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AP: Ex-CIA Officer Accused Of Electric-Drill Torture Now Training CIA Operatives As A Contractor

ADAM GOLDMAN   09/ 7/10 04:34 PM ET   AP

Cia Drill

WASHINGTON — A former CIA officer accused of revving an electric drill near the head of an imprisoned terror suspect has returned to U.S. intelligence as a contractor, training CIA operatives after leaving the agency, The Associated Press has learned.

The CIA officer wielded the bitless drill and an unloaded handgun - unauthorized interrogation techniques - to menace suspected USS Cole bombing plotter Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri inside a secret CIA prison in Poland in late 2002 and early 2003, according to several former intelligence officials and a review by the CIA's inspector general.

Adding details to the public portions of the review, the former officials identified the officer as Albert, 60, a former FBI agent of Egyptian descent who worked as a bureau translator in New York before joining the CIA. The former officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because many details of the incident remain classified.

Both Albert and his CIA supervisor at the time, a second official known as Mike, were reprimanded for their involvement in the incident, the former officials said.

The AP is withholding the last names of the two men at the request of U.S. officials for safety reasons.

Human rights critics say the men's actions were emblematic of harsh treatment and oversight problems in the CIA's detention and interrogation program, amounting to torture that should have been prosecuted. They also say Albert's return as a contractor raises questions about how the intelligence community deals with those who used unauthorized interrogation methods.

"The notion that an individual involved in one of the more notorious episodes of the CIA's interrogation program is still employed directly or indirectly by the U.S. government is scandalous," said Ben Wizner, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union.

Federal prosecutor John Durham is looking at the case - the third time federal authorities have examined it for possible charges. Now held at Guantanamo Bay prison, al-Nashiri faces possible terror charges either in a U.S. military commission or in a civilian court, and the outcome of Durham's investigation could influence his case, possibly determining whether the detainee was tortured.

Nancy Hollander, al-Nashiri's lawyer, said torture would be a mitigating factor if al-Nashiri ever faced a possible death sentence.

After leaving the CIA, Albert returned at some point as a contractor, training CIA officers at a facility in northern Virginia to handle different scenarios they might face in the field, according to former officials. Albert hasn't been involved in training CIA employees for at least two years, but a current U.S. official says he continues to work as an intelligence contractor.

A message left with Albert was not returned. It's not clear when he left the agency and became an intelligence contractor.

His former supervisor, Mike, 56, retired from the CIA in 2003 and now teaches and works in the private sector. Mike declined to comment.

The events in Poland were outlined in the CIA Inspector General's special review of the agency's detention and interrogation program, parts of which were declassified last year. But a full accounting of what happened to al-Nashiri at the so-called black site and who was involved has never been made public.

The CIA used secret prisons scattered around world, from Thailand to Poland, where detainees were questioned and subjected to the simulated drowning technique of waterboarding and other harsh methods.

President George W. Bush closed the black sites in 2006, but the government has yet to divulge the full history of the secret program. Revelations have continued to surface, confronting the CIA even as the spy agency tries to focus on the future.

Al-Nashiri was captured in Dubai in November 2002 and was taken to another CIA secret prison in Afghanistan known as the Salt Pit - a facility that figures in a separate Durham prosecution of a detainee death in 2002.

Al-Nashiri was flown to still another secret CIA prison in Thailand, where he stayed briefly, then taken to the Poland prison on Dec. 5, 2002, just days after that facility was opened.

In Poland, al-Nashiri was subjected to a series of enhanced interrogation techniques - including some not authorized by Justice Department guidelines.

There were heated arguments at CIA headquarters about al-Nashiri's treatment, according to a former CIA official. Some CIA officers felt al-Nashiri was "compliant" after two weeks of tough questioning and additional rough treatment was unnecessary. But others thought he was withholding information, and Albert was sent to Poland, according to the special review.

According to the review, Albert took an unloaded semiautomatic handgun to the cell where al-Nashiri was shackled. The officer then racked the slide - a cocking action - of the unloaded weapon once or twice next al-Nashiri's head, according to the review.

The special review said that, probably on the same day, Albert revved a power drill to frighten al-Nashiri, who had been left naked and hooded. The drill did not contain a sharpened bit, but the detainee would not have known that. The drill was placed near the detainee's head but did not touch him, the review concluded. In January 2003, newly arrived CIA officers heard about these incidents and reported them to headquarters.

Former and current intelligence officials said the agency disciplined Albert and Mike, the CIA officer in charge of the jail. The details of the reprimands remain classified, but Mike had given Albert permission to use the unauthorized techniques, failing to get approval from headquarters, the former U.S officials said.

The CIA's inspector general investigated the incident and referred it to the Bush administration Justice Department. But prosecutors declined in September 2003 to charge Albert with a crime.

Charging Albert for the gun and drill incidents could prove difficult. CIA officers can be prosecuted in the U.S. for crimes committed overseas, but typically just for felonies. Simple assault would not qualify.

And since the gun was unloaded and the drill contained no bit, it would be hard to convict him of more serious charges such as assault with intent to murder or assault with intent to do bodily harm.

Despite those hurdles, al-Nashiri's lawyer insisted she would press for legal consideration of the detainee's treatment.

"Terrorizing a hooded, shackled prisoner is torture," Hollander said. "I will do everything in my power to make sure the world knows that agents of the U.S. government tortured my client and have now held him in violation of U.S. and international law for over eight years."

___

Associate Press writer Matt Apuzzo in Washington contributed to this report.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeffin90019
Your religion is your lifestyle choice. Not mine.
01:38 PM on 09/08/2010
As a voter (and financial supporter) of President Obama, I wanted to believe that there would be accountability for those who lied America into a pair of a pointless, unwinnable wars. But it was quickly clear that Obama doesn't have the stomach for transparency (too many Democrats would have been brought down if he truly looked into who enabled these wars). So America shoulders on, bearing an enormous and pointless burden because Mr. Obama lacks courage -- not our military leaders or our incredibly brave soldiers, but Obama himself. He's a weak, cautious man at a time when America needs a bold, decisive leader. He took a once in a generation opportunity to transform America and completely blew it. He coddles and rewards and protects war criminals and mass murderers.
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11:49 AM on 09/08/2010
Thank goodness we have a new administration that never allows this sort of thing to occur, except when it occurs.
Javalation
Laughing in a Daydream
10:24 AM on 09/08/2010
This shouldn't come as a big surprise to anyone. Don't you remember that when "enhanced interrogation" was revealed to us, we were told that "enemy combatants" didn't have the same rights as US citizens? Further, it is the opinion of some legal scholars that US citizens could be subject to"enhanced interrogation" techniques as well. Did you see Antonin Scalia on 60 Minutes saying that the Constitution outlaws "cruel and unusual PUNISHMENT", but is mute on the subject of what techniques authorities can use to gather information? It made me wonder how the Republican justices would rule if a case finds its way to them where police use torture to get a confession.
10:15 AM on 09/08/2010
Another misleading headline. It implies that this guy drilled someone's head or some such nonsense. "The CIA officer wielded the bitless drill and an unloaded handgun". Oh, how terrible. Seriously, THAT'S torture now? Liberals won't be happy until we give the terrorists money as an interrogation technique.
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11:52 AM on 09/08/2010
"Liberals won't be happy until we give the terrorists money as an interrogation technique. "

That was step #1 of the surge. They gave insurgents money to stop killing American soldiers and start spilling the beans on their cohorts. Bush did it in Iraq. Obama is doing it in Afghanistan. Reagan did it with arms to Iran.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
08:44 AM on 09/08/2010
It's had to tell the good guys from the bad guys in this scenario.
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parlimentMike
Terrorists keep you in fear
09:23 AM on 09/08/2010
The bad guys are the ones in someone else's country trying to tell them what to do there. Same as it ever was.
03:36 PM on 09/08/2010
You must not be an American. If you are then it's easy, in fact it's blindingly obvious. If you're an american, the bad guy is al-Nashiri who planned bombing the USS Cole and French oil tanker Limburg and murdered 17 US sailors and a Bulgarian seaman, and was a senior figure in AQ. The good guy is the CIA guy trying to get information about other Al Qaeda people who al-Nashiri would definitely know and other plans to kill Americans, and the CIA guy does it without hurting al-Nashiri at all, without any torture. Oooooh he scared al-Nashiri with a bitless drill.
Seriously, so what? Al-Nashiri legitimately deserves to die and he will eventually face the death penalty and hopefully be convicted, if alqaeda sympathizers and bleeding heart types kvetching about nonexistent "torture" don't get him off.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
08:41 AM on 09/09/2010
"you must not be an Amurican" That's funny. Thanks for the laff.
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08:32 AM on 09/08/2010
Trivia:

On this date in 1974, Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon.

Political Crime was given a pass and GWB and Cheney who was Ford's COS at the time are the result
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11:53 AM on 09/08/2010
And President Obama won't lift a finger to bring them to justice. There may be two parties, but they all belong to the same club.
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syrius
Excuse me, EXCUSE ME!
07:59 AM on 09/08/2010
Why not show the guy a rock? As in-"With this rock, I am going to split your head open!" then proceed to show the rock crushing coconuts...ooooo scary!!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LarBear
07:44 AM on 09/08/2010
I, for one, am disgusted (to frame it mildly) with spineless, cowardly, fear driven, Americans, who are OK with Torturing... That is totally against and undermining the Holistic IDEAL of America...

What's next, fearful children??? Mommy, Mommy, those bad men recruited by our Torturing are after me! Make em go away Mommy....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bellestarrr#1
she done him wrong
07:05 AM on 09/08/2010
These are the kinda things that make people who voted for Obama very furious..he promised a lot when campaigning and now is doing the things that are politically expedient for his survival..all the war criminals need to be prosecuted to set things right with our country...whether is supporters will give him a second term in really in jeopardy....as for who to vote for...Dems get out a strong candidate to challenge him.lets get somebody in there that walks the talk...tired of Obama's coolness and shadiness
05:50 AM on 09/08/2010
This article headline needs to be rewritten, it falsely claims that a drill was used by a CIA agent to torture some detainee. Nothing like that occurred. The detainee was never harmed. The drill was empty. This is no different than if the interrogator yelled Boo at the detainee.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LarBear
07:30 AM on 09/08/2010
Waltereg0

QUOTE from Article: " The CIA unauthorized interrogation techniques officer wielded the bitless drill and an unloaded handgun - - to menace suspected USS Cole bombing plotter Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri inside a secret CIA prison in Poland in late 2002 and early 2003, according to several former intelligence officials and a review by the CIA's inspector general.

Which part of "The CIA unauthorized interrogation techniques officer wielded the bitless drill and an unloaded handgun" don't you get? Clearly the "unauthorized interrogation techniques"....

America Tortures People... We say we don't, but clearly we do and that is used to recruit people wanting to kill us... The USA (America) is an Ideal WE strive to do better and better... Bush/ Cheney undermined that Ideal and harmed America, Worldwide...
12:54 PM on 09/08/2010
Not in this case. The headline claims a drill was used to torture the detainee. That didn't happen. Wielding an empty drill and making noises with it is nothing like torture. All it does is make the detainee nervous and confused. The headline implies that a drill drilled into the detainee. In fact the detainee wasn't harmed at all.
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08:33 AM on 09/08/2010
What a pathetic comment.
05:23 AM on 09/08/2010
This isn't even news. This is done all the time and has been done for decades. These intelligence gathering outfits recruit killers directly and indirectly for covert ops, training, assassination and infiltration. Under Bush/Cheney and now Obama, they are no longer underground but mainstream and proud of it. This is a continuing aspect of "not looking behind, but moving forward" as per Obama who doesn't believe in punishing anyone no matter how heinous the crimes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald Simon
05:17 AM on 09/08/2010
I have wondered why the CIA is called an INTELLIGENCE agency? Seems like an oxymoron to me.
04:52 AM on 09/08/2010
Drill baby drill. Its the American way.
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03:06 AM on 09/08/2010
A US general who trained Salvadoran death squads is in Iraq to do more of the same.
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=5571

Bush and BO are now both war criminals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramirez
Taxpayer-American
02:29 AM on 09/08/2010
The provocative headline promised a story that the article failed to deliver.
03:44 AM on 09/08/2010
I was going to make the same comment. And why a picture of an old rusty drill, with a bit no less when the article says it was a "bitless" drill? It was used menacingly, they did not actually drill the guy. Not that it isn't torture, but this article is misleading.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LarBear
07:34 AM on 09/08/2010
JoeAmerican...

It is an unauthorized interrogation technique... WE signed such as the Geneva Convention and other Treaties we helped create... They designate what is allowed in interogation and what is NOT...