U.S. Jury Convicts Liberian Dictator's Son
Charles Taylor Jr., A U.S. Citizen, Convicted Of Torture In First Application Of 1994 Law
-
Former Liberian President Charles Taylor's son, Charles McArthur Emmanuel, is shown in a courtroom drawing by Shirley Henderson, Sept. 29, 2008 in Miami. Taylor was convicted Oct. 30, 2008, of torture and conspiracy. He faces life in prison. The trial marks the first test of a 1994 law that makes it a crime for a U.S. citizen to commit torture overseas. (AP Photo/Shirley Henderson)
-
Play CBS Video Video Behind The Scenes In Liberia "Only On The Web": CBS News White House Correspondent Bill Plante gives a behind-the-scenes look at covering the president in Monrovia, Liberia, where Bush met with President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf.
-
Interactive Liberia Conflict Major events, photos and fast facts on this war-torn West African nation.
-
Fast Facts Liberia Learn about the people, economy and history.
Charles McArthur Emmanuel, also known as Charles "Chuckie" Taylor Jr., was convicted of torture, firearms and conspiracy charges on the second day of jury deliberations. He faces life in prison, with sentencing set for Jan. 9.
Prosecutors said the 31-year-old Emmanuel was involved in killings and torture as head of an elite Antiterrorist Unit in his father's government also known as the "Demon Forces." From 1999 to 2002, Emmanuel's job was to use his paramilitary soldiers to silence opposition to Taylor and train soldiers for conflict in neighboring African countries, according to trial testimony.
Miami U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta said the case, investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and FBI agents who traveled the globe finding victims and witnesses, will serve as a model for future prosecutors involving foreign torture allegations.
"It is truly historic. It's the first case of its kind, but it won't be the last of its kind," Acosta said.
Charles Taylor is on trial before a United Nations tribunal 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.
A succession of African witnesses described Emmanuel's involvement in at least three killings and torture using electric shocks, lit cigarettes, molten plastic, hot irons, stabbings with bayonets and even biting ants shoveled onto people's bodies.
Many of the victims were accused of being anti-Taylor rebels or sympathizers and were held at a base known as Gbatala, often in pits partially filled with water and covered with iron bars and barbed wire.
"I want the world to know what happened to me so it will not happen again in the future," former prisoner Rufus Kpadeh testified. He showed jurors scars on his arms from molten plastic he said was dripped on him.
Emmanuel did not testify in his own defense. His court-appointed lawyers suggested that many of the witnesses lied in a bid to win political asylum in the U.S. or to settle political vendettas against Taylor and his government.
Defense lawyer Miguel Caridad said he was "disappointed" by the verdict.
"It's tough to defend a case where everything happened across the ocean," Caridad said.
The verdict was hailed by the Human Rights Watch organization, which pushed hard for Emmanuel's prosecution and has spent years documenting crimes and violence in west Africa.
I want the world to know what happened to me so it will not happen again in the future.
Rufus Kpadeh, former Liberian prisonerEmmanuel is a U.S. citizen who was born in 1977 in Boston to a girlfriend of Taylor, who was a college student there at the time. Emmanuel's mother later remarried and moved the family to Orlando, Florida.
Court records show Emmanuel was involved in a long string of crimes, eventually leaving the U.S. to join his father in Liberia in 1997 and using the name Chuckie Taylor. After the elder Taylor left office in August 2003, Emmanuel fled to Trinidad and eventually decided to return to the U.S.
The torture trial took place in Miami because Emmanuel arrived here in March 2006 with a passport he obtained after giving a false name for his father on its application. Emmanuel pleaded guilty to passport fraud and was sentenced to 11 months in prison, then stood trial on the torture indictment.
Taylor came to power in 1997 after a long civil war and resigned under pressure from the Bush administration in August 2003. At the time, Taylor was one of Africa's most infamous warlords, allegedly involved in recruitment of child soldiers and arms sales for so-called "blood" diamonds.
By AP Legal Affairs Writer Curt Anderson
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- um, brianbwb, did you not read in the article that Taylor''s resignation from power was due to pressure from Bush''s administration in 2003? You''re so busy spewing hate you don''t even stop to think.
- Reply to this comment
- The world sees the Bush, Cheney, AShcroft ,Gonzales,torture team UNCHARGED- what a sight the US has become !!
- Reply to this comment
- talk about the pot calling the kettle black, the worlds foremost government tries someone for torture....when they admittedly have used the practice in the war on terror?I just hope someone has the balls to bring up Bush and Cheney on these same charges, for that matter anyone who knew it was going on in the presidents circle should be charged, our government behavior has been appalling.We have gone from the most respected countries in the world to the most hated and despised, in less than a decade.i still don''''t believe the bailout lie , it comes from the same people that brought you the illegal war. Even the governments investigation of 911 was a sham , a cover up. a lie.Too many things didn''''t add up , like how the three buildings collapsed ,it was a little too suspicious how they fell straight down with no cause that physics can verify to support the investigation.So in my mind Bush created the attack then used the fear factor to take this country to war.then he convinced Congress to approve making it a "privatized war" so the company in which he sits on the board of directors with his father, The Carlyle Group , could be awarded the security contracts for the war.those contracts have been worth 6 billion dollars to Carlyle....
Posted by tincup356
If you spent the time it took for you to type your post loving America, we would all be better off. - Reply to this comment
- talk about the pot calling the kettle black, the worlds foremost government tries someone for torture....when they admittedly have used the practice in the war on terror?I just hope someone has the balls to bring up Bush and Cheney on these same charges, for that matter anyone who knew it was going on in the presidents circle should be charged, our government behavior has been appalling.We have gone from the most respected countries in the world to the most hated and despised, in less than a decade.i still don''t believe the bailout lie , it comes from the same people that brought you the illegal war. Even the governments investigation of 911 was a sham , a cover up. a lie.Too many things didn''t add up , like how the three buildings collapsed ,it was a little too suspicious how they fell straight down with no cause that physics can verify to support the investigation.So in my mind Bush created the attack then used the fear factor to take this country to war.then he convinced Congress to approve making it a "privatized war" so the company in which he sits on the board of directors with his father, The Carlyle Group , could be awarded the security contracts for the war.those contracts have been worth 6 billion dollars to Carlyle.Start connecting the dots people he had motive, power and the greed to orchestrate the whole show.G.W.Bush and his cabinet are war criminals and thieves.they all deserve to pay dearly for making a profit off of dead American soldiers.
- Reply to this comment
- Sooner or later you will pay. The foundation is being laid, the precedents are being set. We will bring you to account for your crimes.
Posted by brianbwb
I guess you can add Clinton, Carter, Reed, Pelosi, Hillary, Kerry.... to that since they ALL sent people out to Kill and Die. - Reply to this comment
- Posted by brianbwb at 05:11 PM : Oct 30, 2008
Agreed 100% - Reply to this comment
- "It is truly historic. It''s the first case of its kind, but it won''t be the last of its kind," Acosta said.
Do you hear that, Bush?
Cheney?
Sooner or later you will pay. The foundation is being laid, the precedents are being set. We will bring you to account for your crimes. - Reply to this comment




