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Italy Convicts 23 Americans In CIA Terrorist Kidnapping Case

COLLEEN BARRY and VICTOR L. SIMPSON   11/ 4/09 08:31 PM ET   AP

Italy Cia Trial

MILAN — An Italian judge found 23 Americans and two Italians guilty Wednesday in the kidnapping of an Egyptian terror suspect, delivering the first legal convictions anywhere in the world against people involved in the CIA's extraordinary renditions program.

Human rights groups hailed the decision and pressed President Barack Obama to repudiate the Bush administration's practice of abducting terror suspects and transferring them to third countries where torture was permitted. The American Civil Liberties Union said the verdicts were the first convictions stemming from the rendition program.

The Obama administration ended the CIA's interrogation program and shuttered its secret overseas jails in January but has opted to continue the practice of extraordinary renditions.

The Americans, who were tried in absentia, now cannot travel to Europe without risking arrest as long as the verdicts remains in place.

One of those convicted, former Milan consular official Sabrina De Sousa, accused Congress of turning a blind eye to the entire matter.

"No one has investigated the fact that the U.S. government allegedly conducted a rendition of an individual who now walks free and the operation of which was so bungled," she said, speaking through her lawyer Mark Zaid.

Despite the convictions capping the nearly three-year Italian trial, several Italian and American defendants – including the two alleged masterminds of the abduction – were acquitted due to either diplomatic immunity or because classified information was stricken by Italy's highest court.

The case has been politically charged from the beginning, with attempts to mislead investigators looking into the cleric's disappearance and derail the judicial proceedings once the trial was under way. But the Italian-American relationship, conditioned on such issues as participation in the Afghan campaign, is unlikely to be hurt by the convictions.

Three Americans were acquitted, including the then-Rome CIA station chief Jeffrey Castelli and two other diplomats formerly assigned to the Rome Embassy, as well as the former head of Italian military intelligence Nicolo Pollari and four other Italian secret service agents.

Only two Italians were in the courtroom to hear the verdict, including Marco Mancini, the former No. 2 at Italian military intelligence, who embraced his lawyer outside the courtroom after he was acquitted.

Former Milan CIA station chief Robert Seldon Lady received the top sentence of eight years in prison. The other 22 convicted American defendants, including De Sousa and Air Force Lt. Col. Joseph Romano, each received a five-year sentence. Two Italians got three years each as accessories.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the Obama administration was "disappointed about the verdicts."

The State Department is being sued by De Sousa, a former State Department employee who denies she was a CIA agent and who believes she should have been granted diplomatic immunity by U.S. officials. The judge's verdict, however, did not extend diplomatic immunity to consular officials charged.

Zaid, De Sousa's American lawyer, told The Associated Press in Washington: "The Italian conviction merely confirms the U.S. government's betrayal of our diplomatic and military representatives overseas."

Romano, who was one of only two Americans who received permission to hire his own lawyer, had tried to have the jurisdiction moved to a U.S. military court in the last weeks of the trial.

"We are clearly disappointed by the court's ruling," Defense Department press secretary Geoff Morrell told a Pentagon press conference Wednesday.

The Americans, all but one identified by prosecutors as CIA agents, were tried in absentia as subsequent Italian governments refused or ignored prosecutors' extradition request – a position that casts doubts on the Italian government's political will to enforce the sentences.

Prosecutor Armando Spataro said he was considering asking Rome to issue international arrest warrants for the fugitive Americans on the strength of the convictions. The government of Silvio Berlusconi, a close ally of President George W. Bush, has previously refused.

The Americans and Italian agents were accused of kidnapping Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, on Feb. 17, 2003, in Milan, then transferring him to U.S. bases in Italy and Germany. He was then moved to Egypt, where he says he was tortured. He has since been released, but has not been permitted to leave Egypt to attend the trial.

Spataro had sought stiffer sentences ranging from 10 to 13 years in jail, citing a conspiracy between U.S. and Italian secret services to abduct Nasr, who was under surveillance by Italian investigators building their own terror case against him. Nasr was suspected of organizing the movement of would-be suicide bombers to the Middle East, and Spataro noted in his closing arguments that the timing of his CIA-led abduction, as the United States was preparing to invade Iraq, indicated his potential importance.

CIA Director Leon Panetta said at his confirmation hearing in February that the administration would continue the practice of rendition for prisoners captured in the war on terrorism, but promised to get assurances first that prisoners would not be tortured or have their human rights violated once transferred.

The CIA declined to comment on the convictions.

____

Associated Writers Pamela Hess in Washington and Luca Bruno in Milan contributed to this report

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MILAN — An Italian judge found 23 Americans and two Italians guilty Wednesday in the kidnapping of an Egyptian terror suspect, delivering the first legal convictions anywhere in the world agains...
MILAN — An Italian judge found 23 Americans and two Italians guilty Wednesday in the kidnapping of an Egyptian terror suspect, delivering the first legal convictions anywhere in the world agains...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Johnathan Vrozos
afficianado of world
10:32 AM on 12/06/2009
Johnathan Vrozos believes this will all be taken care in the back rooms as it always has and should....
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
01:24 PM on 11/06/2009
As with many others posting here, I applaud the Italians!
.
05:05 AM on 11/06/2009
You know, America bombed 2 civilian cities as well, killing 200 000 civilians. Where is the justice for those terrorist murders?
01:55 AM on 11/06/2009
I for one think the exactly perfect and just reaction to this by Italy would be the abduction of the criminals out of OUR country. What is right for us is right for them. And it would give the whole matter poetic justice. - AND show the world how truely abhorrent and illegal is what we do regularly and still defend as our right.

""The Italian conviction merely confirms the U.S. government­'s betrayal of our diplomatic and military representa­tives overseas."

That line says it all. It is not a crime to abduct an innocent man. The crime is not to cover for the criminals.

And she is begging for the cover of the criminals that gave the orders, of all things.

Mr. Obama, if You do not go and bring US the justice even super corrupt Italy is showing an innocent man right now You have failed us. - Again.

Don't get me worng. McCain would have been one of the criminals in question and Obama is the better choice by far. But being better than a warmongeri­ng, massmurder­ing, torturing man, making a few parasites rich on ruining Billions does not make him good.
02:19 AM on 11/06/2009
Co-sign!!
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:45 PM on 11/05/2009
Dear Mod

The comment pending

spoke the truth as I see it any way !!
06:40 PM on 11/05/2009
As Americans, we should all write to Atty. General Eric Holder and demand that Bush and Cheney be held accountabl­e for their crimes also. Fish rots from the head down. Anyone read 'The Prosecutio­n of George W. Bush for Murder'? If you haven't, you should!
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:49 PM on 11/05/2009
I saw him in hearing on Capital Hill

I don,t know why they still have not been arrested white paper say,s it all
03:52 PM on 11/05/2009
"CIA Director Leon Panetta said at his confirmati­on hearing in February that the administra­tion would continue the practice of rendition for prisoners captured in the war on terrorism, but promised to get assurances first that prisoners would not be tortured or have their human rights violated once transferre­d."

So let me get this straight. If someone in the executive branch (FBI, CIA, NSA, DOJ, etc.) decides someone is a "prisoner,­" it's then okay to kidnap them and take them somewhere where they won't be "tortured or have their human rights violated?" How can one be a "prisoner" unless they have been convicted of something? Wouldn't the act of being kidnapped be a violation of your human rights? Are people really so stupid and paranoid that this practice becomes okay with them?
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
01:19 PM on 11/06/2009
It's not OK with me.
.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:51 PM on 11/05/2009
NICE, that's a good start. Now I hope Chen.ey and Bush travel to Italy and end up in jail for the rest of their lives.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
kmdippenger
Montgomery County, PA
01:46 PM on 11/05/2009
The US government should have claimed the responsibi­lity for the crimes committed and not made these people scapegoats­.
09:49 PM on 11/05/2009
I agree.
12:09 PM on 11/05/2009
The US could have stopped torturing prisoners and used legal means to bring the suspect to the USA but it chose not to.

Many countries around the world have laws that forbid torture and forbid extraditio­n of suspects to countries that do torture. When it became known that suspects handed over to the CIA would be tortured, many of these countries stopped handing suspects over to the CIA. The stubborn refusal to end torture actually crippled the US war against terror. Even the UK refused to hand over suspects to the CIA.

US torturing of prisoners made it illegal for Italy to hand over the suspect and the CIA chose to escalate the use of illegal means. These CIA employees knew they were committing a serious felony offense but they did it anyway.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:51 PM on 11/05/2009
some one should tell them plausible denial is not going to work any more
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:00 PM on 11/05/2009
There's no point to rendition if the prisoners aren't going to get abused at their destinatio­n.
12:18 PM on 11/05/2009
Exactly.
Sometimes whats obvious to many is not so obvious to all.
Depends on how dense are ones delusions.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:51 PM on 11/05/2009
x2
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
missouriwatcher
military veteran, veteran teacher, father, grandpa
11:39 AM on 11/05/2009
Good!! Kidnapping is kidnapping is kidnapping­. . . . It doesn't matter if it is done by individual­s, groups, or government­s; it is a CRIME and without excuse. "Rendition­", aka kidnapping­, is a black eye for the U.S. or any other entity which practices it. It so far beneath the ideals of my government­, and is an accurate measure of the character of the characters who left office last January.
10:44 AM on 11/05/2009
Italian cowardice as the USA is an easy target but letting the Mafia operate for centuries in its own country is fine with them. Clean up your own mess first!
11:06 AM on 11/05/2009
Hey Dumb0 - how about you Americvnts clean up the mess in your own sh1thole cesspit of a cvntry (your corrupt banks, your corrupt government­, your drug trade Government­, your child m0lesting military etc) before lecturing other countries on human rights and corruption
11:26 AM on 11/05/2009
You are quite rude, Valkyre. Just send us the list of countries without the problems you listed.
02:21 PM on 11/05/2009
In the US organized crime is called government policy. It is unfortunat­e that the US chose to protect war criminals instead of prosecutin­g them.

Good for Italy. I hope Canada, Spain, Germany and other countries follow suit.
10:41 AM on 11/05/2009
Now that the US Department of Defense claim that the Italian court had no jurisdicti­on over one of its officers involved in then case was rejected I hope that, with the Lisbon Treaty now ratified throughout the EU, the new European President and Foreign Minister will review the SOF agreements for NATO and US and other non EU forces in Europe.
NATO, like the F22, no longer serves any useful purpose in the EU nor does stationing US forces there.
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09:34 AM on 11/05/2009
They knew as much about what was going on before 9/11 as they did about what was going on after 9/11. After 9/11 Bush said he was going to follow the money trail wherever it may lead...we heard about that for a few days...and then it was never mentioned again. The White House obviously got a phone call giving them the low-down, as in "the trail doesn't go to OBL" and they dropped it like a hot piece of lava rock.
09:53 AM on 11/05/2009
So where did the money trail lead?
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10:32 AM on 11/05/2009
We never found out. That's what many of us have been waiting to hear.
11:07 AM on 11/05/2009
where do you think - my guess would be to D1ckless 5 yellow belly deferments cheny and his child m0lesting supporter daughter