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Steve Stormoen, Former CIA Officer, Under Scrutiny In Abu Ghraib Prisoner Death

Abu Ghraib

By MATT APUZZO and ADAM GOLDMAN   07/13/11 12:43 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- A CIA officer who oversaw the agency's interrogation program at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and pushed for approval to use increasingly harsh tactics has come under scrutiny in a federal war crimes investigation involving the death of a prisoner, witnesses told The Associated Press.

Steve Stormoen, who is now retired from the CIA, supervised an unofficial program in which the CIA imprisoned and interrogated men without entering their names in the Army's books.

The so-called "ghosting" program was unsanctioned by CIA headquarters. In fact, in early 2003, CIA lawyers expressly prohibited the agency from running its own interrogations, current and former intelligence officials said. The lawyers said agency officers could be present during military interrogations and add their expertise but, under the laws of war, the military must always have the lead.

Yet, in November 2003, CIA officers brought a prisoner, Manadel al-Jamadi, to Abu Ghraib and, instead of turning him over to the Army, took him to a shower stall. They put a sandbag over his head, handcuffed him behind his back and chained his arms to a barred window. When he leaned forward, his arms stretched painfully behind and above his back.

The CIA interrogated al-Jamadi alone. Within an hour, he was dead.

Now, nearly eight years after a photo of an Army officer grinning over al-Jamadi's body became an indelible image in the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal, federal prosecutors are investigating whether al-Jamadi's death amounted to a war crime.

The instructions from CIA lawyers could become an important element of that inquiry. Though it's not required for prosecutors to show that someone knew such interrogations were against the rules, it's still valuable evidence, said David Crane, a Syracuse law professor and former war crimes prosecutor. The instructions also undercut the argument that the CIA officers were simply following rules laid out by their superiors.

"The government can say, `He was told not to, and he went ahead and did it anyways,'" Crane said.

Two witnesses who testified before a grand jury in Virginia said they were asked about Stormoen's role at the prison and his whereabouts when al-Jamadi died. The witnesses and officials agreed to discuss the case only on condition of anonymity because they were told not to speak with reporters.

Stormoen, who ran what was known in the CIA as the detainee exploitation cell, processed al-Jamadi into the prison but was not in the shower room when al-Jamadi died.

Stormoen, 56, was part of the CIA's paramilitary arm, the Special Activities Division, after leaving the Army. He retired after al-Jamadi's death and received a letter of reprimand for his role in Abu Ghraib. He has since rejoined the intelligence community as a contractor working for a company called SpecTal, which was bought last year by BAE Systems, a leading defense contractor.

Stormoen, whose identity is no longer classified, did not return numerous messages seeking comment. His lawyer also declined to comment.

CIA spokesman George Little had no comment on the inquiry.

Much of the public attention in the al-Jamadi case has been on interrogator Mark Swanner, who was in the shower room when al-Jamadi died. Another CIA officer, who goes by the nickname "Chili," also came up at the grand jury, one witness said. Chili continues to work with the agency and his name is classified. The witness, who was at the prison, told prosecutors that Chili was at Abu Ghraib the day al-Jamadi died.

Though President George W. Bush's administration allowed the CIA to interrogate terrorism suspects in secret overseas prisons, that authorization did not apply in Iraq. CIA lawyers determined that, as a traditional war zone, Iraq fell under the Geneva Convention rules of war. That meant prisoners had to be documented and treated without cruelty, with access to medical attention.

Tactics such as waterboarding and sleep deprivation, which the CIA used in other overseas prisons, were prohibited at Abu Ghraib without prior approval. In videoconferences with headquarters, Stormoen and other officers in Iraq repeatedly asked for permission to use harsher techniques, but that permission was never granted, one former senior intelligence official recalled.

Current and former officials say the CIA officers at Abu Ghraib saw ambiguity in the rules, believing they could interrogate detainees before they were formally processed into the military prison. That gray area could last several days or longer.

Military investigators said the informal nature of the CIA's ghosting program contributed to a sense that the rules didn't apply at the prison.

At the time, the CIA's station in Baghdad, which was in charge of overseeing agency operations at the prison, was in such disarray that its top two officers were pulled out for mismanagement. An internal CIA inquiry did not single out any officer as responsible for al-Jamadi's death and no one has been charged.

A military autopsy labeled the death a homicide. Doctors said al-Jamadi died from a combination of factors: injuries he received while being captured by Navy SEALs and breathing difficulties caused by a lung injury and made worse by having a sandbag over his head.

Shortly after al-Jamadi's death, senior CIA officials once again circulated the rules. In January 2004, the agency sent a blunt memo flatly ordering agency officials to stop all interrogations, officials said.

Al-Jamadi's death has twice been reviewed by the Justice Department and prosecutors have declined to bring charges. Attorney General Eric Holder has appointed a new prosecutor, John Durham, to investigate CIA interrogation tactics. Durham is now re-investigating the al-Jamadi death, and Holder said the investigation has uncovered new information, though he did not say what it was.

Prosecutions for torture and war crimes are rare in the United States. The most high-profile recent case was the successful torture prosecution of the son of former Liberian President Charles Taylor in Florida in 2008.

There is no statute of limitations on war crimes if a death is involved.

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WASHINGTON -- A CIA officer who oversaw the agency's interrogation program at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and pushed for approval to use increasingly harsh tactics has come under scrutiny in a feder...
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05:49 AM on 07/14/2011
If it was an unofficial program and prisoners' names were kept off the books, then every one involved, including the former President, Vice President, Sec of Def and head of the CIA should be up on charges, and if they aren't prosecuted, then Obamination and Eric Holder should be brought up on charges of obstruction of justice and shielding war criminals.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
05:48 AM on 07/14/2011
Obama should stop the wars and the torture.
10:39 PM on 07/13/2011
Give Steve a medal and he can be on his way.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
donnyraindog
Hi Mom!
10:10 PM on 07/13/2011
The argument running through this thread claiming that those totured would do the same to us were the roles reversed is beyond bogus.In the aftermath of the iraqi invasion many of those detained were just unlucky people caught in the wrong place at the wrong time in the fog of war. More importantly the argument that they would do worse to us then anything we did to them is that the sense of right and wrong that any of you teach your children?
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
07:08 PM on 07/13/2011
Oh, the CIA is up to more "no good" in Mogadishu, Somalia.

The CIA has a facility in Mogadishu, which "looks like a small gated communtity with more than a dozen buildings behind large protective walls and secured by guard towers at each of its four corners. Adjacent to the compound are eight large metal hangars, and the CIA has its own aircraft at the airport. The site, which airport officials and Somali intelligence sources say was completed four months ago, is guarded by Somali soldiers, but the Americans control access. At the facility, the CIA runs a counterterrorism training program for Somali intelligence agents and operatives aimed at building an indigenous strike force capable of snatch operations and targeted “combat” operations against members of Al Shabab, an Islamic militant group with close ties to Al Qaeda."

A facility completed 4 months ago? Is the cost of building and running this facility a part of that which many Americans are having to give up in Medicare and SS?

The CIA also has a secret prisong in the basement of Somalia's National Security Agency (NSA) headquarters. Some prisoners have been snatched off the streets of Kenya and redered by plane to Mogadishu.

The underground prison is "officially" run by the Somalia NSA, but US intelligence personnel pay the salaries of the intelligence agents who interrogate prisoners.

http://www.thenation.com/article/161936/cias-secret-sites-somalia

"The CIA"s Secret Sites in Somalia"
By: Jeremy Scahill
"The Nation"
05:42 PM on 07/13/2011
Let's call a spade a spade. Abu Graib and Guantanamo are concentration camps. Think of what justice was served to SS officers doing same thing in German camps.
07:26 PM on 07/13/2011
Your sick to compare this to a concentration camp i bet you never served your country.because you still arent.
12:54 PM on 07/15/2011
They are concentration camps. Serving "your country" means paying taxes so boys and girls in fed gov can get paid. Voluntary service in the military is a job with cash and benefits just like any "contractor" or merc. There is risk, of course, that misguided potus sends you to occupy some foreign country and you get whacked by some angry locals. It comes with the job.
05:08 PM on 07/13/2011
IS THIS A WAR CRIME? Is water wet? Is the sun hot? Is the pope catholic? This abomination of our values fuels terrorism. The perps must be ill sadists.
05:53 PM on 07/13/2011
were the 9/11 terrorists all just good muslims? The second and third generations of muslims in this country will try to kill us all.
01:29 AM on 07/14/2011
rtgmjg - what has that to do with what went on at Abu Ghraib. Does one criminal act justify another? What a short time lapsed betweem the trial of nazis for war crimes and Abu ghraib. It was Americans who demanded the Nuremberg trils. What a terrible irony.
04:34 PM on 07/13/2011
I think some of these libs here need to be waterboarded, jeez sounds like a coastal sport.
07:43 PM on 07/13/2011
people who do waterboarding deserve beheading :)
08:14 PM on 07/13/2011
Thank,s for the info we,ll keep your waterboarding on the hush
KnoxScott
whatever
12:30 PM on 07/18/2011
maybe you should do some waterboarding then..just sayin
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bones Rhodes
08:23 PM on 07/13/2011
And I think you deserve to be rolled in fire ants, attacked by pitbulls, and set on fire: however, would I actually do any of that ? No. And that is the difference in a lib and a conservative.
08:52 PM on 07/13/2011
If i got you mad enough you would try i see the contempt in your font, as far as what you call torture up there thats just another sat night too me. smooches xxx ooo
03:49 PM on 07/13/2011
The U.S. must remove the stain of torture deaths from our history in the wars in the Mid East. Our image as defenders of human liberties has sufferred greatly. The treatment of prisoners in Abu Grave (sp?) had no Consitutuional legitimacy. If we want to defend democracy abroad we should live up to its values.
05:54 PM on 07/13/2011
BOO! HOO!
10:42 PM on 07/13/2011
First of all, WE DO NOT need to defend democracy anywhere BUT here in the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. If the other third world banana republics want democracy let them earn it with their own money and their own lives. Let them read a history book. Just don't send in our troops to die for THEIR democracy or help them pay for it with OUR tax dollars.
03:46 PM on 07/13/2011
These stories always get the Liberals panties in a twist. so funny
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
artist-53
Wordy opinionated poor spelling Liberal
04:44 PM on 07/13/2011
Comments like yours always make me feel as though, America has indeed lost all integrity, and humanity for that matter. And what's left in many cases, are people such as your self typing comments on a news forum thread that reinforce my initial sentiments.

America continues to be lost but just isn't aware of it yet.

And if you think torture is funny, then you are one sick person.
05:57 PM on 07/13/2011
You must have loved Pearl Harbor and tha Bataan Death March!
07:29 PM on 07/13/2011
What's "lost" is the idea that our enemies deserve one ounce better treatment than what they give our troops.

What's "sick" is refusing to use every tool at our disposal to save American lives, including torture if required.

Liberals want a secure America but they turn their nose up when we have to do nasty things to win that security.
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03:28 PM on 07/13/2011
Should give him a medal. Saving tax payer money.
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sophie M
ANTI WAR./animal rescue
03:24 PM on 07/13/2011
so who is to blame for torturing : Bradley Manning?
03:17 PM on 07/13/2011
There is a thing in life called personal responsibility. If you do not want people to seek to apprehend you, if you do not want to be subject to interrogation then do not be a terrorist nor consort with them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lel737
cut spending-cut taxes!
03:16 PM on 07/13/2011
would the liberals be happier if we gave him milk and cookies?
03:44 PM on 07/13/2011
probably
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lel737
cut spending-cut taxes!
03:10 PM on 07/13/2011
big deal...he did his job...protecting america by getting the bad guys to talk...