January 23, 2010 12:33 PM

Suit Alleges Blackwater Defiance, Drug Use

(AP)  A federal grand jury investigating Blackwater Worldwide heard witnesses Tuesday as a private lawsuit accused the government contractor's bodyguards of ignoring orders and abandoning their posts shortly before taking part in a Baghdad shooting that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead.

Filed this week in U.S. District Court in Washington, the civil complaint also accuses North Carolina-based Blackwater of failing to give drug tests to its guards in Baghdad - even though an estimated one in four of them was using steroids or other "judgment altering substances."

A Blackwater spokeswoman said Tuesday its employees are banned from using steroids or other enhancement drugs but declined to comment on the other charges detailed in the 18-page lawsuit.

The lawsuit was filed Monday on behalf of five Iraqis who were killed and two who were injured during the Sept. 16 shooting in Baghdad's Nisoor Square. The shootings enraged the Iraqi government, and the Justice Department is investigating whether it can bring criminal charges in the case, even though the State Department promised limited immunity to the Blackwater guards.

Justice Department national security prosecutors Kenneth Kohl and Stephen Ponticiello, both of whom are handling the Blackwater case, spent much of Tuesday afternoon in the grand jury room, which is off limits to the public. Two witnesses also spent hours behind closed doors in the District of Columbia's federal courthouse. One of them emerged sporadically to speak with an attorney, who refused to identify himself, his law firm or his client.

When the grand jury was dismissed for the day, the men left without commenting, as did Kohl.

Before the shootings in Baghdad last September, the three teams of an estimated dozen Blackwater bodyguards had already dropped off the State Department official they were tasked with protecting when they headed to Nisoor Square, according to the lawsuit filed by lawyers working with the Center for Constitutional Rights.

Blackwater and State Department personnel staffing a tactical operations center "expressly directed the Blackwater shooters to stay with the official and refrain from leaving the secure area," the complaint says. "Reasonable discovery will establish that the Blackwater shooters ignored those directives."

Additionally, the lawsuit notes: "One of Blackwater's own shooters tried to stop his colleagues from indiscriminately firing upon the crowd of innocent civilians but he was unsuccessful in his efforts."

The civil complaint offers new details of the incident that has strained relations between the United States and Iraq, which is demanding the right to launch its own prosecution of the Blackwater bodyguards.

The Justice Department says it likely will be months before it decides whether it can prosecute the guards, and it is trying now to pinpoint how many shooters in the Blackwater convoy could face charges. A senior U.S. law enforcement official confirmed Tuesday that government investigators are looking at whether the Blackwater guards were authorized to be in the square at the time of the shooting. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

In an interview, lead plaintiff attorney Susan L. Burke said private investigators turned up the new evidence through interviews with people in Iraq and the United States "who would have reason to know." Those people do not include government officials, Burke said, and she declined to comment when asked if they include Blackwater employees.

The civil lawsuit does not specify how much money the victims and their families are seeking from Blackwater, its 11 subsidiaries and founder, Erik Prince, all of whom are named as defendants.

"We're looking for compensatory (damages) because the people who were killed were the breadwinners in their families," Burke said. "And we're looking for punitive in a manner that suffices to change the corporation's conduct. We have a real interest in holding them accountable for what were completely avoidable deaths."

The lawsuit also accuses Blackwater of routinely sending its guards into Baghdad despite knowing that at least 25 percent of them were using steroids or other "judgment-altering substances." Attorneys estimated that Blackwater employs about 600 guards in Iraq. The company "did not conduct drug-testing of any of its shooters before sending them equipped with heavy weapons into the streets of Baghdad," the lawsuit states.

Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said Blackwater employees are tested for drug use before they are hired and later given random quarterly tests. She said use of steroids and other performance enhancement drugs "are absolutely in violation of our policy."

"Blackwater has very strict policies concerning drug use, and if anyone were known to be in violation of them they would be immediately fired," Tyrrell said.

She declined comment on whether the bodyguards ignored their orders and abandoned their posts, or on other details outlined in the lawsuit.

Blackwater's contract with the State Department to protect diplomats in Iraq expires in May, and there are questions whether it will remain as the primary contractor for diplomatic bodyguards. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has said his Cabinet is drafting legislation that would force the State Department to replace Blackwater with another security company.

The State Department declined to comment on the case Tuesday, citing standard policy on pending legal matters. Deputy spokesman Tom Casey referred questions on the matter "to those involved in the lawsuit."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 26 Comments
by logicanada November 29, 2007 6:58 PM EST
drugs---no!
Kill indiscriminately---- well, ok.
Reply to this comment
by mbcsmith November 28, 2007 4:52 PM EST
"force the State Department to replace Blackwater with another security company".. how about the KKK?


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Posted by sunsetbillyb at 07:31 AM : Nov 28, 2007

That isn''t possible, Robert Byrd''s(LIB-WV) sheet is at the cleaners. The LIB party is the only one with a full fledged KKK member. It''s your party, love it!
Reply to this comment
by allunknowing November 28, 2007 1:43 PM EST
I wish I had lithium. It looked like fun in the movie American Psycho. I wonder if Osama watched that flick... It''s pretty much how he views capitalism.

Oh now I''ve gone off-topic again...

hi mom!
Reply to this comment
by antoniof123 November 28, 2007 12:26 PM EST
I know one thing when they meet their maker I bet they don''t like what he does then.

The real funny think is that they won''t understand. I mean kill, in the name of god.

Regards
Reply to this comment
by allunknowing November 28, 2007 11:52 AM EST
w.t.f.

Where''s the commraderie in this *** country?
Bring the Blackwater troopers home along with the US soldiers. Let those Iraqi courts run their own country without us. This has already been a nightmare of a war that has divided our own country more than Iraq.

Those guys from Blackwater have families at home too you know. I''m sure they want to take every advantage in war so they can get back home to see them again just as much as the US military frontliners. Steroids are LEGAL. They are no more mind-altering than Ritalin or Aderall or Sudafed or the Zanax in your medicine cabinet.

War is hell. Plain and simple.

But the stupid media just makes it entertainment. Because THEY MAKE MONEY FROM ENTERTAINMENT. Without war, what would they do? Report on the water drought? lol, now that''s not very exciting is it?
Reply to this comment
by flreason November 28, 2007 11:46 AM EST
IdlePugilist...I have trouble understanding why you''re defending Blackwater. Mercenaries have an almost universally bad reputation. Yes, there can be trigger-happy soldiers as well, but at least they''re held accountable and can be court-martialed. And where can trigger-happy ex-soldiers and other sociopaths go to indulge their blood-lust? You guessed it!

Blackwater''s "random testing" would be laughable if the consequences of their laxity weren''t tarring our country--OUR--reputation.

If the military needs more manpower, then the administration should ask for it and ask Congress to up the pay for soldiers so they can attract more soldiers of a better caliber than these thugs-for-hire. If the administration doesn''t have the courage to ask the American public to support and fund such a move, then they have no business involving us in a war. If their reasons for war are so flimsey they can''t convince the American people of the necessity of paying for a larger military, then they either need to get the corporations like Haliburton to fund their own attempts to get control of Iraqi oil, or they need to fund it out of their own pockets. Oh wait, Haliburton and the other contributors to the (previous) Republican majority thought that''s what they were doing--through Bush, Cheney and company. No wonder the Congressional Republican leadership that pushed this war on the American public are all running for the exits. Next stop Dubai?
Reply to this comment
by usayesterday November 28, 2007 10:55 AM EST
What''s more scary, is that Blackwater contracted troopers could come to a street near you!

One bill passed by Congress and a Presidential directive about 6 months ago allows Bush to willy nilly declare a "national emergency" and then impose martial law with no Congressional oversight, approval, or resistance. On top of that, the Constitution would also be shelved during this time of martial law.

Just be prepared ladies and gentlemen. We may have to fight Blackwater thugs on our own soil one of these days. (I predict 10 to 12 months)
Reply to this comment
by neobrian-2009 November 28, 2007 10:33 AM EST
What do you expect from the GOPigs ? Mickey & Minnie ? Criminals band together like Black goo ,Texas Tea, OIL that IS !!!King W & Deadeye Dicck ,Scab-burton,,..All the republicons are from the same mold,..Liars,Greedy Silver Spoon scumbags,and pro politicians.
Remember " Friends don`t let friends vote republicon !"
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by samrensho November 28, 2007 9:40 AM EST
It''s the administrations way of fighting crime in America. Round up street gangs, employ them in a "made for" company and send them to Iraq. Win-Win.
Reply to this comment
by taylpatr November 28, 2007 4:56 AM EST
Anyone who knows their history can surely see what happens when you deal with the devil.Anyone but Mr.Born again bush.This sub-contracting of a war has been a miserable failure, not only for our soldiers and Marines, but for the Iraqi and American civilian populations. While we are losing only a fraction of the number of people that Iraq is losing, all Americans must live with the results on our country, not only economically but spiritually as well. I don''t know about you, but I lay awake at night alot thinking about how I''ve seen my country go down the tube under this regime. History will show this man for the idiot that he is, but I''m afraid it will show America as the land that WAS free.These hired bully-thugs are just one part of the quagmire.It''s going to take many years to realize the extent of the damage this little Hitler has done.
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