July 16, 2009 10:53 AM

U.S. Contractor Freed In Iraq Slay Probe

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Three American contractors detained during an investigation into the slaying of another American have been ordered released, but two others remain in custody on drug charges, the Iraqi government said Thursday.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, correcting an earlier statement, said only one of the men had been released as of late Thursday because of bureaucratic delays involving the other two. He said earlier that all three had been freed.

Corporate Training Unlimited, a Fayetteville, North Carolina-based security company, confirmed that its owner, Donald Feeney Jr., had been freed but four other American employees, including Feeney's son, were still detained.

The case has been seen as the first test of a provision in a U.S.-Iraqi security pact that lifted the immunity U.S. contractors had enjoyed for most of the 6-year-old war. But it has been surrounded by confusion as American and Iraqi officials have given varying information about the circumstances involved.

U.S.-backed Iraqi forces detained the contractors June 3 in connection with an investigation into the stabbing death of contractor Jim Kitterman of Houston.

Kitterman, a 60-year-old construction company owner, was found dead in his car on May 22 in Baghdad's protected Green Zone. He had been blindfolded, bound and stabbed.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have said the five detained Americans were not accused in Kitterman's death but were detained in a raid that was part of the investigation into the killing.

The U.S. Embassy said FBI agents were present during a search of the men's quarters at the request of Iraqi authorities who are handling the investigation.

Al-Dabbagh said Wednesday that an investigative judge had ordered all five freed due to insufficient evidence. But he said Thursday that two of the suspects remained in custody on drug charges.

Feeney, 55, who founded the company in 1986, was detained with his son, Donald Feeney III, 31, and three other employees, according to CTU spokeswoman Sarah Smith.

Smith has said the CTU contractors knew Kitterman as "simply comrades living in the Green Zone."

CTU trains corporate officials on how to avoid terrorists while they are overseas. The company, which has operated in Iraq since 2003, also has gained attention for rescuing American children taken to foreign countries in custody disputes.

AP
Add a Comment
by revlin1 June 11, 2009 12:07 PM EDT
I'm sick and tired of the media (MSM) attack and ignorance re; our loved ones roles and contracting in general. We advise you go to an informed website and book on contractors just coming out if you want to explore who these families are. To endanger all Americans deployed as wartime contractors by this type of commenting and "bait and switch" by media is getting old and it is simply NOT TRUE. May God be with those families whose loved ones are still being held. www.shadowsofiraq.com
Reply to this comment
by rhs648 June 11, 2009 5:53 AM EDT
The door just opened.The rest of the cows will wander soon.These guys(professional killers)are well connected,and will do no time ever.I wouldn't care what happens to them,any of them.

You make a lot of assunptions about people you don't even know. They may not be guilty of any wrongdoings. Why aren't you willing to withold judgement until we know whether they had any involvement in this person's death?
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