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Law School Study Finds Evidence Of Cover-Up After Three Alleged Suicides At Guantanamo In 2006

First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 03:50 PM ET

Guantanamo Cell

By Scott Horton
Special to the Huffington Post

On the night of June 9-10 in 2006, three prisoners held at the Guantánamo prison's Camp Delta died under mysterious circumstances. Military authorities responded by quickly ordering media representatives off the island and blocking lawyers from meeting with their clients. The first official military statements declared the deaths not just suicides -- but actually went so far as to describe them as acts of "asymmetrical warfare" against the United States.

Now a 58-page study prepared by law faculty and students at Seton Hall University in New Jersey starkly challenges the Pentagon's claims. It notes serious and unresolved contradictions within a Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) report -- which was publicly released only in fragmentary form, two years after the fact -- and declares the military's internal investigation an obvious cover-up. The only question is: of what?

Law Professor Mark Denbeaux, who directed the study, said in an interview that "there are two possibilities here. Either the investigation is a cover-up of gross dereliction of duty, or it is a cover-up of something far more chilling. More than three years later we do not know what really happened." (Read a Q&A with Denbeaux: "'The Most Innocent Explanation Is That This Is Gitmo Meets Lord Of The Flies'".)

The new study exposes how the NCIS report purports that all three prisoners on the prison's Alpha Block did the following to commit suicide:

• Braided a noose by tearing up their sheets and/or clothing.
• Made mannequins of themselves so it would appear to the guards they were asleep in their cells.
• Hung sheets to block the view into the cells.
• Stuffed rags down their own throats well past a point which would have induced involuntary gagging.
• Tied their own feet together.
• Tied their own hands together.
• Hung the noose from the metal mesh of the cell wall and/or ceiling.
• Climbed up on to the sink, put the noose around their necks and release their weight, resulting in death by strangulation.

The study also notes that there has never been any explanation of how the three bodies could have hung in the cells, undiscovered, for at least two hours, when the cells were supposed to be under constant supervision by roving guards and video cameras.

Disturbingly, these facts were collected within the NCIS report -- but without discussion or any effort to make conclusions based on them. Was that because the facts did not fit the conclusions that military leaders had already offered the public and that the investigators were therefore struggling to support -- namely that the prisoners committed suicide? It is not even clear that it would be physically possible for the prisoners to commit suicide consistent with these facts.

One of the Seton Hall study's authors, law student and former sergeant in the 82nd Airborne Division Paul W. Taylor, stated: "We have three bodies and no explanation. How is it possible that all three detainees had shoved rags so far down their own throats that medical personnel could not remove them? One of the dead detainees was scheduled for release from Guantanamo Bay in 19 days. Instead he died in custody."

The Seton Hall study concludes that the NCIS investigators made conclusions completely unsupported by facts. For instance, they concluded that the three prisoners committed suicide as part of a "conspiracy." But, according to the study: "The investigations... fail to present any evidence of a conspiracy. In fact, all other evidence is inconsistent with the conclusion that the detainees conspired."

The Seton Hall study also faults the manner in which military investigators proceeded. "There is reason to suspect that the [NCIS] interviewers designed questions to obtain particular results. The interviewers failed to frame their inquiries neutrally." Moreover, by June 14, 2006, military investigators had informed all four guards assigned to Alpha Block that night, the Alpha Block noncommissioned officer, and the Alpha Block platoon leader that they were suspected of making false official statements and/or failing to obey direct orders. This suggests that NCIS investigators believed they were being consciously misled on key issues. But amazingly, when the final report issued, no disciplinary measures of any sort were recommended.

There was also a large amount of evidence which should have been assembled as a matter of routine, but which is missing from the NCIS report, the new study explains.. Most disturbing is the absence of sworn statements, which should have been prepared immediately after the events in question and then been turned over to investigators. In this case, however, it appears that affected personnel were actually ordered not to prepare such statements. Instead, the Seton Hall study notes that "the Commander assembled three or four of the Alpha guards aside to put together 'the series of events,' and he spoke with each of them for approximately four or five minutes." Amazingly, the military investigation makes no effort to ascertain what was said or done during this meeting at which an effort was evidently made to coordinate accounts.

A videotape of the hallway and common area existed, but is not taken into account in the report. Similarly, no effort appears to have been made to examine radio and telephone communications. Other critical records, including the missing Duty Roster, Detainee Transfer Book and Pass-On Book also do not appear in the report.

When the NCIS report was finally released, it was redacted so heavily as to make it almost incomprehensible. More than a third of the pages were fully redacted, and very few pages were released without some redaction. The NCIS report itself is highly disorganized, without an index or even a chronological progression in its recounting of events. All this appears intended to make review and criticism of the report much more difficult. While the redaction of names of service personnel is appropriate, it is difficult to understand why many other redactions were undertaken.

Human Rights Watch is calling for the release of the unredacted NCIS report. HRW's Joanne Mariner stated, in response to a request for comment, that "the heavy-handed nature of the redactions to the publicly-released reports of the investigations makes it impossible to get a clear picture of the events of that night. We think that the heavy redactions currently found in the documents -- by which names, dates, and other key facts are completely obscured on many pages -- raise concerns about whether the military is trying to hide embarrassing facts."

The Seton Hall study also points to a large number of violations of Guantánamo's standard operating procedures that appear in the investigation, many of which are linked directly to the deaths. Although the NCIS investigation flags many of these violations, no disciplinary action of any sort was taken. The Seton Hall study sees evidence of a "camp in disarray." Professor Denbeaux notes "guards not on duty, detainees hanging dead in their cells for hours and guards leaving their posts to eat the detainees' leftover food." He sees the failure to take disciplinary measures as further evidence of a cover-up. Denbeaux stresses that his review not only leaves serious doubt as to the military's conclusions that the deaths were suicides, it also exposes gross misconduct by camp guards and others that went undisciplined.

The study is the eleventh in a series of reports by the Seton Hall Law School examining issues related to the detention regime at Guantanamo and establishing that a number of Pentagon claims about Guantanamo and the prisoners held there are pure myths. One earlier report established that over 80% of the prisoners were captured not by Americans on the battlefield but by Pakistanis and Afghans, often in exchange for bounty payments. Another demonstrated that the Guantanamo Combat Status Review Tribunals consistently failed to follow their own rules and were frequently convened for purposes of overturning determinations made by earlier tribunals that prisoners were not enemy combatants. Another debunked Bush Administration claims denying the existence of tapes of prisoner interrogations, and demonstrated that 24,000 such tapes were made, together with extensive notes based on them.

This latest study comes shortly after the resignation of the Obama Administration's two top officials responsible for detainee issues: White House counsel Greg Craig and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Phil Carter.

A senior Pentagon official, asked about the report on Sunday, did not have an immediate response, but said one might be forthcoming. This post will be updated if and when the Pentagon has a statement.


READ the report below:


Death in Camp Delta - Evidence Of Cover-Up After Three Alleged Suicides At Guantanamo Bay -


About Scott Horton


Scott Horton is a contributing editor at Harper's Magazine, where he writes on law and national security issues, an adjunct professor at Columbia Law School, where he teaches international private law and the law of armed conflict, and a frequent contributor to the Huffington Post. A life-long human rights advocate, Scott served as counsel to Andrei Sakharov and Elena Bonner, among other activists in the former Soviet Union. He is a co-founder of the American University in Central Asia, where he currently serves as a trustee. Scott recently led a number of studies of issues associated with the conduct of the war on terror, including the introduction of highly coercive interrogation techniques and the program of extraordinary renditions for the New York City Bar Association, where he has chaired several committees, including, most recently, the Committee on International Law. He is also an associate of the Harriman Institute at Columbia University, a member of the board of the National Institute of Military Justice, Center on Law and Security of NYU Law School, the EurasiaGroup and the American Branch of the International Law Association and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He co-authored a recent study on legal accountability for private military contractors, Private Security Contractors at War. He appeared at an expert witness for the House Judiciary Committee three times in the past two years testifying on the legal status of private military contractors and the program of extraordinary renditions and also testified as an expert on renditions issue before an investigatory commission of the European Parliament.


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By Scott Horton Special to the Huffington Post On the night of June 9-10 in 2006, three prisoners held at the Guantánamo prison's Camp Delta died under mysterious circumstances. Military authoriti...
By Scott Horton Special to the Huffington Post On the night of June 9-10 in 2006, three prisoners held at the Guantánamo prison's Camp Delta died under mysterious circumstances. Military authoriti...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:06 AM on 12/12/2009
A nice piece of real-life education for the Seton Hall law students who worked on this project.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Blackorpheus
the decisive blows are always struck left-handed
12:27 PM on 12/08/2009
Wasn't closing Gitmo asap one of Obama's sternest campaign promises?
01:27 PM on 12/08/2009
This happend 3 years ago ... was there a President Obama then???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Blackorpheus
the decisive blows are always struck left-handed
07:12 PM on 12/08/2009
There was a Gitmo then and now imprisoning hundreds of Muslims, including children and humans mistaken as Muslims, and detaining them without trial. Suicides ("assymetrical warfare") and torture were not restricted to three years ago.
12:03 PM on 12/08/2009
You see it here. The thing is the media will never accept that good ole ' murican boys could ever do anything wrong but that NASCAR shore is sumpin' ain't it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atexasdem
Pointing out the foolishness of republican voters.
09:28 AM on 12/08/2009
Any large organization automatically goes into CYA mode when bad things happen. The military is no different. " Who do we blame this on" is SOP. Anyone notice that not a single officer was blamed in any action from the killing of Pat Tillman to the atrocities of Abu Ghraib? If anyone is punished it will always be some low ranking "sacrificial lamb". Soldiers (and civilians) work in the environment generated by their leaders whether they be called officers or managers. Abuses happen because of the leadership allowing or even encouraging it. This cover up is to be expected.
Often it is many years before the truth is revealed, sometimes in a soul clearing tell all book or diary from a participant on their deathbed. The again often leaders will go to their deathbeds never admitting or even denying what they did.
The perfect examples are Henry Kissinger, William Calley and William Westmorland. All to this day denying anything they ever did wrong. On a lessor note I'm sure that even George W Bush doesn't consider anything he did while president to be wrong. Denial and CYA are strong human traits.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
05:38 AM on 12/08/2009
If those were suicides, they were the worst cases of suicide I've heard about.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OscarthePug
06:05 AM on 12/08/2009
Impossible to commit suicide in the manner described in the NCIS report. Unless they were three Harry Houdini's, how could someone tie their arms and legs together? If this wasn't murder, then the sun doesn't rise in the East.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
06:56 AM on 12/08/2009
That's my point. Exactly how can you stuff a rag down your throat, tie your hands and feet, climb up and put on a noose? Or is it they tied their hands and feet, climbed, put on a noose, then stuffed the rag down their throats?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:58 AM on 12/08/2009
Sad. Horrible. Corrupt...................
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoanneRM
02:17 AM on 12/08/2009
"Disturbingly, these facts were collected within the NCIS report -- but without discussion or any effort to make conclusions based on them."

I don't find that disturbing at all. NCIS put all the facts, all the evidence out there for everyone to find, and then drew bullshit conclusions, based on what they were told they had to say. They did as much of their job as they could do, and left it up to the people who were free, to take it from there, to draw the correct conclusions. That is what seems to be happening.

If this was a cover up by NCIS, the facts would never have come out. But they did, every one of them. Look to the Bush administration for the conclusion. Fortunately, they never looked at the report, and just told them what conclusion to draw, or none of the evidence would have seen the light of day.

Credit where credit is due; NCIS preserved the evidence.
11:16 PM on 12/07/2009
{- + OscarthePug I'm a Fan of OscarthePug I'm a fan of this user 33 fans permalink
We can and must do better by designing a military for the 21st century that protects our interests and provides adequate security for half the price.}]]

Providing security is one thing but what is protecting "our interests"?
It is protecting our interest which led to these unnecessary wars. We are just protecting the business interests of few of our businessmen. What a waste.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OscarthePug
01:40 AM on 12/08/2009
What about the Iranian risk?
holyghostie
Spiritus est qui vivificat
11:09 PM on 12/07/2009
These are people who view human life as worthless, and they would do anything including killing themselves to kill what they perceive as their enemy.

So it is not beyond the realm of possibility that they killed themselves to embarrass the United States.

If lightining would strike the plane carrying the terrorists to NY and drop it into the sea that would be okay by me too Lord. If your listening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atexasdem
Pointing out the foolishness of republican voters.
09:41 AM on 12/08/2009
People do that in jails all the time. Prisoners will tie their hands and legs together, put a rope around their neck and strangle themselves to death just to embarrass the guards. It's so bad that sometimes they will even beat themselves black and blue first. This beating themselves, hanging themselves and even torturing themselves is just a plot to embarrass the United States of America. George W Bush even said it, " America does not torture". Therefor they have to be doing it to themselves.

Memo to:
Rush Limbaugh:
cc: NRC
Did I say all that right?
01:32 PM on 12/08/2009
Fact: none of these men were convicted in court so how can you believe them to be guilty of anything. slap the american justice system in the face.

I was told Innocent UNTILL proven guilty, but that is only for Americans right?

Non-Americans its Guilty untill we say you may be innocent.

And people wonder why?
11:05 PM on 12/07/2009
Yeah, I tend to shove all my junk in the closet as well, but eventually, the closet is so full that things fall out. The only way to clean that closet is to pull everything out -- and it makes a terrible, terrible mess at first.

A real investigation, and the real truth, are the only way for us to move forward. Otherwise, there will be things festering in that closet forever. These coverups and unresolved issues are corrosive to the morale of the entire country, and cast our nation in a terrible light internationally.

It may harm us in the short-term to own up to atrocities on our watch, but not nearly as much as denying and obfuscating.
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02:59 AM on 12/08/2009
Lulubelle1,
Well said.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Cambridge9
07:37 AM on 12/08/2009
Excellent post!

What is the old quote? "Sunshine is the best disinfectant"!
10:28 PM on 12/07/2009
I've always had the gut feeling that Alyssa Peterson was murdered. She was the Mormon woman soldier that would not "interrogate" prisoners at Gitmo and then according to the military, killed herself. The reason I always felt that she was killed was because of the timing for one thing. Her death coincided at the same time when the public had just started to get very vocal about their unhappiness with what was becoming more and more public, which was we were torturing prisoners at Gitmo. The stories were coming out and a few whistle blowers had surfaced but the Bush Administration was still trying to cover it up and was lying about it to the public. I've always thought that Peterson's refusal on moral and religious grounds was something Dick Cheney , as well as others, knew they had to stop because of their false use of the moral high ground and Christianity to justify the unjustifiable.

But I don't know why we even talk about it anymore because the Elite are allowed to break all laws domestic and international and they operate obviously aware of this. Tricking a country into to war by lying and then having the people of this country support a war and sacrifice their loved ones, not to provide spoils to the country, but to provide 'free" spoils and endless money to private industry means nothing.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
10:00 AM on 12/08/2009
Thanks for the post about Alyssa Peterson. I had forgotten. She deserves too be remembered.

You suspicions may be justified.

Too bad.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
10:17 PM on 12/07/2009
The army needs a major shakeup. Its leadership has been seriously damaged by eight years under Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld. Someone like retired Major General Antonio Taguba, the man who wrote the Taguba report on Abu Ghraib, should investigate the current state of the US military. (No, Colin Powell would not be a good choice.)

Among the areas needing investigation are:

--relaxed recruiting standards that endanger recruits fellow soldiers, civilians in combat zones, and US citizens (the army is accepting felons, skinheads, gang members, people with mental problems; the kind of people you don't want being taught urban warfare)
--record numbers of suicides by military recruiters and soldiers
--orders to army medical personnel to not diagnose PTSD and to claim war injuries are preexisting conditions, so the army won't have to pay to treat them
--increased numbers of sexual assaults on male and female recruits in war zones (google Laveena Johnson)
--blatantly unsuitable soldiers being sent overseas, like Steven Green, who with a couple of buddies, gang-raped a 14-year-old girl in Iraq, after shooting her family first
--leaks of confidential memos that advance individual generals' agenda, rather than the US's best interests
--and why the Fort Hood shooter was going to be sent to Afghanistan to treat soldiers, despite a questionable history
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lairs
09:49 PM on 12/07/2009
I feel sorry for the three navy seals.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
realpolitic
Proud member of the reality-based community!
09:29 PM on 12/07/2009
The military's ability to investigate itself is one of the biggest jokes around. The military always lets itself off the hook and tries to bury all incidents of gross malfeasance or direct involvment of military personnel in crimes. Another body should investigate the military.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
08:28 PM on 12/07/2009
The U.S. Army needs a tough exec appointed to clean up the mess.

--Increasing numbers of suicides among soldiers
--17 military recruiter suicides (http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1889152,00.html)
--recruiters so desperate to meet quotas that during the Bush years that the army was accepting recruits with gang tattoos, histories of mental disorders, felony records, and redneck/Aryan/white power affiliations (just the kind of people you want to give urban warfare training to)
--Steve Green, the soldier responsible for the gang rape of a fourteen year old girl named Abir and the murder of her toddler sister and her parents (she was being gang raped in one room, while hearing her family being shot), supposedly had a history of a personality disorder and should never have been given a rifle, much less admitted into the army
--VA medical personnel being urged to declare that returning vets had "preexisting conditions" so the VA wouldn't have to cover the cost; also being ordered not to diagnose PTSD
--the whole Ft. Hood fiasco; the army was seriously going to send the shooter over to Aghanistan to treat soldiers?
--General McChrystal's "leaked" confidential memo
--the mysterious deaths (with highly suspicious army autopsy results) of Levena Johnson and at least two other women (covered-up sexual assaults)

And please, Colin Powell is NOT the person to run this investigation. Retired Major General Antonio Taguba would be a good choice (google Taguba report on Abu Ghraib).