing the murder, rape and mutilation of thousands of people during Sierra Leone's bloody 10-year civil war, many hacked to death with machetes. Taylor has pleaded not guilty.

Emmanuel pleaded guilty in September to lying on his passport application by listing his father as "Steven Daniel Smith" rather than Taylor or his stepfather, Roy Belfast. Emmanuel legally changed his name to Roy Belfast Jr. in 1990 and had a long criminal record as a child in the Orlando, Fla., area under that name, according to court documents.

Sentencing was scheduled for Thursday in the passport case, with prosecutors seeking a nearly two-year prison term.

In a written statement to the judge in passport case, Emmanuel said he falsified the name to get around a United Nations travel ban imposed on both him and his father. But Emmanuel said he was the victim of a "smear campaign" regarding the alleged Liberian atrocities, mentioning the 2005 Hollywood film "Lord of War" as an example.

"I am alongside my father depicted as a gold gun toting made man who lusts for girls with cowboy hats along with diamonds and money," Emmanuel wrote. "I wish not for these allegations, perceptions, and hypothefications to exist; clearly they are above the realm of reality."

Emmanuel joined his father in Liberia in 1997, three years after fleeing prosecution in Orlando on attempted robbery, aggravated assault and other charges, court documents show. Taylor had taken office that year after leading a rebel group against former President Samuel Doe during a seven-year civil war that claimed some 250,000 lives.

Taylor fled Liberia in 2003 after his indictment by the special Sierra Leone court. He was arrested in Africa one day before his son was apprehended March 30 at Miami International Airport.


©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by agnim December 7, 2006 2:17 AM EST
"Water boarding and nudity are hardly the same as burning,electrical shock, and excruciating pain.
Posted by lestb35 at 08:09 PM : Dec 06, 2006"

Right, 'water boarding' is not painful. LOL

Rule of thumb: If it's torture, it is painful in some way or some form!
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 December 7, 2006 12:41 AM EST
Re: "The son of former Liberian President Charles Taylor was indicted Wednesday on U.S. charges of committing torture..."

Pot to Kettle! Pot to Kettle!
Reply to this comment
by lestb35 December 6, 2006 11:09 PM EST
Water boarding and nudity are hardly the same as burning,electrical shock, and excruciating pain.
Reply to this comment
by lestb35 December 6, 2006 11:07 PM EST
Now why is he a US citizen? Did he ever live here or was he just born here?
Reply to this comment
by flolake December 6, 2006 10:51 PM EST
"Agnim", your days are numbered I suspect. I guess you think you are the stuff for circumventing CBSnews.com's software for combating biggoted mindless trolls like you.
Reply to this comment
by flolake December 6, 2006 10:33 PM EST
Any country involved in ANY way with "torture", has no right whatsoever to comment about another country's despicable violation of human rights.

The whole idea of torture is deplorable yet many have received awards for doing so.

It is likely that since so many nations use these techniques, it will never end. Probably the reporting of such atrocities will diminish as nations get better at torture thus better in their improving methods of squelching the truth.
Reply to this comment
by observantx December 6, 2006 8:48 PM EST
Well, well, well.

A US citizen indicted for torture. I guess this opens the door for a number of our citizens in high government office to also be indicted for torture. These individuals try to doublespeak around what they are doing as %u201Cintensive interrogation techniques%u201D, but we all know what it is.

What is so revolting about torture is that it is done for two reasons. The first is to extract the answer you want from the subject of your attentions. Not the answer you need, not the truth, but the answer you wish to hear. The answer that confirms the conclusion the torturer has already made. The second is for the pure sadistic joy of hearing the screams, the pleading, the crying, seeing the blood, the trembling, the feeble attempts to escape. All too often the first easily becomes the second.

So will the higher ups who foisted the blame for Abu Ghraib on underlings be allowed to wriggle free of this law? Will those who have rendered innocent people to cold dark cells and electric cable whips and water boarding get a free pass?

I sincerely hope not. Anyone who authorized torture, lied about its use, looked the other way, shipped people to places where it happens are loathsome and vile scum. They deserve worse than prison, but since we are supposed to be better than torturers, it will have to do.
Reply to this comment

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