Full Text: The Taguba Report On Iraq Prison Abuse
HEARING
ARTICLE 15-6 INVESTIGATION
OF THE
800th MILITARY POLICE
BRIGADE
SECRET/NO FOREIGN DISSEMINATION
TABLE OF CONTENTS
References .......................... 3
Background ......................... 6
Assessment
of DoD Counter-Terrorism
Interrogation and Detention
Operations
In Iraq (MG Miller's
Assessment).................. 8
IO Comments on MG Miller's Assessment.............. 8
Report on Detention
and Corrections
In Iraq (MG Ryder's
Report).................. 9
IO Comments on MG Ryder's Report.................. 12
Preliminary Investigative Actions .................. 12
Findings and Recommendations
Part One (Detainee Abuse). .................. 15
Findings ...................... 15
Recommendations .................. 20
Part Two (Escapes and Accountability) ............... 22
Findings ...................... 22
Recommendations. ................... 31
Part Three (Command Climate, Etc.). ............... 34
Findings ...................... 36
Recommendations .................. 44
Other Findings/Observations ................... 49
Conclusion ........................ 50
Annexes ......................... 51
References
1.
Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of
Prisoners of War, 12 August 1949
2. Geneva Convention
for the Amelioration of the Condition
of the Wounded and
Sick in the Armed Forces in the Field, 12
August 1949
3. Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the
Condition
of the Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked
Members of Armed Forces
at Sea, 12 August 1949
4.
Geneva Convention Protocol Relative to the Status
of
Refugees, 1967
5. Geneva Convention Relative to
the Status of Refugees,
1951
6. Geneva Convention
for the Protection of War Victims, 12
August 1949
7.
Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War, 12 August 1949
8. DOD
Directive 5100.69, "DOD Program for Prisoners of
War and
other Detainees," 27 December 1972
9. DOD Directive
5100.77 "DOD Law of War Program," 10 July
1979
10.
STANAG No. 2044, Procedures for Dealing with Prisoners
of
War (PW) (Edition 5), 28 June 1994
11. STANAG No. 2033,
Interrogation of Prisoners of War (PW)
(Edition 6), 6
December 1994
12. AR 190-8, Enemy Prisoners of War,
Retained Personnel,
Civilian Internees, and Other
Detainees, 1 October 1997
13. AR 190-47, The Army
Corrections System, 15 August 1996
14. AR 190-14,
Carrying of Firearms and Use of Force for
Law
Enforcement and Security Duties, 12 March 1993
15. AR
195-5, Evidence Procedures, 28 August 1992
16. AR
190-11, Physical Security of Arms, Ammunition
and
Explosives, 12 February 1998
17. AR 190-12,
Military Police Working Dogs, 30 September
1993
18.
AR 190-13, The Army Physical Security Program,
30
September 1993
19. AR 380-67, Personnel Security
Program, 9 September 1988
20. AR 380-5, Department of
the Army Information Security,
31 September 2000
21.
AR 670-1, Wear and Appearance of Army Uniforms and
Insignia, 5 September 2003
22. AR 190-40, Serious
Incident Report, 30 November 1993
23. AR 15-6,
Procedures for Investigating Officers and
Boards of
Officers, 11 May 1988
24. AR 27-10, Military Justice, 6
September 2002
25. AR 635-200, Enlisted Personnel, 1
November 2000
26. AR 600-8-24, Officer Transfers and
Discharges, 29 June
2002
27. AR 500-5, Army
Mobilization, 6 July 1996
28. AR 600-20, Army Command
Policy, 13 May 2002
29. AR 623-105, Officer Evaluation
Reports, 1 April 1998
30. AR 175-9, Contractors
Accompanying the Force, 29
October 1999
31. FM
3-19.40, Military Police Internment/Resettlement
Operations, 1 August 2001
32. FM 3-19.1, Military Police
Operations, 22 March 2001
33. FM 3-19.4, Military Police
Leaders' Handbook, 4 March
2002
34. FM 3-05.30,
Psychological Operations, 19 June 2000
35. FM 33-1-1,
Psychological Operations Techniques and
Procedures, 5 May
1994
36. FM 34-52, Intelligence Interrogation, 28
September 1992
37. FM 19-15, Civil Disturbances, 25
November 1985
38. FM 3-0, Operations, 14 June 2001
39. FM 101-5, Staff Organizations and Functions, 23 May
1984
40. FM 3-19.30, Physical Security, 8 January
2001
41. FM 3-21.5, Drill and Ceremonies, 7 July
2003
42. ARTEP 19-546-30 MTP, Mission Training Plan
for Military
Police Battalion (IR)
43. ARTEP
19-667-30 MTP, Mission Training Plan for Military
Police
Guard Company
44. ARTEP 19-647-30 MTP, Mission Training
Plan for Military
Police Escort Guard Company
45. STP
19-95B1-SM, Soldier's Manual, MOS 95B, Military
Police,
Skill Level 1, 6 August 2002
46. STP 19-95C14-SM-TG,
Soldier's Manual and Trainer's
Guide for MOS 95C
Internment/Resettlement Specialist, Skill
Levels 1/2/3/4,
26 March 1999
47. STP 19-95C1-SM MOS 95C, Corrections
Specialist, Skill
Level 1, Soldier's Manual, 30 September
2003
48. STP 19-95C24-SM-TG MOS 95C, Corrections
Specialist,
Skill Levels 2/3/4, Soldier's Manual and
Trainer's Guide, 30
September 2003
49. Assessment of
DOD Counter-Terrorism Interrogation and
Detention
Operations in Iraq, (MG Geoffrey D. Miller,
Commander
JTF-GTMO, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba), 9 September 2003
50.
Assessment of Detention and Corrections Operations
in
Iraq, (MG Donald J. Ryder, Provost Marshal General),
6
November 2003
51. CJTF-7 FRAGO #1108, Subject:
includes- para 3.C.8 &
3.C.8.A.1, Assignment of 205 MI
BDE CDR Responsibilities for
the Baghdad Central
Confinement Facility (BCCF), 19 November
2003
52.
CJTF-7 FRAGO #749, Subject: Intelligence and
Evidence-
Led Detention Operations Relating to Detainees,
24 August
2003
53. 800th MP BDE FRAGO # 89, Subject:
Rules of Engagement,
26 December 2003
54. CG CJTF-7
Memo: CJTF-7 Interrogation and Counter-
Resistance
Policy, 12 October 2003
55. CG CJTF-7 Memo: Dignity and
Respect While Conducting
Operations, 13 December
2003
56. Uniform Code of Military Justice and Manual for
Courts
Martial, 2002 Edition
ARTICLE 15-6 INVESTIGATION OF THE
800th
MILITARY POLICE BRIGADE
BACKGROUND
1. (U) On 19 January 2004, Lieutenant
General (LTG) Ricardo
S. Sanchez, Commander, Combined
Joint Task Force Seven
(CJTF-7) requested that the
Commander, US Central
Command, appoint an Investigating
Officer (IO) in the
grade of Major General (MG) or
above to investigate the
conduct of operations within
the 800th Military Police
(MP) Brigade. LTG Sanchez
requested an investigation of
detention and internment
operations by the Brigade from 1
November 2003 to
present. LTG Sanchez cited recent
reports of detainee
abuse, escapes from confinement
facilities, and
accountability lapses, which indicated
systemic
problems within the brigade and suggested a lack
of
clear standards, proficiency, and leadership. LTG
Sanchez requested a comprehensive and all-encompassing
inquiry to make findings and recommendations concerning
the fitness and performance of the 800th MP Brigade.
(ANNEX 2)
2. (U) On 24 January 2003, the Chief of Staff
of US Central
Command (CENTCOM), MG R. Steven Whitcomb,
on behalf of
the CENTCOM Commander, directed that the
Commander,
Coalition Forces Land Component Command
(CFLCC), LTG
David D. McKiernan, conduct an
investigation into the
800th MP Brigade's detention and
internment operations
from 1 November 2003 to present.
CENTCOM directed that
the investigation should inquire
into all facts and
circumstances surrounding recent
reports of suspected
detainee abuse in Iraq. It also
directed that the
investigation inquire into detainee
escapes and
accountability lapses as reported by
CJTF-7, and to gain
a more comprehensive and
all-encompassing inquiry into
the fitness and
performance of the 800th MP Brigade.
(ANNEX 3)
3.
(U) On 31 January 2004, the Commander, CFLCC, appointed
MG Antonio M. Taguba, Deputy Commanding General Support,
CFLCC, to conduct this investigation. MG Taguba was
directed to conduct an informal investigation under AR
15-
6 into the 800th MP Brigade's detention and
internment
operations. Specifically, MG Taguba was
tasked to:
a. (U) Inquire into all the facts and
circumstances
surrounding recent allegations of
detainee abuse,
specifically allegations of
maltreatment at the Abu
Ghraib Prison (Baghdad
Central Confinement Facility
(BCCF));
b. (U)
Inquire into detainee escapes and accountability
lapses as reported by CJTF-7, specifically allegations
concerning these events at the Abu Ghraib Prison;
c.
(U) Investigate the training, standards, employment,
command policies, internal procedures, and command
climate in the 800th MP Brigade, as appropriate;
d. (U)
Make specific findings of fact concerning all
aspects of the investigation, and make any
recommendations for corrective action, as appropriate.
(ANNEX 4)
4. (U) LTG Sanchez's request to investigate the
800th MP
Brigade followed the initiation of a
criminal
investigation by the US Army Criminal
Investigation
Command (USACIDC) into specific
allegations of detainee
abuse committed by members of
the 372nd MP Company, 320th
MP Battalion in Iraq.
These units are part of the 800th
MP Brigade. The
Brigade is an Iraq Theater asset, TACON
to CJTF-7, but
OPCON to CFLCC at the time this
investigation was
initiated. In addition, CJTF-7 had
several reports of
detainee escapes from US/Coalition
Confinement
Facilities in Iraq over the past several
months. These
include Camp Bucca, Camp Ashraf, Abu
Ghraib, and the
High Value Detainee (HVD) Complex/Camp
Cropper. The
800th MP Brigade operated these facilities.
In
addition, four Soldiers from the 320th MP Battalion
had
been formally charged under the Uniform Code of
Military Justice (UCMJ) with detainee abuse in May 2003
at the Theater Internment Facility (TIF) at Camp Bucca,
Iraq. (ANNEXES 5-18, 34 and 35)
5. (U) I began assembling
my investigation team prior to
the actual appointment
by the CFLCC Commander. I
assembled subject matter
experts from the CFLCC Provost
Marshal (PM) and the
CFLCC Staff Judge Advocate (SJA). I
selected COL
Kinard J. La Fate, CFLCC Provost Marshal to
be my
Deputy for this investigation. I also contacted
the
Provost Marshal General of the Army, MG Donald J.
Ryder, to enlist the support of MP subject matter
experts
in the areas of detention and internment
operations.
(ANNEXES 4 and 19)
6. (U) The
Investigating Team also reviewed the Assessment
of DoD
Counter-Terrorism Interrogation and Detention
Operations in Iraq conducted by MG Geoffrey D. Miller,
Commander, Joint Task Force Guantanamo (JTF-GTMO). From
31 August to 9 September 2003, MG Miller led a team of
personnel experienced in strategic interrogation to HQ,
CJTF-7 and the Iraqi Survey Group (ISG) to review
current
Iraqi Theater ability to rapidly exploit
internees for
actionable intelligence. MG Miller's
team focused on
three areas: intelligence integration,
synchronization,
and fusion; interrogation operations;
and detention
operations. MG Miller's team used
JTF-GTMO procedures
and interrogation authorities as
baselines. (ANNEX 20)
7. (U) The Investigating Team began
its inquiry with an in-
depth analysis of the Report on
Detention and Corrections
in Iraq, dated 5 November
2003, conducted by MG Ryder and
a team of military
police, legal, medical, and automation
experts. The
CJTF-7 Commander, LTG Sanchez, had
previously requested
a team of subject matter experts to
assess, and make
specific recommendations concerning
detention and
corrections operations. From 13 October to
6 November
2003, MG Ryder personally led this
assessment/assistance team in Iraq. (ANNEX 19)
ASSESSMENT OF DoD COUNTER-TERRORISM INTERROGATION AND
DETENTION OPERATIONS IN IRAQ (MG MILLER'S
ASSESSMENT)
1. (S/NF) The principal focus of MG
Miller's team was on
the strategic interrogation of
detainees/internees in
Iraq. Among its conclusions in
its Executive Summary
were that CJTF-7 did not have
authorities and procedures
in place to affect a unified
strategy to detain,
interrogate, and report information
from
detainees/internees in Iraq. The Executive Summary
also
stated that detention operations must act as an
enabler
for interrogation. (ANNEX 20)
2. (S/NF)
With respect to interrogation, MG Miller's Team
recommended that CJTF-7 dedicate and train a detention
guard force subordinate to the Joint Interrogation
Debriefing Center (JIDC) Commander that "sets the
conditions for the successful interrogation and
exploitation of internees/detainees." Regarding
Detention Operations, MG Miller's team stated that the
function of Detention Operations is to provide a safe,
secure, and humane environment that supports the
expeditious collection of intelligence. However, it
also
stated "it is essential that the guard force be
actively
engaged in setting the conditions for
successful
exploitation of the internees." (ANNEX
20)
3. (S/NF) MG Miller's team also concluded that
Joint
Strategic Interrogation Operations (within
CJTF-7) are
hampered by lack of active control of the
internees
within the detention environment. The Miller
Team also
stated that establishment of the Theater
Joint
Interrogation and Detention Center (JIDC) at Abu
Ghraib
(BCCF) will consolidate both detention and
strategic
interrogation operations and result in
synergy between MP
and MI resources and an integrated,
synchronized, and
focused strategic interrogation
effort. (ANNEX 20)
4. (S/NF) MG Miller's team also
observed that the
application of emerging strategic
interrogation
strategies and techniques contain new
approaches and
operational art. The Miller Team also
concluded that a
legal review and recommendations on
internee
interrogation operations by a dedicated
Command Judge
Advocate is required to maximize
interrogation
effectiveness. (ANNEX 20)
IO COMMENTS ON MG MILLER'S ASSESSMENT
1. (S/NF) MG
Miller's team recognized that they were using
JTF-GTMO
operational procedures and interrogation
authorities as
baselines for its observations and
recommendations.
There is a strong argument that the
intelligence value
of detainees held at JTF-Guantanamo
(GTMO) is different
than that of the detainees/internees
held at Abu Ghraib
(BCCF) and other detention facilities
in Iraq.
Currently, there are a large number of Iraqi
criminals
held at Abu Ghraib (BCCF). These are not
believed to
be international terrorists or members of Al
Qaida,
Anser Al Islam, Taliban, and other international
terrorist organizations. (ANNEX 20)
2. (S/NF) The
recommendations of MG Miller's team that the
"guard
force" be actively engaged in setting the
conditions
for successful exploitation of the internees
would
appear to be in conflict with the recommendations
of MG
Ryder's Team and AR 190-8 that military police "do
not
participate in military intelligence supervised
interrogation sessions." The Ryder Report concluded
that
the OEF template whereby military police actively
set the
favorable conditions for subsequent interviews
runs
counter to the smooth operation of a detention
facility.
(ANNEX 20)
REPORT ON
DETENTION AND CORRECTIONS
IN IRAQ (MG
RYDER'S REPORT)
1. (U) MG Ryder and his assessment team
conducted a
comprehensive review of the entire detainee
and
corrections system in Iraq and provided
recommendations
addressing each of the following areas
as requested by
the Commander CJTF-7:
a. (U)
Detainee and corrections system management
b. (U)
Detainee management, including detainee
movement,
segregation, and accountability
c. (U) Means of
command and control of the detention
and corrections
system
d. (U) Integration of military detention
and
corrections with the Coalition Provisional
Authority
(CPA) and adequacy of plans for transition
to an Iraqi-
run corrections system
e. (U)
Detainee medical care and health management
f. (U)
Detention facilities that meet required
health,
hygiene, and sanitation standards
g. (U) Court
integration and docket management for
criminal
detainees
h. (U) Detainee legal processing
i.
(U) Detainee databases and records, including
integration with law enforcement and court databases
(ANNEX 19)
2. (U) Many of the findings and
recommendations of MG
Ryder's team are beyond the scope
of this investigation.
However, several important
findings are clearly relevant
to this inquiry and are
summarized below (emphasis is
added in certain
areas):
A. (U) Detainee Management (including
movement,
segregation, and accountability)
1. (U)
There is a wide variance in standards and
approaches
at the various detention facilities.
Several
Division/Brigade collection points and US
monitored
Iraqi prisons had flawed or insufficiently
detailed
use of force and other standing operating
procedures
or policies (e.g. weapons in the facility,
improper
restraint techniques, detainee management,
etc.)
Though, there were no military police units
purposely applying inappropriate confinement practices.
(ANNEX 19)
2. (U) Currently, due to lack of adequate
Iraqi
facilities, Iraqi criminals (generally
Iraqi-on-Iraqi
crimes) are detained with security
internees (generally
Iraqi-on-Coalition offenses)
and EPWs in the same
facilities, though segregated
in different
cells/compounds. (ANNEX 19)
3.
(U) The management of multiple disparate groups of
detained people in a single location by members of the
same unit invites confusion about handling, processing,
and treatment, and typically facilitates the transfer
of information between different categories of
detainees. (ANNEX 19)
4. (U) The 800th MP (I/R) units
did not receive
Internment/Resettlement (I/R) and
corrections specific
training during their
mobilization period. Corrections
training is only
on the METL of two MP (I/R)
Confinement Battalions
throughout the Army, one
currently serving in
Afghanistan, and elements of the
other are at Camp
Arifjan, Kuwait. MP units supporting
JTF-GTMO
received ten days of training in detention
facility
operations, to include two days of unarmed
self-defense, training in interpersonal communication
skills, forced cell moves, and correctional officer
safety. (ANNEX 19)
B. (U) Means of Command and Control
of the Detention and
Corrections System
1. (U) The
800th MP Brigade was originally task
organized with
eight MP(I/R) Battalions consisting of
both MP Guard
and Combat Support companies. Due to
force rotation
plans, the 800th redeployed two
Battalion HHCs in
December 2003, the 115th MP Battalion
and the 324th
MP Battalion. In December 2003, the
400th MP
Battalion was relieved of its mission and
redeployed
in January 2004. The 724th MP Battalion
redeployed
on 11 February 2004 and the remainder is
scheduled
to redeploy in March and April 2004. They
are the
310th MP Battalion, 320th MP Battalion, 530th
MP
Battalion, and 744th MP Battalion. The units that
remain are generally understrength, as Reserve
Component units do not have an individual personnel
replacement system to mitigate medical losses or the
departure of individual Soldiers that have reached 24
months of Federal active duty in a five-year period.
(ANNEX 19)
2. (U) The 800th MP Brigade (I/R) is
currently a CFLCC
asset, TACON to CJTF-7 to
conduct
Internment/Resettlement (I/R) operations in
Iraq. All
detention operations are conducted in the
CJTF-7 AO;
Camps Ganci, Vigilant, Bucca, TSP
Whitford, and a
separate High Value Detention (HVD)
site. (ANNEX 19)
3. (U) The 800th MP Brigade has
experienced challenges
adapting its task
organizational structure, training,
and equipment
resources from a unit designed to conduct
standard
EPW operations in the COMMZ (Kuwait).
Further, the
doctrinally trained MP Soldier-to-detainee
population ratio and facility layout templates are
predicated on a compliant, self-disciplining EPW
population, and not criminals or high-risk security
internees. (ANNEX 19)
4. (U) EPWs and Civilian
Internees should receive the
full protections of the
Geneva Conventions, unless the
denial of these
protections is due to specifically
articulated
military necessity (e.g., no visitation to
preclude
the direction of insurgency operations).
(ANNEXES 19
and 24)
5. (U) AR 190-8, Enemy Prisoners of War,
Retained
Personnel, Civilian Internees, and other
Detainees, FM
3-19.40, Military Police Internment
and Resettlement
Operations, and FM 34-52,
Intelligence Interrogations,
require military police
to provide an area for
intelligence collection
efforts within EPW facilities.
Military Police,
though adept at passive collection of
intelligence
within a facility, do not participate in
Military
Intelligence supervised interrogation
sessions.
Recent intelligence collection in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom posited a template whereby
military police actively set favorable conditions for
subsequent interviews. Such actions generally run
counter to the smooth operation of a detention
facility, attempting to maintain its population in a
compliant and docile state. The 800th MP Brigade has
not been directed to change its facility procedures to
set the conditions for MI interrogations, nor
participate in those interrogations. (ANNEXES 19 and
21-23)
6. MG Ryder's Report also made the following,
inter
alia, near-term and mid-term recommendations
regarding
the command and control of detainees:
a. (U) Align the release process for security
internees with DoD Policy. The process of
screening security internees should include
intelligence findings, interrogation results, and
current threat assessment.
b. (U) Determine the
scope of intelligence collection that
will
occur at Camp Vigilant. Refurbish the Northeast
Compound to separate the screening operation from the
Iraqi
run Baghdad Central Correctional
Facility. Establish
procedures that define the
role of military police Soldiers
securing the
compound, clearly separating the actions of the
guards from those of the military intelligence personnel.
c. (U) Consolidate all Security Internee
Operations, except the MEK security mission, under
a single Military Police Brigade Headquarters for
OIF 2.
d. (U) Insist that all units identified to
rotate
into the Iraqi Theater of Operations
(ITO) to
conduct internment and confinement
operations in
support of OIF 2 be organic to
CJTF-7. (ANNEX 19)
IO COMMENTS REGARDING
MG RYDER'S REPORT
1. (U) The objective of MG Ryder's Team
was to observe
detention and prison operations,
identify potential
systemic and human rights issues,
and provide near-term,
mid-term, and long-term
recommendations to improve CJTF-7
operations and
transition of the Iraqi prison system from
US military
control/oversight to the Coalition
Provisional
Authority and eventually to the Iraqi
Government. The
Findings and Recommendations of MG
Ryder's Team are
thorough and precise and should be
implemented
immediately. (ANNEX 19)
2. (U) Unfortunately, many of
the systemic problems that
surfaced during MG Ryder's
Team's assessment are the very
same issues that are the
subject of this investigation.
In fact, many of the
abuses suffered by detainees
occurred during, or near
to, the time of that assessment.
As will be pointed out
in detail in subsequent portions
of this report, I
disagree with the conclusion of MG
Ryder's Team in one
critical aspect, that being its
conclusion that the
800th MP Brigade had not been asked
to change its
facility procedures to set the conditions
for MI
interviews. While clearly the 800th MP Brigade
and its
commanders were not tasked to set conditions for
detainees for subsequent MI interrogations, it is
obvious
from a review of comprehensive CID interviews
of suspects
and witnesses that this was done at lower
levels. (ANNEX
19)
3. (U) I concur fully with MG
Ryder's conclusion regarding
the effect of AR 190-8.
Military Police, though adept at
passive collection of
intelligence within a facility,
should not participate
in Military Intelligence
supervised interrogation
sessions. Moreover, Military
Police should not be
involved with setting "favorable
conditions" for
subsequent interviews. These actions, as
will be
outlined in this investigation, clearly run
counter to
the smooth operation of a detention facility.
(ANNEX
19)
PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATIVE
ACTIONS
1. (U) Following our review of MG Ryder's
Report and MG
Miller's Report, my investigation team
immediately began
an in-depth review of all available
documents regarding
the 800th MP Brigade. We reviewed
in detail the
voluminous CID investigation regarding
alleged detainee
abuses at detention facilities in
Iraq, particularly the
Abu Ghraib (BCCF) Detention
Facility. We analyzed
approximately fifty witness
statements from military
police and military
intelligence personnel, potential
suspects, and
detainees. We reviewed numerous photos and
videos of
actual detainee abuse taken by detention
facility
personnel, which are now in the custody and
control of
the US Army Criminal Investigation Command and
the
CJTF-7 prosecution team. The photos and videos are
not
contained in this investigation. We obtained copies
of
the 800th MP Brigade roster, rating chain, and
assorted
internal investigations and disciplinary actions
involving that command for the past several months.
(All
ANNEXES Reviewed by Investigation Team)
2. (U)
In addition to military police and legal officers
from
the CFLCC PMO and SJA Offices we also obtained the
services of two individuals who are experts in military
police detention practices and training. These were LTC
Timothy Weathersbee, Commander, 705th MP Battalion,
United States Disciplinary Barracks, Fort Leavenworth,
and SFC Edward Baldwin, Senior Corrections Advisor, US
Army Military Police School, Fort Leonard Wood. I also
requested and received the services of Col (Dr) Henry
Nelson, a trained US Air Force psychiatrist assigned to
assist my investigation team. (ANNEX 4)
3. (U) In
addition to MG Ryder's and MG Miller's Reports,
the
team reviewed numerous reference materials including
the 12 October 2003 CJTF-7 Interrogation and Counter-
Resistance Policy, the AR 15-6 Investigation on Riot and
Shootings at Abu Ghraib on 24 November 2003, the 205th
MI
Brigade's Interrogation Rules of Engagement
(IROE),
facility staff logs/journals and numerous
records of AR
15-6 investigations and Serious Incident
Reports (SIRs)
on detainee escapes/shootings and
disciplinary matters
from the 800th MP Brigade.
(ANNEXES 5-20, 37, 93, and
94)
4. (U) On 2 February
2004, I took my team to Baghdad for a
one-day
inspection of the Abu Ghraib Prison (BCCF) and
the High
Value Detainee (HVD) Complex in order to become
familiar with those facilities. We also met with COL
Jerry Mocello, Commander, 3rd MP Criminal Investigation
Group (CID), COL Dave Quantock, Commander, 16th MP
Brigade, COL Dave Phillips, Commander, 89th MP Brigade,
and COL Ed Sannwaldt, CJTF-7 Provost Marshal. On 7
February 2004, the team visited the Camp Bucca Detention
Facility to familiarize itself with the facility and
operating structure. In addition, on 6 and 7 February
2004, at Camp Doha, Kuwait, we conducted extensive
training sessions on approved detention practices. We
continued our preparation by reviewing the ongoing CID
investigation and were briefed by the Special Agent in
Charge, CW2 Paul Arthur. We refreshed ourselves on the
applicable reference materials within each team member's
area of expertise, and practiced investigative
techniques. I met with the team on numerous occasions
to
finalize appropriate witness lists, review
existing
witness statements, arrange logistics, and
collect
potential evidence. We also coordinated with
CJTF-7 to
arrange witness attendance, force protection
measures,
and general logistics for the team's move to
Baghdad on 8
February 2004. (ANNEXES 4 and 25)
5.
(U) At the same time, due to the Transfer of Authority
on 1 February 2004 between III Corps and V Corps, and
the
upcoming demobilization of the 800th MP Brigade
Command,
I directed that several critical witnesses who
were
preparing to leave the theater remain at Camp
Arifjan,
Kuwait until they could be interviewed (ANNEX
29). My
team deployed to Baghdad on 8 February 2004
and conducted
a series of interviews with a variety of
witnesses (ANNEX
30). We returned to Camp Doha, Kuwait
on 13 February
2004. On 14 and 15 February we
interviewed a number of
witnesses from the 800th MP
Brigade. On 17 February we
returned to Camp Bucca,
Iraq to complete interviews of
witnesses at that
location. From 18 February thru 28
February we
collected documents, compiled references, did
follow-up
interviews, and completed a detailed analysis
of the
volumes of materials accumulated throughout our
investigation. On 29 February we finalized our
executive
summary and out-briefing slides. On 9 March
we submitted
the AR 15-6 written report with findings
and
recommendations to the CFLCC Deputy SJA, LTC
Mark
Johnson, for a legal sufficiency review. The
out-brief
to the appointing authority, LTG McKiernan,
took place on
3 March 2004. (ANNEXES 26 and 45-91)
FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
(PART ONE)
(U) The investigation should inquire into all
of the facts
and circumstances surrounding recent
allegations of detainee
abuse, specifically, allegations
of maltreatment at the Abu
Ghraib Prison (Baghdad Central
Confinement Facility).
1. (U) The US Army Criminal
Investigation Command (CID),
led by COL Jerry Mocello,
and a team of highly trained
professional agents have
done a superb job of
investigating several complex and
extremely disturbing
incidents of detainee abuse at the
Abu Ghraib Prison.
They conducted over 50 interviews of
witnesses, potential
criminal suspects, and detainees.
They also uncovered
numerous photos and videos
portraying in graphic detail
detainee abuse by Military
Police personnel on numerous
occasions from October to
December 2003. Several
potential suspects rendered
full and complete confessions
regarding their personal
involvement and the involvement
of fellow Soldiers in
this abuse. Several potential
suspects invoked their
rights under Article 31 of the
Uniform Code of Military
Justice (UCMJ) and the 5th
Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution. (ANNEX 25)
2. (U) In addition to a
comprehensive and exhaustive review
of all of these
statements and documentary evidence, we
also
interviewed numerous officers, NCOs, and junior
enlisted Soldiers in the 800th MP Brigade, as well as
members of the 205th Military Intelligence Brigade
working at the prison. We did not believe it was
necessary to re-interview all the numerous witnesses who
had previously provided comprehensive statements to CID,
and I have adopted those statements for the purposes of
this investigation. (ANNEXES 26, 34, 35, and 45-91)
REGARDING PART ONE OF THE INVESTIGATION, I MAKE THE
FOLLOWING SPECIFIC FINDINGS OF FACT:
1. (U) That Forward
Operating Base (FOB) Abu Ghraib (BCCF)
provides
security of both criminal and security detainees
at the
Baghdad Central Correctional Facility, facilitates
the
conducting of interrogations for CJTF-7, supports
other
CPA operations at the prison, and enhances the
force
protection/quality of life of Soldiers assigned in
order to ensure the success of ongoing operations to
secure a free Iraq. (ANNEX 31)
2. (U) That the
Commander, 205th Military Intelligence
Brigade, was
designated by CJTF-7 as the Commander of FOB
Abu Ghraib
(BCCF) effective 19 November 2003. That the
205th MI
Brigade conducts operational and strategic
interrogations for CJTF-7. That from 19 November 2003
until Transfer of Authority (TOA) on 6 February 2004,
COL
Thomas M. Pappas was the Commander of the 205th
MI
Brigade and the Commander of FOB Abu Ghraib
(BCCF).
(ANNEX 31)
3. (U) That the 320th Military
Police Battalion of the
800th MP Brigade is responsible
for the Guard Force at
Camp Ganci, Camp Vigilant, &
Cellblock 1 of FOB Abu
Ghraib (BCCF). That from
February 2003 to until he was
suspended from his duties
on 17 January 2004, LTC Jerry
Phillabaum served as the
Battalion Commander of the 320th
MP Battalion. That
from December 2002 until he was
suspended from his
duties, on 17 January 2004, CPT Donald
Reese served as
the Company Commander of the 372nd MP
Company, which
was in charge of guarding detainees at FOB
Abu Ghraib.
I further find that both the 320th MP
Battalion and the
372nd MP Company were located within
the confines of
FOB Abu Ghraib. (ANNEXES 32 and 45)
4. (U) That from
July of 2003 to the present, BG Janis L.
Karpinski was
the Commander of the 800th MP Brigade.
(ANNEX 45)
5.
(S) That between October and December 2003, at the Abu
Ghraib Confinement Facility (BCCF), numerous incidents
of
sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses
were
inflicted on several detainees. This systemic
and
illegal abuse of detainees was intentionally
perpetrated
by several members of the military police
guard force
(372nd Military Police Company, 320th
Military Police
Battalion, 800th MP Brigade), in Tier
(section) 1-A of
the Abu Ghraib Prison (BCCF). The
allegations of abuse
were substantiated by detailed
witness statements (ANNEX
26) and the discovery of
extremely graphic photographic
evidence. Due to the
extremely sensitive nature of these
photographs and
videos, the ongoing CID investigation,
and the
potential for the criminal prosecution of several
suspects, the photographic evidence is not included in
the body of my investigation. The pictures and videos
are available from the Criminal Investigative Command
and
the CTJF-7 prosecution team. In addition to
the
aforementioned crimes, there were also abuses
committed
by members of the 325th MI Battalion, 205th
MI Brigade,
and Joint Interrogation and Debriefing
Center (JIDC).
Specifically, on 24 November 2003, SPC
Luciana Spencer,
205th MI Brigade, sought to degrade a
detainee by having
him strip and returned to cell
naked. (ANNEXES 26 and
53)
6. (S) I find that the
intentional abuse of detainees by
military police
personnel included the following acts:
a. (S)
Punching, slapping, and kicking detainees;
jumping on
their naked feet;
b. (S) Videotaping and
photographing naked male and
female detainees;
c.
(S) Forcibly arranging detainees in various
sexually
explicit positions for photographing;
d. (S)
Forcing detainees to remove their clothing and
keeping them naked for several days at a time;
e. (S)
Forcing naked male detainees to wear women's
underwear;
f. (S) Forcing groups of male detainees
to masturbate
themselves while being photographed
and videotaped;
g. (S) Arranging naked male detainees
in a pile and
then jumping on them;
h. (S)
Positioning a naked detainee on a MRE Box,
with a
sandbag on his head, and attaching wires to his
fingers, toes, and penis to simulate electric torture;
i. (S) Writing "I am a Rapest" (sic) on the leg of
a
detainee alleged to have forcibly raped a 15-year
old
fellow detainee, and then photographing him
naked;
j. (S) Placing a dog chain or strap around a
naked
detainee's neck and having a female Soldier
pose for a
picture;
k. (S) A male MP guard
having sex with a female
detainee;
l. (S)
Using military working dogs (without muzzles)
to
intimidate and frighten detainees, and in at least
one case biting and severely injuring a detainee;
m.
(S) Taking photographs of dead Iraqi detainees.
(ANNEXES 25 and 26)
7. (U) These findings are amply
supported by written
confessions provided by several of
the suspects, written
statements provided by detainees,
and witness statements.
In reaching my findings, I have
carefully considered the
pre-existing statements of the
following witnesses and
suspects (ANNEX 26):
a.
(U) SPC Jeremy Sivits, 372nd MP Company - Suspect
b.
(U) SPC Sabrina Harman, 372nd MP Company - Suspect
c.
(U) SGT Javal S. Davis, 372nd MP Company - Suspect
c.
(U) PFC Lynndie R. England, 372nd MP Company -
Suspect
d. (U) Adel Nakhla, Civilian Translator,
Titan Corp.,
Assigned to the 205th MI Brigade-
Suspect
e. (U) SPC Joseph M. Darby, 372nd MP
Company
f. (U) SGT Neil A. Wallin, 109th Area Support
Medical
Battalion
g (U) SGT Samuel Jefferson
Provance, 302nd MI
Battalion
h (U) Torin S.
Nelson, Contractor, Titan Corp.,
Assigned to the 205th
MI Brigade
j. (U) CPL Matthew Scott Bolanger,
372nd MP
Company
k. (U) SPC Mathew C. Wisdom,
372nd MP Company
l. (U) SSG Reuben R. Layton, Medic,
109th Medical
Detachment
m. (U) SPC John V.
Polak, 229th MP Company
8. (U) In addition, several
detainees also described the
following acts of abuse,
which under the circumstances, I
find credible based on
the clarity of their statements
and supporting evidence
provided by other witnesses
(ANNEX 26):
a. (U)
Breaking chemical lights and pouring the
phosphoric
liquid on detainees;
b. (U) Threatening detainees with
a charged 9mm pistol;
c. (U) Pouring cold water on
naked detainees;
d. (U) Beating detainees with a broom
handle and a
chair;
e. (U) Threatening male
detainees with rape;
f. (U) Allowing a military
police guard to stitch the
wound of a detainee who
was injured after being slammed
against the wall in
his cell;
g. (U) Sodomizing a detainee with a
chemical light and
perhaps a broom stick.
h.
(U) Using military working dogs to frighten and
intimidate detainees with threats of attack, and in one
instance actually biting a detainee.
9. (U) I have
carefully considered the statements provided
by the
following detainees, which under the circumstances
I
find credible based on the clarity of their statements
and supporting evidence provided by other witnesses:
a.
(U) Amjed Isail Waleed, Detainee # 151365
b. (U)
Hiadar Saber Abed Miktub-Aboodi, Detainee #
13077
c. (U) Huessin Mohssein Al-Zayiadi, Detainee # 19446
d. (U) Kasim Mehaddi Hilas, Detainee # 151108
e.
(U) Mohanded Juma Juma (sic), Detainee # 152307
f.
(U) Mustafa Jassim Mustafa, Detainee # 150542
g. (U)
Shalan Said Alsharoni, Detainee, # 150422
h. (U) Abd
Alwhab Youss, Detainee # 150425
i. (U) Asad
Hamza Hanfosh, Detainee # 152529
j. (U) Nori Samir
Gunbar Al-Yasseri, Detainee # 7787
k. (U) Thaar
Salman Dawod, Detainee # 150427
l. (U) Ameen
Sa'eed Al-Sheikh, Detainee # 151362
m. (U) Abdou
Hussain Saad Faleh, Detainee # 18470
(ANNEX 26)
10.
(U) I find that contrary to the provision of AR 190-8,
and the findings found in MG Ryder's Report, Military
Intelligence (MI) interrogators and Other US Government
Agency's (OGA) interrogators actively requested that MP
guards set physical and mental conditions for favorable
interrogation of witnesses. Contrary to the findings of
MG Ryder's Report, I find that personnel assigned to the
372nd MP Company, 800th MP Brigade were directed to
change facility procedures to "set the conditions" for
MI
interrogations. I find no direct evidence that
MP
personnel actually participated in those MI
interrogations. (ANNEXES 19, 21, 25, and 26).
11. (U) I
reach this finding based on the actual proven
abuse
that I find was inflicted on detainees and by the
following witness statements. (ANNEXES 25 and 26):
a. (U) SPC Sabrina Harman, 372nd MP Company, stated in
her sworn statement regarding the incident where a
detainee was placed on a box with wires attached to his
fingers, toes, and penis, "that her job was to keep
detainees awake." She stated that MI was talking to CPL
Grainer. She stated: "MI wanted to get them to talk.
It is Grainer and Frederick's job to do things for MI
and OGA to get these people to talk."
b. (U) SGT
Javal S. Davis, 372nd MP Company, stated in
his sworn
statement as follows: "I witnessed prisoners
in the MI
hold section, wing 1A being made to do various
things
that I would question morally. In Wing 1A we
were
told that they had different rules and different
SOP
for treatment. I never saw a set of rules or SOP
for
that section just word of mouth. The Soldier in
charge of 1A was Corporal Granier. He stated that the
Agents and MI Soldiers would ask him to do things, but
nothing was ever in writing he would complain (sic)."
When asked why the rules in 1A/1B were different than
the rest of the wings, SGT Davis stated: "The rest of
the wings are regular prisoners and 1A/B are Military
Intelligence (MI) holds." When asked why he did not
inform his chain of command about this abuse, SGT Davis
stated: " Because I assumed that if they were doing
things out of the ordinary or outside the guidelines,
someone would have said something. Also the wing
belongs to MI and it appeared MI personnel approved of
the abuse." SGT Davis also stated that he had heard MI
insinuate to the guards to abuse the inmates. When
asked what MI said he stated: "Loosen this guy up for
us." Make sure he has a bad night." "Make sure he gets
the treatment." He claimed these comments were made to
CPL Granier and SSG Frederick. Finally, SGT Davis
stated that (sic): "the MI staffs to my understanding
have been giving Granier compliments on the way he has
been handling the MI holds. Example being statements
like, "Good job, they're breaking down real fast. They
answer every question. They're giving out good
information, Finally, and Keep up the good work . Stuff
like that."
c. (U) SPC Jason Kennel, 372nd MP
Company, was asked
if he were present when any
detainees were abused. He
stated: "I saw them nude,
but MI would tell us to take
away their mattresses,
sheets, and clothes." He could
not recall who in MI
had instructed him to do this, but
commented that, "if
they wanted me to do that they
needed to give me
paperwork." He was later informed
that "we could not
do anything to embarrass the
prisoners."
d.
(U) Mr. Adel L. Nakhla, a US civilian contract
translator was questioned about several detainees
accused of rape. He observed (sic): "They (detainees)
were all naked, a bunch of people from MI, the MP were
there that night and the inmates were ordered by SGT
Granier and SGT Frederick ordered the guys while
questioning them to admit what they did. They made them
do strange exercises by sliding on their stomach, jump
up and down, throw water on them and made them some wet,
called them all kinds of names such as "gays" do they
like to make love to guys, then they handcuffed their
hands together and their legs with shackles and started
to stack them on top of each other by insuring that the
bottom guys penis will touch the guy on tops butt."
e. (U) SPC Neil A Wallin, 109th Area Support Medical
Battalion, a medic testified that: "Cell 1A was used to
house high priority detainees and cell 1B was used to
house the high risk or trouble making detainees. During
my tour at the prison I observed that when the male
detainees were first brought to the facility, some of
them were made to wear female underwear, which I think
was to somehow break them down."
12. (U) I find that
prior to its deployment to Iraq for
Operation Iraqi
Freedom, the 320th MP Battalion and the
372nd MP
Company had received no training in
detention/internee
operations. I also find that very
little instruction
or training was provided to MP
personnel on the
applicable rules of the Geneva
Convention Relative to
the Treatment of Prisoners of War,
FM 27-10, AR 190-8,
or FM 3-19.40. Moreover, I find that
few, if any,
copies of the Geneva Conventions were ever
made
available to MP personnel or detainees. (ANNEXES 21-
24, 33, and multiple witness statements)
13. (U) Another
obvious example of the Brigade Leadership
not
communicating with its Soldiers or ensuring their
tactical proficiency concerns the incident of detainee
abuse that occurred at Camp Bucca, Iraq, on May 12,
2003.
Soldiers from the 223rd MP Company reported to
the 800th
MP Brigade Command at Camp Bucca, that four
Military
Police Soldiers from the 320th MP Battalion
had abused a
number of detainees during inprocessing at
Camp Bucca.
An extensive CID investigation determined
that four
soldiers from the 320th MP Battalion had
kicked and
beaten these detainees following a transport
mission from
Talil Air Base. (ANNEXES 34 and 35)
14.
(U) Formal charges under the UCMJ were preferred
against these Soldiers and an Article-32 Investigation
conducted by LTC Gentry. He recommended a general court
martial for the four accused, which BG Karpinski
supported. Despite this documented abuse, there is no
evidence that BG Karpinski ever attempted to remind
800th
MP Soldiers of the requirements of the Geneva
Conventions
regarding detainee treatment or took any
steps to ensure
that such abuse was not repeated. Nor
is there any
evidence that LTC(P) Phillabaum, the
commander of the
Soldiers involved in the Camp Bucca
abuse incident, took
any initiative to ensure his
Soldiers were properly
trained regarding detainee
treatment. (ANNEXES 35 and
62)
RECOMMENDATIONS AS TO PART ONE OF THE INVESTIGATION:
1.
(U) Immediately deploy to the Iraq Theater an integrated
multi-discipline Mobile Training Team (MTT) comprised of
subject matter experts in internment/resettlement
operations, international and operational law,
information technology, facility management,
interrogation and intelligence gathering techniques,
chaplains, Arab cultural awareness, and medical
practices
as it pertains to I/R activities. This team
needs to
oversee and conduct comprehensive training in
all aspects
of detainee and confinement
operations.
2. (U) That all military police and military
intelligence
personnel involved in any aspect of
detainee operations
or interrogation operations in
CJTF-7, and subordinate
units, be immediately provided
with training by an
international/operational law
attorney on the specific
provisions of The Law of Land
Warfare FM 27-10,
specifically the Geneva Convention
Relative to the
Treatment of Prisoners of War, Enemy
Prisoners of War,
Retained Personnel, Civilian
Internees, and Other
Detainees, and AR 190-8.
3. (U)
That a single commander in CJTF-7 be responsible for
overall detainee operations throughout the Iraq Theater
of Operations. I also recommend that the Provost
Marshal
General of the Army assign a minimum of two (2)
subject
matter experts, one officer and one NCO, to
assist CJTF-7
in coordinating detainee operations.
4.
(U) That detention facility commanders and interrogation
facility commanders ensure that appropriate copies of
the
Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of
Prisoners
of War and notice of protections be made
available in
both English and the detainees' language
and be
prominently displayed in all detention
facilities.
Detainees with questions regarding their
treatment should
be given the full opportunity to read
the Convention.
5. (U) That each detention facility
commander and
interrogation facility commander publish
a complete and
comprehensive set of Standing Operating
Procedures (SOPs)
regarding treatment of detainees, and
that all personnel
be required to read the SOPs and
sign a document
indicating that they have read and
understand the SOPs.
6. (U) That in accordance with the
recommendations of MG
Ryder's Assessment Report, and my
findings and
recommendations in this investigation, all
units in the
Iraq Theater of Operations conducting
internment/confinement/detainment operations in support
of Operation Iraqi Freedom be OPCON for all purposes, to
include action under the UCMJ, to CJTF-7.
7. (U) Appoint
the C3, CJTF as the staff proponent for
detainee
operations in the Iraq Joint Operations Area
(JOA).
(MG Tom Miller, C3, CJTF-7, has been appointed by
COMCJTF-7).
8. (U) That an inquiry UP AR 381-10,
Procedure 15 be
conducted to determine the extent of
culpability of
Military Intelligence personnel,
assigned to the 205th MI
Brigade and the Joint
Interrogation and Debriefing Center
(JIDC) regarding
abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib (BCCF).
9. (U) That it
is critical that the proponent for detainee
operations
is assigned a dedicated Senior Judge Advocate,
with
specialized training and knowledge of international
and
operational law, to assist and advise on matters of
detainee operations.
FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
(PART TWO)
(U)
The Investigation inquire into detainee escapes
and
accountability lapses as reported by CJTF-7,
specifically
allegations concerning these events at the
Abu Ghraib
Prison:
REGARDING PART TWO OF THE
INVESTIGATION,
I MAKE THE FOLLOWING SPECIFIC
FINDINGS OF FACT:
1. The 800th MP Brigade was
responsible for theater-wide
Internment and
Resettlement (I/R) operations. (ANNEXES 45
and
95)
2. (U) The 320th MP Battalion, 800th MP Brigade was
tasked
with detainee operations at the Abu Ghraib
Prison Complex
during the time period covered in this
investigation.
(ANNEXES 41, 45, and 59)
3. (U) The
310th MP Battalion, 800th MP Brigade was tasked
with
detainee operations and Forward Operating Base (FOB)
Operations at the Camp Bucca Detention Facility until TOA
on
26 February 2004. (ANNEXES 41 and 52)
4. (U) The
744th MP Battalion, 800th MP Brigade was tasked
with
detainee operations and FOB Operations at the HVD
Detention Facility until TOA on 4 March 2004. (ANNEXES
41
and 55)
5. (U) The 530th MP Battalion, 800th MP
Brigade was tasked
with detainee operations and FOB
Operations at the MEK
holding facility until TOA on 15
March 2004. (ANNEXES 41 and
97)
6. (U) Detainee
operations include accountability, care,
and well being
of Enemy Prisoners of War, Retained Person,
Civilian
Detainees, and Other Detainees, as well as Iraqi
criminal prisoners. (ANNEX 22)
7. (U) The
accountability for detainees is doctrinally an
MP task
IAW FM 3-19.40. (ANNEX 22)
8. (U) There is a general
lack of knowledge,
implementation, and emphasis of
basic legal, regulatory,
doctrinal, and command
requirements within the 800th MP
Brigade and its
subordinate units. (Multiple witness
statements in
ANNEXES 45-91).
9.
(U) The handling of detainees and
criminal prisoners after
in-processing was inconsistent
from detention facility to
detention facility, compound
to compound, encampment to
encampment, and even shift to
shift throughout the 800th MP
Brigade AOR. (ANNEX
37)
10. (U) Camp Bucca, operated by the 310th MP
Battalion, had
a "Criminal Detainee In-Processing SOP"
and a "Training
Outline" for transferring and releasing
detainees, which
appears to have been followed.
(ANNEXES 38 and 52)
11. (U) Incoming and outgoing
detainees are being
documented in the National Detainee
Reporting System (NDRS)
and Biometric Automated Toolset
System (BATS) as required by
regulation at all
detention facilities. However, it is
underutilized and
often does not give a "real time" accurate
picture of
the detainee population due to untimely updating.
(ANNEX 56)
12. (U) There was a severe lapse in the
accountability of
detainees at the Abu Ghraib Prison
Complex. The 320th MP
Battalion used a self-created
"change sheet" to document the
transfer of a detainee
from one location to another. For
proper
accountability, it is imperative that these change
sheets be processed and the detainee manifest be updated
within 24 hours of movement. At Abu Ghraib, this
process
would often take as long as 4 days to complete.
This lag-
time resulted in inaccurate detainee
Internment Serial
Number (ISN) counts, gross
differences in the detainee
manifest and the actual
occupants of an individual compound,
and significant
confusion of the MP Soldiers. The 320th MP
Battalion
S-1, CPT Theresa Delbalso, and the S-3, MAJ David
DiNenna, explained that this breakdown was due to the
lack
of manpower to process change sheets in a timely
manner.
(ANNEXES 39 and 98)
13. (U) The 320th
Battalion TACSOP requires detainee
accountability at
least 4 times daily at Abu Ghraib.
However, a detailed
review of their operational journals
revealed that
these accounts were often not done or not
documented by
the unit. Additionally, there is no indication
that
accounting errors or the loss of a detainee in the
accounting process triggered any immediate corrective
action
by the Battalion TOC. (ANNEX 44)
14. (U)
There is a lack of standardization in the way the
320th
MP Battalion conducted physical counts of their
detainees. Each compound within a given encampment did
their headcounts differently. Some compounds had
detainees
line up in lines of 10, some had them sit in
rows, and some
moved all the detainees to one end of
the compound and
counted them as they passed to the
other end of the
compound. (ANNEX 98)
15. (U) FM
3-19.40 outlines the need for 2 roll calls (100%
ISN
band checks) per day. The 320th MP Battalion did this
check only 2 times per week. Due to the lack of
real-time
updates to the system, these checks were
regularly
inaccurate. (ANNEXES 22 and 98)
16. (U)
The 800th MP Brigade and subordinate units
adopted
non-doctrinal terms such as "band checks,"
"roll-ups," and
"call-ups," which contributed to the
lapses in
accountability and confusion at the soldier
level. (ANNEXES
63, 88, and 98)
17. (U) Operational
journals at the various compounds and
the 320th
Battalion TOC contained numerous unprofessional
entries
and flippant comments, which highlighted the lack of
discipline within the unit. There was no indication
that
the journals were ever reviewed by anyone in their
chain of
command. (ANNEX 37)
18. (U) Accountability
SOPs were not fully developed and
standing TACSOPs were
widely ignored. Any SOPs that did
exist were not
trained on, and were never distributed to the
lowest
level. Most procedures were shelved at the unit TOC,
rather than at the subordinate units and guards mount
sites.
(ANNEXES 44, 67, 71, and 85)
19. (U)
Accountability and facility operations SOPs lacked
specificity, implementation measures, and a system of
checks
and balances to ensure compliance. (ANNEXES 76
and 82)
20. (U) Basic Army Doctrine was not widely
referenced or
utilized to develop the accountability
practices throughout
the 800th MP Brigade's subordinate
units. Daily processing,
accountability, and detainee
care appears to have been made
up as the operations
developed with reliance on, and
guidance from, junior
members of the unit who had civilian
corrections
experience. (ANNEX 21)
21. (U) Soldiers were poorly
prepared and untrained to
conduct I/R operations prior
to deployment, at the
mobilization site, upon arrival
in theater, and throughout
their mission. (ANNEXES 62,
63, and 69)
22. (U) The documentation provided to this
investigation
identified 27 escapes or attempted
escapes from the
detention facilities throughout the
800th MP Brigade's AOR.
Based on my assessment and
detailed analysis of the
substandard accountability
process maintained by the 800th
MP Brigade, it is
highly likely that there were several more
unreported
cases of escape that were probably "written off"
as
administrative errors or otherwise undocumented. 1LT
Lewis Raeder, Platoon Leader, 372nd MP Company, reported
knowing about at least two additional escapes (one from
a
work detail and one from a window) from Abu Ghraib
(BCCF)
that were not documented. LTC Dennis McGlone,
Commander,
744th MP Battalion, detailed the escape of
one detainee at
the High Value Detainee Facility who
went to the latrine and
then outran the guards and
escaped. Lastly, BG Janis
Karpinski, Commander, 800th
MP Brigade, stated that there
were more than 32 escapes
from her holding facilities, which
does not match the
number derived from the investigation
materials.
(ANNEXES 5-10, 45, 55, and 71)
23. (U) The Abu
Ghraib and Camp Bucca detention facilities
are
significantly over their intended maximum capacity while
the guard force is undermanned and under resourced.
This
imbalance has contributed to the poor living
conditions,
escapes, and accountability lapses at the
various
facilities. The overcrowding of the facilities
also limits
the ability to identify and segregate
leaders in the
detainee population who may be
organizing escapes and riots
within the facility.
(ANNEXES 6, 22, and 92)
24. (U) The screening,
processing, and release of detainees
who should not be
in custody takes too long and contributes
to the
overcrowding and unrest in the detention facilities.
There are currently three separate release mechanisms in
the
theater-wide internment operations. First, the
apprehending
unit can release a detainee if there is a
determination that
their continued detention is not
warranted. Secondly, a
criminal detainee can be
released after it has been
determined that the detainee
has no intelligence value, and
that their release would
not be detrimental to society. BG
Karpinski had
signature authority to release detainees in
this second
category. Lastly, detainees accused of
committing
"Crimes Against the Coalition," who are held
throughout
the separate facilities in the CJTF-7 AOR, can be
released upon a determination that they are of no
intelligence value and no longer pose a significant
threat
to Coalition Forces. The release process for
this category
of detainee is a screening by the local
US Forces Magistrate
Cell and a review by a Detainee
Release Board consisting of
BG Karpinski, COL Marc
Warren, SJA, CJTF-7, and MG Barbara
Fast, C-2, CJTF-7.
MG Fast is the "Detainee Release
Authority" for
detainees being held for committing crimes
against the
coalition. According to BG Karpinski, this
category of
detainee makes up more than 60% of the total
detainee
population, and is the fastest growing category.
However, MG Fast, according to BG Karpinski, routinely
denied the board's recommendations to release detainees
in
this category who were no longer deemed a threat and
clearly
met the requirements for release. According to
BG
Karpinski, the extremely slow and ineffective
release
process has significantly contributed to the
overcrowding of
the facilities. (ANNEXES 40, 45, and
46)
25. (U) After Action Reviews (AARs) are not routinely
being
conducted after an escape or other serious
incident. No
lessons learned seem to have been
disseminated to
subordinate units to enable corrective
action at the lowest
level. The Investigation Team
requested copies of AARs, and
none were provided.
(Multiple Witness Statements)
26. (U) Lessons learned
(i.e. Findings and Recommendations
from various 15-6
Investigations concerning escapes and
accountability
lapses) were rubber stamped as approved and
ordered
implemented by BG Karpinski. There is no evidence
that
the majority of her orders directing the implementation
of substantive changes were ever acted upon.
Additionally,
there was no follow-up by the command to
verify the
corrective actions were taken. Had the
findings and
recommendations contained within their own
investigations
been analyzed and actually implemented
by BG Karpinski, many
of the subsequent escapes,
accountability lapses, and cases
of abuse may have been
prevented. (ANNEXES 5-10)
27. (U) The perimeter lighting
around Abu Ghraib and the
detention facility at Camp
Bucca is inadequate and needs to
be improved to
illuminate dark areas that have routinely
become
avenues of escape. (ANNEX 6)
28. (U) Neither the camp
rules nor the provisions of the
Geneva Conventions are
posted in English or in the language
of the detainees
at any of the detention facilities in the
800th MP
Brigade's AOR, even after several investigations
had
annotated the lack of this critical requirement.
(Multiple Witness Statements and the Personal
Observations
of the Investigation Team)
29. (U) The
Iraqi guards at Abu Ghraib BCCF) demonstrate
questionable work ethics and loyalties, and are a
potentially dangerous contingent within the Hard-Site.
These guards have furnished the Iraqi criminal inmates
with
contraband, weapons, and information.
Additionally, they
have facilitated the escape of at
least one detainee.
(ANNEX 8 and 26-SPC Polak's
Statement)
30. (U) In general, US civilian contract
personnel (Titan
Corporation, CACI, etc.), third
country nationals, and local
contractors do not appear
to be properly supervised within
the detention facility
at Abu Ghraib. During our on-site
inspection, they
wandered about with too much unsupervised
free access
in the detainee area. Having civilians in
various
outfits (civilian and DCUs) in and about the
detainee
area causes confusion and may have contributed to
the
difficulties in the accountability process and with
detecting escapes. (ANNEX 51, Multiple Witness
Statements,
and the Personal Observations of the
Investigation Team)
31. (U) SGM Marc Emerson, Operations
SGM, 320th MP
Battalion, contended that the Detainee
Rules of Engagement
(DROE) and the general principles
of the Geneva Convention
were briefed at every guard
mount and shift change on Abu
Ghraib. However, none of
our witnesses, nor our personal
observations, support
his contention. I find that SGM
Emerson was not a
credible witness. (ANNEXES 45, 80, and
the Personal
Observations of the Investigation Team)
32. (U) Several
interviewees insisted that the MP and MI
Soldiers at
Abu Ghraib (BCCF) received regular training on
the
basics of detainee operations; however, they have been
unable to produce any verifying documentation, sign-in
rosters, or soldiers who can recall the content of this
training. (ANNEXES 59, 80, and the Absence of any
Training
Records)
33. (S/NF) The various detention
facilities operated by
the 800th MP Brigade have
routinely held persons brought to
them by Other
Government Agencies (OGAs) without accounting
for them,
knowing their identities, or even the reason for
their
detention. The Joint Interrogation and Debriefing
Center (JIDC) at Abu Ghraib called these detainees
"ghost
detainees." On at least one occasion, the 320th
MP
Battalion at Abu Ghraib held a handful of "ghost
detainees"
(6-8) for OGAs that they moved around within
the facility to
hide them from a visiting International
Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) survey team. This
maneuver was deceptive,
contrary to Army Doctrine, and
in violation of international
law. (ANNEX 53)
34.
(U) The following riots, escapes, and shootings have
been documented and reported to this Investigation Team.
Although there is no data from other missions of similar
size and duration to compare the number of escapes with,
the
most significant factors derived from these reports
are
twofold. First, investigations and SIRs lacked
critical
data needed to evaluate the details of each
incident.
Second, each investigation seems to have
pointed to the same
types of deficiencies; however,
little to nothing was done
to correct the problems and
to implement the recommendations
as was ordered by BG
Karpinski, nor was there any command
emphasis to ensure
these deficiencies were corrected:
a. (U) 4 June
03- This escape was mentioned in the 15-6
Investigation covering the 13 June 03 escape, recapture,
and
shootings of detainees at Camp Vigilant (320th
MP
Battalion). However, no investigation or
additional
information was provided as requested
by this investigation
team. (ANNEX 7)
b.
(U) 9 June 03- Riot and shootings of five detainees at
Camp Cropper. (115th MP Battalion) Several detainees
allegedly rioted after a detainee was subdued by MPs of
the
115th MP Battalion after striking a guard in
compound B of
Camp Cropper. A 15-6 investigation
by 1LT Magowan (115th
MP Battalion, Platoon
Leader) concluded that a detainee had
acted up and
hit an MP. After being subdued, one of the MPs
took off his DCU top and flexed his muscles to the
detainees, which further escalated the riot. The MPs
were
overwhelmed and the guards fired lethal
rounds to protect
the life of the compound MPs,
whereby 5 detainees were
wounded. Contributing
factors were poor communications, no
clear chain
of command, facility-obstructed views of posted
guards, the QRF did not have non-lethal equipment, and
the
SOP was inadequate and outdated. (ANNEX 5)
c. (U) 12 June 03- Escape and recapture of detainee
#8399,
escape and shooting of detainee # 7166, and
attempted escape
of an unidentified detainee from
Camp Cropper Holding Area
(115th MP Battalion).
Several detainees allegedly made
their escape in
the nighttime hours prior to 0300. A 15-6
investigation by CPT Wendlandt (115th MP Battalion, S-2)
concluded that the detainees allegedly escaped by
crawling
under the wire at a location with
inadequate lighting. One
detainee was stopped
prior to escape. An MP of the 115th MP
Battalion
search team recaptured detainee # 8399, and
detainee # 7166 was shot and killed by a Soldier during
the
recapture process. Contributing factors were
overcrowding,
poor lighting, and the nature of the
hardened criminal
detainees at that location. It
is of particular note that
the command was
informed at least 24 hours in advance of the
upcoming escape attempt and started doing amplified
announcements in Arabic stating the camp rules. The
investigation pointed out that rules and guidelines were
not
posted in the camps in the detainees' native
languages.
(ANNEX 6)
d. (U) 13 June 03-
Escape and recapture of detainee # 8968
and the
shooting of eight detainees at Abu Ghraib (BCCF)
(320th MP Battalion). Several detainees allegedly
attempted to escape at about 1400 hours from the Camp
Vigilant Compound, Abu Ghraib (BCCF). A 15-6
investigation
by CPT Wyks (400th MP Battalion,
S-1) concluded that the
detainee allegedly escaped
by sliding under the wire while
the tower guard
was turned in the other direction. This
detainee
was subsequently apprehended by the QRF. At about
1600 the same day, 30-40 detainees rioted and pelted
three
interior MP guards with rocks. One guard
was injured and
the tower guards fired lethal
rounds at the rioters injuring
7 and killing 1
detainee. (ANNEX 7)
e. (U) 05 November 03- Escape
of detainees # 9877 and #
10739 from Abu Ghraib
(320th MP Battalion). Several
detainees
allegedly escaped at 0345 from the Hard-Site, Abu
Ghraib (BCCF). An SIR was initiated by SPC Warner (320th
MP
Battalion, S-3 RTO). The SIR indicated that 2
criminal
prisoners escaped through their cell
window in tier 3A of
the Hard-Site. No
information on findings, contributing
factors, or
corrective action has been provided to this
investigation team. (ANNEX 11)
f. (U) 07 November
03- Escape of detainee # 14239 from Abu
Ghraib
(320th MP Battalion). A detainee allegedly escaped
at 1330 from Compound 2 of the Ganci Encampment, Abu
Ghraib
(BCCF). An SIR was initiated by SSG Hydro
(320th MP
Battalion, S-3 Asst. NCOIC). The SIR
indicated that a
detainee escaped from the North
end of the compound and was
discovered missing
during distribution of the noon meal, but
there is
no method of escape listed in the SIR. No
information on findings, contributing factors, or
corrective
action has been provided to this
investigation team. (ANNEX
12)
g. (U) 08
November 03- Escape of detainees # 115089, #
151623, # 151624, # 116734, # 116735, and # 116738 from
Abu
Ghraib (320th MP Battalion). Several
detainees allegedly
escaped at 2022 from Compound
8 of the Ganci encampment, Abu
Ghraib. An SIR was
initiated by MAJ DiNenna (320th MP
Battalion,
S-3). The SIR indicated that 5-6 prisoners
escaped from the North end of the compound, but there is
no
method of escape listed in the SIR. No
information on
findings, contributing factors, or
corrective action has
been provided to this
investigation team. (ANNEX 13)
h. (U) 24 November
03- Riot and shooting of 12 detainees #
150216,
#150894, #153096, 153165, #153169, #116361, #153399,
#20257, #150348, #152616, #116146, and #152156 at Abu
Ghraib
(320th MP Battalion). Several detainees
allegedly began to
riot at about 1300 in all of
the compounds at the Ganci
encampment. This
resulted in the shooting deaths of 3
detainees, 9
wounded detainees, and 9 injured US Soldiers.
A
15-6 investigation by COL Bruce Falcone (220th MP
Brigade,
Deputy Commander) concluded that the
detainees rioted in
protest of their living
conditions, that the riot turned
violent, the use
of non-lethal force was ineffective, and,
after
the 320th MP Battalion CDR executed "Golden Spike,"
the emergency containment plan, the use of deadly force
was
authorized. Contributing factors were lack of
comprehensive
training of guards, poor or
non-existent SOPs, no formal
guard-mount conducted
prior to shift, no rehearsals or
ongoing training,
the mix of less than lethal rounds with
lethal
rounds in weapons, no AARs being conducted after
incidents, ROE not posted and not understood,
overcrowding,
uniforms not standardized, and poor
communication between
the command and Soldiers.
(ANNEX 8)
i. (U) 24 November 03- Shooting of
detainee at Abu Ghraib
(320th MP Battalion). A
detainee allegedly had a pistol in
his cell and
around 1830 an extraction team shot him with
less
than lethal and lethal rounds in the process of
recovering the weapon. A 15-6 investigation by COL
Bruce
Falcone (220th Brigade, Deputy Commander)
concluded that one
of the detainees in tier 1A of
the Hard Site had gotten a
pistol and a couple of
knives from an Iraqi Guard working in
the
encampment. Immediately upon receipt of this
information, an ad-hoc extraction team consisting of MP
and
MI personnel conducted what they called a
routine cell
search, which resulted in the
shooting of an MP and the
detainee. Contributing
factors were a corrupt Iraqi Guard,
inadequate
SOPs, the Detention ROE in place at the time was
ineffective due to the numerous levels of authorization
needed for use of lethal force, poorly trained MPs,
unclear
lanes of responsibility, and ambiguous
relationship between
the MI and MP assets. (ANNEX
8)
j. (U) 13 December 03- Shooting by non-lethal
means into
crowd at Abu Ghraib (320th MP
Battalion). Several
detainees allegedly got into
a detainee-on-detainee fight
around 1030 in
Compound 8 of the Ganci encampment, Abu
Ghraib.
An SIR was initiated by SSG Matash (320th MP
Battalion, S-3 Section). The SIR indicated that there was
a
fight in the compound and the MPs used a
non-lethal crowd-
dispersing round to break up the
fight, which was
successful. No information on
findings, contributing
factors, or corrective
action has been provided to this
investigation
team. (ANNEX 14)
k. (U) 13 December 03- Shooting
by non-lethal means into
crowd at Abu Ghraib
(320th MP Battalion). Several
detainees
allegedly got into a detainee-on-detainee fight
around 1120 in Compound 2 of the Ganci encampment, Abu
Ghraib. An SIR was initiated by SSG Matash (320th MP
Battalion, S-3 Section). The SIR indicated that there was
a
fight in the compound and the MPs used two
non-lethal shots
to disperse the crowd, which was
successful. No information
on findings,
contributing factors, or corrective action has
been provided to this investigation team. (ANNEX 15)
l. (U) 13 December 03- Shooting by non-lethal means
into
crowd at Abu Ghraib (320th MP Battalion).
Approximately 30-
40 detainees allegedly got into
a detainee-on-detainee fight
around 1642 in
Compound 3 of the Ganci encampment, Abu
Ghraib
(BCCF). An SIR was initiated by SSG Matash (320th MP
Battalion, S-3 Section). The SIR indicates that there was
a
fight in the compound and the MPs used a
non-lethal crowd-
dispersing round to break up the
fight, which was
successful. No information on
findings, contributing
factors, or corrective
action has been provided to this
investigation
team. (ANNEX 16)
m. (U) 17 December 03- Shooting
by non-lethal means of
detainee from Abu Ghraib
(320th MP Battalion). Several
detainees
allegedly assaulted an MP at 1459 inside the Ganci
Encampment, Abu Ghraib (BCCF). An SIR was initiated by
SSG
Matash (320th MP BRIGADE, S-3 Section). The
SIR indicated
that three detainees assaulted an
MP, which resulted in the
use of a non-lethal shot
that calmed the situation. No
information on
findings, contributing factors, or corrective
action has been provided to this investigation team.
(ANNEX
17)
n. (U) 07 January 04- Escape
of detainee #115032 from Camp
Bucca (310th MP
Battalion). A detainee allegedly escaped
between
the hours of 0445 and 0640 from Compound 12, of Camp
Bucca. Investigation by CPT Kaires (310th MP Battalion
S-3)
and CPT Holsombeck (724th MP Battalion S-3)
concluded that
the detainee escaped through an
undetected weakness in the
wire. Contributing
factors were inexperienced guards,
lapses in
accountability, complacency, lack of leadership
presence, poor visibility, and lack of clear and concise
communication between the guards and the leadership.
(ANNEX
9)
o. (U) 12 January 04- Escape of
Detainees #115314 and
#109950 as well as the
escape and recapture of 5 unknown
detainees at the
Camp Bucca Detention Facility (310th MP
Battalion). Several detainees allegedly escaped
around
0300 from Compound 12, of Camp Bucca. An
AR 15-6
Investigation by LTC Leigh Coulter (800th
MP Brigade, OIC
Camp Arifjan Detachment) concluded
that three of the
detainees escaped through the
front holding cell during
conditions of limited
visibility due to fog. One of the
detainees was
noticed, shot with a non-lethal round, and
returned to his holding compound. That same night, 4
detainees exited through the wire on the South side of
the
camp and were seen and apprehended by the QRF.
Contributing
factors were the lack of a
coordinated effort for
emplacement of MPs during
implementation of the fog plan,
overcrowding, and
poor communications. (ANNEX 10)
p. (U) 14 January
04- Escape of detainee #12436 and
missing Iraqi
guard from Hard-Site, Abu Ghraib (320th MP
Battalion). A detainee allegedly escaped at 1335 from
the
Hard Site at Abu Ghraib (BCCF). An SIR was
initiated by SSG
Hydro (320th MP Battalion, S-3
Asst. NCOIC). The SIR
indicates that an Iraqi
guard assisted a detainee to escape
by signing him
out on a work detail and disappearing with
him.
At the time of the second SIR, neither missing person
had been located. No information on findings,
contributing
factors, or corrective action has
been provided to this
investigation team. (ANNEX
99)
q. (U) 26 January 04- Escape of detainees #s
115236,
116272, and 151933 from Camp Bucca (310th
MP Battalion).
Several Detainees allegedly escaped
between the hours of
0440 and 0700 during a period
of intense fog. Investigation
by CPT Kaires
(310th MP Battalion S-3) concluded that the
detainees crawled under a fence when visibility was only
10-
15 meters due to fog. Contributing factors
were the limited
visibility (darkness under foggy
conditions), lack of proper
accountability
reporting, inadequate number of guards,
commencement of detainee feeding during low visibility
operations, and poorly rested MPs. (ANNEX 18)
36. (U) As
I have previously indicated, this investigation
determined that there was virtually a complete lack of
detailed SOPs at any of the detention facilities.
Moreover, despite the fact that there were numerous
reported escapes at detention facilities throughout Iraq
(in excess of 35), AR 15-6 Investigations following
these
escapes were simply forgotten or ignored by the
Brigade
Commander with no dissemination to other
facilities.
After-Action Reports and Lessons Learned,
if done at all,
remained at individual facilities and
were not shared
among other commanders or soldiers
throughout the
Brigade. The Command never issued
standard TTPs for
handling escape incidents. (ANNEXES
5-10, Multiple
Witness Statements, and the Personal
Observations of the
Investigation Team)
RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING PART TWO OF THE INVESTIGATION:
1. (U) ANNEX 100 of this investigation contains a
detailed
and referenced series of recommendations
for improving the
detainee accountability practices
throughout the OIF area of
operations.
2. (U)
Accountability practices throughout any particular
detention facility must be standardized and in
accordance
with applicable regulations and
international law.
3. (U) The NDRS and BATS accounting
systems must be
expanded and used to their fullest
extent to facilitate real
time updating when
detainees are moved and or transferred
from one
location to another.
4. (U) "Change sheets," or their
doctrinal equivalent must
be immediately processed
and updated into the system to
ensure accurate
accountability. The detainee roll call or
ISN
counts must match the manifest provided to the compound
guards to ensure proper accountability of detainees.
5.
(U) Develop, staff, and implement comprehensive and
detailed SOPs utilizing the lessons learned from this
investigation as well as any previous findings,
recommendations, and reports.
6. (U) SOPs must be
written, disseminated, trained on, and
understood at
the lowest level.
7. (U) Iraqi criminal prisoners must
be held in separate
facilities from any other
category of detainee.
8. (U) All of the compounds
should be wired into the
master manifest whereby MP
Soldiers can account for their
detainees in real
time and without waiting for their change
sheets to
be processed. This would also have the change
sheet
serve as a way to check up on the accuracy of the
manifest as updated by each compound. The BATS and NDRS
system can be utilized for this function.
9. (U)
Accountability lapses, escapes, and disturbances
within the detainment facilities must be immediately
reported through both the operational and administrative
Chain of Command via a Serious Incident Report (SIR).
The
SIRs must then be tracked and followed by daily
SITREPs
until the situation is resolved.
10.
(U) Detention Rules of Engagement (DROE), Interrogation
Rules of Engagement (IROE), and the principles of the
Geneva
Conventions need to be briefed at every shift
change and
guard mount.
11. (U) AARs must be
conducted after serious incidents at
any given
facility. The observations and corrective actions
that develop from the AARs must be analyzed by the
respective MP Battalion S-3 section, developed into a
plan
of action, shared with the other facilities,
and implemented
as a matter of policy.
12. (U)
There must be significant structural improvements
at
each of the detention facilities. The needed changes
include significant enhancement of perimeter lighting,
additional chain link fencing, staking down of all
concertina wire, hard site development, and expansion of
Abu
Ghraib (BCCF) .
13. (U) The Geneva
Conventions and the facility rules must
be
prominently displayed in English and the language of the
detainees at each compound and encampment at every
detention
facility IAW AR 190-8.
14. (U)
Further restrict US civilians and other
contractors'
access throughout the facility. Contractors
and
civilians must be in an authorized and easily
identifiable uniform to be more easily distinguished
from
the masses of detainees in civilian clothes.
15. (U) Facilities must have a stop movement/transfer
period of at least 1 hour prior to every 100% detainee
roll
call and ISN counts to ensure accurate
accountability.
16. (U) The method for doing head
counts of detainees
within a given compound must be
standardized.
17. (U) Those military units conducting
I/R operations must
know of, train on, and
constantly reference the applicable
Army Doctrine
and CJTF command policies. The references
provided
in this report cover nearly every deficiency I have
enumerated. Although they do not, and cannot, make up
for
leadership shortfalls, all soldiers, at all
levels, can use
them to maintain standardized
operating procedures and
efficient accountability
practices.
FINDINGS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
(PART
THREE)
(U) Investigate the training, standards,
employment, command
policies, internal procedures, and
command climate in the
800th MP Brigade, as
appropriate:
Pursuant to Part Three of the Investigation,
select members
of the Investigation team (Primarily COL
La Fate and I)
personally interviewed the following
witnesses:
1. (U) BG Janis Karpinski, Commander, 800th MP Brigade
2. (U) COL Thomas Pappas, Commander, 205th MI
Brigade
3. (U) COL Ralph Sabatino, CFLCC Judge
Advocate, CPA
Ministry of Justice (Interviewed by
COL Richard Gordon,
CFLCC SJA)
4. (U) LTC Gary W. Maddocks, S-5 and Executive Officer,
800th MP Brigade
5. (U) LTC James O'Hare, Command Judge Advocate,
800th MP
Brigade
6. (U) LTC Robert P. Walters Jr.,
Commander, 165th MI
Battalion (Tactical
Exploitation)
7. (U) LTC James D. Edwards, Commander, 202nd MI Battalion
8. (U) LTC Vincent Montera,
Commander, 310th MP Battalion
9. (U) LTC Steve
Jordan, former Director, Joint
Interrogation and
Debriefing Center/LNO to the 205th MI
Brigade
10. (U) LTC Leigh A. Coulter, Commander, 724th MP
Battalion
and OIC Arifjan Detachment, 800th MP
Brigade
11. (U) LTC Dennis McGlone, Commander, 744th MP Battalion
12. (U) MAJ David Hinzman, S-1, 800th MP Brigade
13. (U) MAJ William D. Proietto, Deputy CJA,
800th MP
Brigade
14. (U) MAJ Stacy L. Garrity, S-1
(FWD), 800th MP Brigade
15. (U) MAJ David W. DiNenna,
S-3, 320th MP Battalion
16. (U) MAJ Michael Sheridan,
XO, 320th MP Battalion
17. (U) MAJ Anthony Cavallaro,
S-3, 800th MP Brigade
18. (U) CPT Marc C. Hale,
Commander, 670th MP Company
19. (U) CPT Donald Reese,
Commander, 372nd MP Company
20. (U) CPT Darren Hampton,
Assistant S-3, 320th MP
Battalion
21. (U) CPT John
Kaires, S-3, 310th MP Battalion
22. (U) CPT Ed
Diamantis, S-2, 800th MP Brigade
23. (U) CPT Marc C. Hale, Commander, 670th MP Company
24. (U) CPT Donald
Reese, Commander, 372nd MP Company
25. (U) CPT James
G. Jones, Commander, 229th MP Company
26. (U) CPT
Michael Anthony Mastrangelo, Jr., Commander,
310th
MP Company
27. (U) CPT Lawrence Bush, IG, 800th MP Brigade
28. (U) 1LT Lewis C. Raeder, Platoon Leader, 372nd MP
Company
29. (U) 1LT Elvis Mabry,
Aide-de-camp to Brigade Commander,
800th MP Brigade
30. (U) 1LT Warren E. Ford, II, Commander, HHC 320th MP
Battalion
31. (U) 2LT David O. Sutton, Platoon Leader,
229th MP
Company
32. (U) CW2 Edward J. Rivas, 205th MI Brigade
33. (U) CSM Joseph P. Arrington, Command Sergeant Major,
320th MP Battalion
34.
(U) SGM Pascual Cartagena, Acting Command Sergeant
Major, 800th MP Brigade
35. (U) CSM Timothy L. Woodcock, Command Sergeant Major,
310th MP Battalion
36. (U) 1SG Dawn J. Rippelmeyer, First
Sergeant, 977th MP
Company
37. (U) SGM Mark Emerson, Operations SGM, 320th MP
Battalion
38.
(U) MSG Brian G. Lipinski, First Sergeant, 372nd
MP
Company
39. (U) MSG Andrew J. Lombardo,
Operations Sergeant, 310th
MP Battalion
40. (U) SFC Daryl J. Plude, Platoon Sergeant, 229th MP
Company
41. (U) SFC Shannon K. Snider, Platoon SGT, 372nd MP
Company
42. (U) SFC Keith A. Comer, 372nd
MP Company
43. (U) SSG Robert Elliot, Squad Leader,
372nd MP Company
44. (U) SSG Santos A. Cardona, Army
Dog Handler, 42nd MP
Detachment, 16th MP Brigade
45. (U) SGT Michael Smith, Army Dog Handler, 523rd MP
Detachment, 937th Engineer Group
46. (U) MA1 William J.
Kimbro, USN Dog Handler, NAS Signal
and Canine
Unit
47. (U) Mr. Steve Stephanowicz, US civilian
Contract
Interrogator, CACI, 205th MI Brigade
48. (U) Mr. John Israel, US civilian Contract
Interpreter,
Titan Corporation, 205th MI Brigade
(ANNEXES 45-91)
REGARDING PART THREE OF THE
INVESTIGATION, I MAKE THE
FOLLOWING SPECIFIC
FINDINGS OF FACT:
1. (U) I find that BG Janis Karpinski
took command of the
800th MP Brigade on 30 June 2003
from BG Paul Hill. BG
Karpinski has remained in
command since that date. The
800th MP Brigade is
comprised of eight MP battalions in
the Iraqi TOR:
115th MP Battalion, 310th MP Battalion,
320th MP
Battalion, 324th MP Battalion, 400th MP
Battalion,
530th MP Battalion, 724th MP Battalion, and
744th MP
Battalion.
(ANNEXES 41 and 45)
2. (U) Prior to BG
Karpinski taking command, members of the
800th MP
Brigade believed they would be allowed to go
home when
all the detainees were released from the Camp
Bucca
Theater Internment Facility following the cessation
of
major ground combat on 1 May 2003. At one point,
approximately 7,000 to 8,000 detainees were held at Camp
Bucca. Through Article-5 Tribunals and a screening
process, several thousand detainees were released. Many
in the command believed they would go home when the
detainees were released. In late May-early June 2003
the
800th MP Brigade was given a new mission to manage
the
Iraqi penal system and several detention centers.
This
new mission meant Soldiers would not redeploy to
CONUS
when anticipated. Morale suffered, and over the
next few
months there did not appear to have been any
attempt by
the Command to mitigate this morale problem.
(ANNEXES 45
and 96)
3. (U) There is abundant
evidence in the statements of
numerous witnesses that
soldiers throughout the 800th MP
Brigade were not
proficient in their basic MOS skills,
particularly
regarding internment/resettlement
operations.
Moreover, there is no evidence that the
command,
although aware of these deficiencies, attempted
to
correct them in any systemic manner other than ad hoc
training by individuals with civilian corrections
experience. (Multiple Witness Statements and the
Personal Observations of the Investigation Team)
4. (U) I
find that the 800th MP Brigade was not adequately
trained for a mission that included operating a prison
or
penal institution at Abu Ghraib Prison Complex. As
the
Ryder Assessment found, I also concur that units of
the
800th MP Brigade did not receive
corrections-specific
training during their mobilization
period. MP units did
not receive pinpoint assignments
prior to mobilization
and during the post mobilization
training, and thus could
not train for specific
missions. The training that was
accomplished at the
mobilization sites were developed and
implemented at
the company level with little or no
direction or
supervision at the Battalion and Brigade
levels, and
consisted primarily of common tasks and law
enforcement
training. However, I found no evidence that
the
Command, although aware of this deficiency, ever
requested specific corrections training from the
Commandant of the Military Police School, the US Army
Confinement Facility at Mannheim, Germany, the Provost
Marshal General of the Army, or the US Army Disciplinary
Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. (ANNEXES 19 and
76)
5. (U) I find that without adequate training for a
civilian
internee detention mission, Brigade personnel
relied
heavily on individuals within the Brigade who
had
civilian corrections experience, including many
who
worked as prison guards or corrections officials in
their
civilian jobs. Almost every witness we
interviewed had
no familiarity with the provisions of
AR 190-8 or FM 3-
19.40. It does not appear that a
Mission Essential Task
List (METL) based on in-theater
missions was ever
developed nor was a training plan
implemented throughout
the Brigade. (ANNEXES 21, 22,
67, and 81)
6. (U) I also find, as did MG Ryder's Team,
that the 800th
MP Brigade as a whole, was understrength
for the mission
for which it was tasked. Army Doctrine
dictates that an
I/R Brigade can be organized with
between 7 and 21
battalions, and that the average
battalion size element
should be able to handle
approximately 4000 detainees at
a time. This
investigation indicates that BG Karpinski
and her staff
did a poor job allocating resources
throughout the Iraq
JOA. Abu Ghraib (BCCF) normally
housed between 6000
and 7000 detainees, yet it was
operated by only one
battalion. In contrast, the HVD
Facility maintains
only about 100 detainees, and is also
run by an entire
battalion. (ANNEXES 19, 22, and 96)
7. (U) Reserve
Component units do not have an individual
replacement
system to mitigate medical or other losses.
Over time,
the 800th MP Brigade clearly suffered from
personnel
shortages through release from active duty
(REFRAD)
actions, medical evacuation, and demobilization.
In
addition to being severely undermanned, the quality of
life for Soldiers assigned to Abu Ghraib (BCCF) was
extremely poor. There was no DFAC, PX, barbershop, or
MWR facilities. There were numerous mortar attacks,
random rifle and RPG attacks, and a serious threat to
Soldiers and detainees in the facility. The prison
complex was also severely overcrowded and the Brigade
lacked adequate resources and personnel to resolve
serious logistical problems. Finally, because of past
associations and familiarity of Soldiers within the
Brigade, it appears that friendship often took
precedence
over appropriate leader and subordinate
relationships.
(ANNEX 101, Multiple Witness Statements,
and the Personal
Observations of the Investigation
Team)
8. (U) With respect to the 800th MP Brigade mission
at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF), I find that there was clear
friction and
lack of effective communication between
the Commander,
205th MI Brigade, who controlled FOB Abu
Ghraib (BCCF)
after 19 November 2003, and the
Commander, 800th MP
Brigade, who controlled detainee
operations inside the
FOB. There was no clear
delineation of responsibility
between commands, little
coordination at the command
level, and no integration
of the two functions.
Coordination occurred at the
lowest possible levels with
little oversight by
commanders. (ANNEXES 31, 45, and 46)
9. (U) I find that
this ambiguous command relationship was
exacerbated by
a CJTF-7 Fragmentary Order (FRAGO) 1108
issued on 19
November 2003. Paragraph 3.C.8, Assignment
of 205th MI
Brigade Commander's Responsibilities for the
Baghdad
Central Confinement Facility, states as follows:
3.C.8. A. (U) 205 MI BRIGADE.
3.C.8. A. 1. (U)
EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY COMMANDER
205 MI BRIGADE
ASSUMES RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE
BAGHDAD
CONFINEMENT FACILITY (BCCF) AND IS
APPOINTED
THE FOB COMMANDER. UNITS CURRENTLY AT
ABU
GHRAIB (BCCF) ARE TACON TO 205 MI BRIGADE FOR
"SECURITY OF DETAINEES AND FOB PROTECTION."
Although not
supported by BG Karpinski, FRAGO 1108 made
all of the
MP units at Abu Ghraib TACON to the Commander,
205th MI
Brigade. This effectively made an MI Officer,
rather
than an MP Officer, responsible for the MP units
conducting detainee operations at that facility. This
is not doctrinally sound due to the different missions
and agendas assigned to each of these respective
specialties. (ANNEX 31)
10 (U) Joint Publication 0-2,
Unified Action Armed Forces
(UNAAF), 10 July 2001
defines Tactical Control (TACON) as
the detailed
direction and control of movements or
maneuvers within
the operational area necessary to
accomplish assigned
missions or tasks. (ANNEX 42)
"TACON is the command
authority over assigned or
attached forces or
commands or military capability made
available for
tasking that is limited to the detailed
direction
and control of movements or maneuvers within
the
operational area necessary to accomplish assigned
missions or tasks. TACON is inherent in OPCON and may
be delegated to and exercised by commanders at any
echelon at or below the level of combatant commander."
11.
(U) Based on all the facts and circumstances in this
investigation, I find that there was little, if any,
recognition of this TACON Order by the 800th MP Brigade
or the 205th MI Brigade. Further, there was no evidence
if the Commander, 205th MI Brigade clearly informed the
Commander, 800th MP Brigade, and specifically the
Commander, 320th MP Battalion assigned at Abu Ghraib
(BCCF), on the specific requirements of this TACON
relationship. (ANNEXES 45 and 46)
12. (U) It is clear
from a comprehensive review of witness
statements and
personal interviews that the 320th MP
Battalion and
800th MP Brigade continued to function as
if they were
responsible for the security, health and
welfare, and
overall security of detainees within Abu
Ghraib (BCCF)
prison. Both BG Karpinski and COL Pappas
clearly
behaved as if this were still the case. (ANNEXES
45
and 46)
13. (U) With respect to the 320th MP Battalion, I
find that
the Battalion Commander, LTC (P) Jerry
Phillabaum, was an
extremely ineffective commander and
leader. Numerous
witnesses confirm that the Battalion
S-3, MAJ David W.
DiNenna, basically ran the battalion
on a day-to-day
basis. At one point, BG Karpinski sent
LTC (P)
Phillabaum to Camp Arifjan, Kuwait for
approximately two
weeks, apparently to give him some
relief from the
pressure he was experiencing as the
320th Battalion
Commander. This movement to Camp
Arifjan immediately
followed a briefing provided by LTC
(P) Phillabaum to the
CJTF-7 Commander, LTG Sanchez,
near the end of October
2003. BG Karpinski placed LTC
Ronald Chew, Commander of
the 115th MP Battalion, in
charge of the 320th MP
Battalion for a period of
approximately two weeks. LTC
Chew was also in command
of the 115th MP Battalion
assigned to Camp Cropper,
BIAP, Iraq. I could find no
orders, either suspending
or relieving LTC (P) Phillabaum
from command, nor any
orders placing LTC Chew in command
of the 320th. In
addition, there was no indication this
removal and
search for a replacement was communicated to
the
Commander CJTF-7, the Commander 377th TSC, or to
Soldiers in the 320th MP Battalion. Temporarily
removing
one commander and replacing him with another
serving
Battalion Commander without an order and
without
notifying superior or subordinate commands is
without
precedent in my military career. LTC (P)
Phillabaum was
also reprimanded for lapses in
accountability that
resulted in several escapes. The
320th MP Battalion was
stigmatized as a unit due to
previous detainee abuse
which occurred in May 2003 at
the Bucca Theater
Internment Facility (TIF), while
under the command of LTC
(P) Phillabaum. Despite his
proven deficiencies as both
a commander and leader, BG
Karpinski allowed LTC (P)
Phillabaum to remain in
command of her most troubled
battalion guarding, by
far, the largest number of
detainees in the 800th MP
Brigade. LTC (P) Phillabaum
was suspended from his
duties by LTG Sanchez, CJTF-7
Commander on 17 January
2004. (ANNEXES 43, 45, and 61)
14. (U) During the course
of this investigation I conducted
a lengthy interview
with BG Karpinski that lasted over
four hours, and is
included verbatim in the investigation
Annexes. BG
Karpinski was extremely emotional during
much of her
testimony. What I found particularly
disturbing in her
testimony was her complete
unwillingness to either
understand or accept that many of
the problems inherent
in the 800th MP Brigade were caused
or exacerbated by
poor leadership and the refusal of her
command to both
establish and enforce basic standards and
principles
among its soldiers. (ANNEX 45 and the
Personal
Observations of the Interview Team)
15. (U) BG Karpinski
alleged that she received no help from
the Civil
Affairs Command, specifically, no assistance
from
either BG John Kern or COL Tim Regan. She blames
much
of the abuse that occurred in Abu Ghraib (BCCF) on
MI
personnel and stated that MI personnel had given the
MPs "ideas" that led to detainee abuse. In addition,
she
blamed the 372nd Company Platoon Sergeant, SFC
Snider,
the Company Commander, CPT Reese, and the First
Sergeant,
MSG Lipinski, for the abuse. She argued that
problems in
Abu Ghraib were the fault of COL Pappas and
LTC Jordan
because COL Pappas was in charge of FOB Abu
Ghraib.
(ANNEX 45)
16. (U) BG Karpinski also implied
during her testimony that
the criminal abuses that
occurred at Abu Ghraib (BCCF)
might have been caused by
the ultimate disposition of the
detainee abuse cases
that originally occurred at Camp
Bucca in May 2003.
She stated that "about the same time
those incidents
were taking place out of Baghdad Central,
the decisions
were made to give the guilty people at
Bucca plea
bargains. So, the system communicated to the
soldiers,
the worst that's gonna happen is, you're gonna
go
home." I think it important to point out that almost
every witness testified that the serious criminal abuse
of detainees at Abu Ghraib (BCCF) occurred in late
October and early November 2003. The photographs and
statements clearly support that the abuses occurred
during this time period. The Bucca cases were set for
trial in January 2004 and were not finally disposed of
until 29 December 2003. There is entirely no evidence
that the decision of numerous MP personnel to
intentionally abuse detainees at Abu Ghrabid (BCCF) was
influenced in any respect by the Camp Bucca cases.
(ANNEXES 25, 26, and 45)
17. (U) Numerous witnesses
stated that the 800th MP Brigade
S-1, MAJ Hinzman and
S-4, MAJ Green, were essentially
dysfunctional, but
that despite numerous complaints,
these officers were
not replaced. This had a detrimental
effect on the
Brigade Staff's effectiveness and morale.
Moreover, the
Brigade Command Judge Advocate, LTC James
O'Hare,
appears to lack initiative and was unwilling to
accept
responsibility for any of his actions. LTC Gary
Maddocks, the Brigade XO did not properly supervise the
Brigade staff by failing to lay out staff priorities,
take overt corrective action when needed, and supervise
their daily functions. (ANNEXES 45, 47, 48, 62, and
67)
18. (U) In addition to poor morale and staff
inefficiencies, I find that the 800th MP Brigade did not
articulate or enforce clear and basic Soldier and Army
standards. I specifically found these examples of
unenforced standards:
a. There was no clear uniform
standard for any MP
Soldiers assigned detention
duties. Despite the
fact that hundreds of former
Iraqi soldiers and
officers were detainees, MP
personnel were allowed
to wear civilian clothes in
the FOB after duty hours
while carrying weapons.
(ANNEXES 51 and 74)
b. Some Soldiers wrote poems and
other sayings on
their helmets and soft caps.
(ANNEXES 51 and 74)
c. In addition, numerous
officers and senior NCOs have
been
reprimanded/disciplined for misconduct during
this
period. Those disciplined include; (ANNEXES
43
and 102)
1). (U) BG Janis Karpinski, Commander,
800th MP
Brigade
-
Memorandum of Admonishment by LTG Sanchez, Commander,
CJTF-7, on 17 January 2004.
2). (U) LTC (P)
Jerry Phillabaum, Commander,
320th MP
Battalion
- GOMOR from BG Karpinski,
Commander 800th MP Brigade, on
10
November 2003, for lack of leadership and for failing to
take corrective security measures as ordered by the
Brigade
Commander; filed locally
-
Suspended by BG Karpinski, Commander 800th MP Brigade,
17
January 2004; Pending Relief for Cause, for
dereliction
of duty
3). (U) LTC Dale Burtyk,
Commander, 400th MP
Battalion
-
GOMOR from BG Karpinski, Commander 800th MP Brigade, on
20 August 2003, for failure to properly train his
Soldiers.
(Soldier had negligent
discharge of M-16 while exiting his
vehicle, round went into fuel tank); filed locally.
4). (U) MAJ David DiNenna, S-3, 320th MP
Battalion
- GOMOR from LTG McKiernan,
Commander CFLCC, on 25 May
2003, for
dereliction of duty for failing to report a
violation of CENTCOM General Order #1 by a subordinate
Field
Grade Officer and Senior
Noncommissioned Officer, which he
personally observed; returned to soldier unfiled.
-
GOMOR from BG Karpinski, Commander 800th MP Brigade,
on
10 November 03, for failing to take corrective
security
measures as ordered by the Brigade Commander;
filed locally.
5). (U) MAJ Stacy Garrity,
Finance Officer, 800th
MP Brigade
- GOMOR from LTG McKiernan, Commander CFLCC, on 25
May
2003, for violation of CENTCOM
General Order #1, consuming
alcohol with
an NCO; filed locally.
6). (U) CPT Leo Merck,
Commander, 870th MP
Company
-
Court-Martial Charges Preferred, for Conduct Unbecoming
an Officer and Unauthorized Use of Government Computer
in
that he was alleged to have taken
nude pictures of his
female Soldiers
without their knowledge; Trial date to be
announced.
7). (U) CPT Damaris Morales,
Commander, 770th MP
Company
-
GOMOR from BG Karpinski, Commander 800th MP Brigade, on
20 August 2003, for failing to properly train his
Soldiers
(Soldier had negligent
discharge of M-16 while exiting his
vehicle, round went into fuel tank); filed locally.
8). (U) CSM Roy Clement, Command Sergeant Major,
800th MP Brigade
- GOMOR and Relief for
Cause from BG Janis Karpinski,
Commander
800th MP Brigade, for fraternization and
dereliction of duty for fraternizing with junior
enlisted
soldiers within his unit; GOMOR
officially filed and he was
removed from
the CSM list.
9). (U) CSM Edward Stotts,
Command Sergeant
Major, 400th MP
Battalion
- GOMOR from BG Karpinski,
Commander 800th MP Brigade, on
20 August
2003, for failing to properly train his Soldiers
(Soldier had negligent discharge of M-16 while exiting
his
vehicle, round went into fuel tank);
filed locally
10). (U) 1SG Carlos Villanueva,
First Sergeant,
770th MP Company
- GOMOR from BG Karpinski, Commander 800th MP Brigade,
on
20 August 2003, for failing to
properly train his Soldiers
(Soldier had
negligent discharge of M-16 while exiting his
vehicle, round went into fuel tank); filed locally.
11). (U) MSG David Maffett, NBC NCO, 800th MP
Brigade,
- GOMOR from LTG McKiernan,
Commander CFLCC, on 25 May
2003, for
violation of CENTCOM General Order #1, consuming
alcohol; filed locally.
12) (U) SGM Marc
Emerson, Operations SGM, 320th
MP
Battalion,
- Two GO Letters of Concern
and a verbal reprimand from
BG
Karpinski, Commander 800th MP Brigade, for failing to
adhere to the guidance/directives given to him by BG
Karpinski; filed locally.
d. (U) Saluting of
officers was sporadic and not
enforced. LTC
Robert P. Walters, Jr., Commander of
the 165th
Military Intelligence Battalion (Tactical
Exploitation), testified that the saluting policy
was enforced by COL Pappas for all MI personnel, and
that BG Karpinski approached COL Pappas to reverse
the saluting policy back to a no-saluting policy as
previously existed. (ANNEX 53)
19. (U) I find that
individual Soldiers within the 800th MP
Brigade and the
320th Battalion stationed throughout Iraq
had very
little contact during their tour of duty with
either
LTC (P) Phillabaum or BG Karpinski. BG Karpinski
claimed, during her testimony, that she paid regular
visits to the various detention facilities where her
Soldiers were stationed. However, the detailed calendar
provided by her Aide-de-Camp, 1LT Mabry, does not
support
her contention. Moreover, numerous witnesses
stated that
they rarely saw BG Karpinski or LTC (P)
Phillabaum.
(Multiple Witness Statements)
20. (U) In
addition I find that psychological factors, such
as the
difference in culture, the Soldiers' quality of
life,
the real presence of mortal danger over an extended
time period, and the failure of commanders to recognize
these pressures contributed to the perversive atmosphere
that existed at Abu Ghraib (BCCF) Detention Facility and
throughout the 800th MP Brigade. (ANNEX 1).
21. As I have
documented in other parts of this
investigation, I find
that there was no clear emphasis by
BG Karpinski to
ensure that the 800th MP Brigade Staff,
Commanders, and
Soldiers were trained to standard in
detainee
operations and proficiency or that serious
accountability lapses that occurred over a significant
period of time, particularly at Abu Ghraib (BCCF), were
corrected. AR 15-6 Investigations regarding detainee
escapes were not acted upon, followed up with corrective
action, or disseminated to subordinate commanders or
Soldiers. Brigade and unit SOPs for dealing with
detainees if they existed at all, were not read or
understood by MP Soldiers assigned the difficult mission
of detainee operations. Following the abuse of several
detainees at Camp Bucca in May 2003, I could find no
evidence that BG Karpinski ever directed corrective
training for her soldiers or ensured that MP Soldiers
throughout Iraq clearly understood the requirements of
the Geneva Conventions relating to the treatment of
detainees. (Multiple Witness Statements and the
Personal
Observations of the Investigation Team
)
22. On 17 January 2004 BG Karpinski was formally
admonished
in writing by LTG Sanchez regarding the
serious
deficiencies in her Brigade. LTG Sanchez found
that the
performance of the 800th MP Brigade had not
met the
standards set by the Army or by CJTF-7. He
found that
incidents in the preceding six months had
occurred that
reflected a lack of clear standards,
proficiency and
leadership within the Brigade. LTG
Sanchez also cited
the recent detainee abuse at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF) as the
most recent example of a poor
leadership climate that
"permeates the Brigade." I
totally concur with LTG
Sanchez' opinion regarding the
performance of BG
Karpinski and the 800th MP Brigade.
(ANNEX 102 and the
Personal Observations of the
Investigating Officer)
RECOMMENDATIONS AS TO PART
THREE OF THE INVESTIGATION:
1. (U) That BG Janis L.
Karpinski, Commander, 800th MP
Brigade be Relieved from
Command and given a General Officer
Memorandum of
Reprimand for the following acts which have
been
previously referred to in the aforementioned findings:
- Failing to ensure that MP Soldiers at theater-level
detention facilities throughout Iraq had appropriate
SOPs
for dealing with detainees and that
Commanders and Soldiers
had read, understood, and
would adhere to these SOPs.
- Failing to ensure that
MP Soldiers in the 800th MP
Brigade knew, understood, and
adhered to the protections
afforded to detainees in the
Geneva Convention Relative to
the Treatment of Prisoners
of War.
- Making material misrepresentations to
the Investigation
Team as to the frequency of her
visits to her subordinate
commands.
-
Failing to obey an order from the CFLCC Commander,
LTG
McKiernan, regarding the withholding of
disciplinary
authority for Officer and Senior
Noncommissioned Officer
misconduct.
- Failing to
take appropriate action regarding the
ineffectiveness of
a subordinate Commander, LTC (P) Jerry
Phillabaum.
-
Failing to take appropriate action regarding
the
ineffectiveness of numerous members of her Brigade
Staff
including her XO, S-1, S-3, and S-4.
-
Failing to properly ensure the results
and
recommendations of the AARs and numerous 15-6
Investigation
reports on escapes and shootings (over a
period of several
months) were properly disseminated to,
and understood by,
subordinate commanders.
-
Failing to ensure and enforce basic Soldier
standards
throughout her command.
- Failing to
establish a Brigade METL.
- Failing to establish basic
proficiency in assigned
tasks for Soldiers throughout the
800th MP Brigade.
- Failing to ensure that
numerous and reported
accountability lapses at
detention facilities throughout
Iraq were
corrected.
2. (U) That COL Thomas M. Pappas,
Commander, 205th MI
Brigade, be given a General Officer
Memorandum of
Reprimand and Investigated UP Procedure
15, AR 381-10, US
Army Intelligence Activities for the
following acts which
have been previously referred to
in the aforementioned
findings:
- Failing to
ensure that Soldiers under his direct
command were
properly trained in and followed the IROE.
-
Failing to ensure that Soldiers under his direct
command knew, understood, and followed the protections
afforded to detainees in the Geneva Convention Relative
to
the Treatment of Prisoners of War.
-
Failing to properly supervise his soldiers working
and
"visiting" Tier 1 of the Hard-Site at Abu Ghraib
(BCCF).
3.(U) That LTC (P) Jerry L. Phillabaum, Commander,
320th MP
Battalion, be Relieved from Command, be given
a General
Officer Memorandum of Reprimand, and be
removed from the
Colonel/O-6 Promotion List for the
following acts which
have been previously referred to
in the aforementioned
findings:
- Failing to
properly ensure the results,
recommendations, and
AARs from numerous reports on escapes
and
shootings over a period of several months were properly
disseminated to, and understood by, subordinates.
-
Failing to implement the appropriate recommendations
from various 15-6 Investigations as specifically directed
by
BG Karpinski.
- Failing to ensure that
Soldiers under his direct
command were properly trained
in Internment and Resettlement
Operations.
-
Failing to ensure that Soldiers under his direct
command
knew and understood the protections afforded to
detainees
in the Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment
of
Prisoners of War.
- Failing to properly supervise his
soldiers working and
"visiting" Tier 1 of the Hard-Site
at Abu Ghraib (BCCF).
- Failing to properly establish
and enforce basic soldier
standards, proficiency, and
accountability.
- Failure to conduct an appropriate
Mission Analysis and
to task organize to accomplish his
mission.
4. (U) That LTC Steven L. Jordan, Former
Director, Joint
Interrogation and Debriefing Center and
Liaison Officer to
205th Military Intelligence Brigade,
be relieved from duty
and be given a General Officer
Memorandum of Reprimand for
the following acts which have
been previously referred to in
the aforementioned
findings:
- Making material misrepresentations to
the Investigating
Team, including his leadership
roll at Abu Ghraib (BCCF).
- Failing to ensure that
Soldiers under his direct
control were properly trained
in and followed the IROE.
- Failing to ensure that
Soldiers under his direct
control knew, understood, and
followed the protections
afforded to detainees in the
Geneva Convention Relative to
the Treatment of Prisoners
of War.
- Failing to properly supervise soldiers under
his direct
authority working and "visiting" Tier 1 of the
Hard-Site at
Abu Ghraib (BCCF).
5. (U) That MAJ
David W. DiNenna, Sr., S-3, 320th MP
Battalion, be
Relieved from his position as the Battalion
S-3 and be
given a General Officer Memorandum of
Reprimand for the
following acts which have been
previously referred to
in the aforementioned findings:
- Received a
GOMOR from LTG McKiernan, Commander CFLCC,
on 25
May 2003, for dereliction of duty for failing to
report a violation of CENTCOM General Order #1 by a
subordinate Field Grade Officer and Senior
Noncommissioned
Officer, which he personally
observed; GOMOR was returned to
Soldier and not
filed.
- Failing to take corrective action and
implement
recommendations from various 15-6
investigations even after
receiving a GOMOR from BG
Karpinski, Commander 800th MP
Brigade, on 10 November 03,
for failing to take corrective
security measures as
ordered; GOMOR was filed locally.
- Failing to
take appropriate action and report an
incident of
detainee abuse, whereby he personally witnessed
a
Soldier throw a detainee from the back of a truck.
6. (U)
That CPT Donald J. Reese, Commander, 372nd MP
Company,
be Relieved from Command and be given a General
Officer
Memorandum of Reprimand for the following acts
which
have been previously referred to in the
aforementioned
findings:
- Failing to ensure that Soldiers under
his direct
command knew and understood the
protections afforded to
detainees in the Geneva
Convention Relative to the Treatment
of Prisoners
of War.
- Failing to properly supervise his Soldiers
working and
"visiting" Tier 1 of the Hard-Site at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF).
- Failing to properly establish and
enforce basic soldier
standards, proficiency, and
accountability.
- Failing to ensure that Soldiers
under his direct
command were properly trained in
Internment and Resettlement
Operations.
7. (U)
That 1LT Lewis C. Raeder, Platoon Leader, 372nd MP
Company, be Relieved from his duties as Platoon Leader
and be given a General Officer Memorandum of Reprimand
for the following acts which have been previously
referred to in the aforementioned findings:
-
Failing to ensure that Soldiers under his direct
command knew and understood the protections afforded to
detainees in the Geneva Convention Relative to the
Treatment
of Prisoners of War.
- Failing to
properly supervise his soldiers working and
"visiting"
Tier 1 of the Hard-Site at Abu Ghraib (BCCF).
-
Failing to properly establish and enforce basic
Soldier
standards, proficiency, and accountability.
- Failing to ensure that Soldiers under his direct
command were properly trained in Internment and
Resettlement
Operations.
8. (U) That SGM Marc
Emerson, Operations SGM, 320th MP
Battalion, be
Relieved from his duties and given a
General Officer
Memorandum of Reprimand for the following
acts which
have been previously referred to in the
aforementioned
findings:
- Making a material misrepresentation to
the
Investigation Team stating that he had "never"
been
admonished or reprimanded by BG Karpinski,
when in fact he
had been admonished for failing to
obey an order from BG
Karpinski to "stay out of
the towers" at the holding
facility.
-
Making a material misrepresentation to the
Investigation
Team stating that he had attended every
shift
change/guard-mount conducted at the 320th MP
Battalion, and
that he personally briefed his Soldiers on
the proper
treatment of detainees, when in fact numerous
statements
contradict this assertion.
- Failing to
ensure that Soldiers in the 320th MP
Battalion knew and
understood the protections afforded to
detainees in the
Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment
of Prisoners
of War.
- Failing to properly supervise his soldiers
working and
"visiting" Tier 1 of the Hard-Site at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF).
- Failing to properly establish and
enforce basic soldier
standards, proficiency, and
accountability.
- Failing to ensure that his
Soldiers were properly
trained in Internment and
Resettlement Operations.
9. (U) That 1SG Brian G.
Lipinski, First Sergeant, 372nd MP
Company, be Relieved
from his duties as First Sergeant of
the 372nd MP
Company and given a General Officer
Memorandum of
Reprimand for the following acts which have
been
previously referred to in the aforementioned
findings:
- Failing to ensure that Soldiers in the
372nd MP Company
knew and understood the
protections afforded to detainees in
the Geneva
Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners
of War.
- Failing to properly supervise his soldiers
working and
"visiting" Tier 1 of the Hard-Site at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF).
- Failing to properly establish and
enforce basic soldier
standards, proficiency, and
accountability.
- Failing to ensure that his
Soldiers were properly
trained in Internment and
Resettlement Operations.
10. (U) That SFC Shannon K.
Snider, Platoon Sergeant,
372nd MP Company, be Relieved
from his duties, receive a
General Officer Memorandum
of Reprimand, and receive
action under the Uniform Code
of Military Justice for the
following acts which have
been previously referred to in
the aforementioned
findings:
- Failing to ensure that Soldiers in his
platoon knew and
understood the protections
afforded to detainees in the
Geneva Convention
Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of
War.
- Failing to properly supervise his soldiers
working and
"visiting" Tier 1 of the Hard-Site at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF).
- Failing to properly establish and
enforce basic soldier
standards, proficiency, and
accountability.
- Failing to ensure that his
Soldiers were properly
trained in Internment and
Resettlement Operations.
- Failing to report a
Soldier, who under his direct
control, abused
detainees by stomping on their bare hands
and feet
in his presence.
11. (U) That Mr. Steven Stephanowicz,
Contract US Civilian
Interrogator, CACI, 205th Military
Intelligence Brigade,
be given an Official Reprimand to
be placed in his
employment file, termination of
employment, and
generation of a derogatory report to
revoke his security
clearance for the following acts
which have been
previously referred to in the
aforementioned findings:
- Made a false statement
to the investigation team
regarding the locations
of his interrogations, the
activities during his
interrogations, and his knowledge of
abuses.
-
Allowed and/or instructed MPs, who were not trained
in
interrogation techniques, to facilitate interrogations
by
"setting conditions" which were neither authorized and
in
accordance with applicable regulations/policy. He
clearly
knew his instructions equated to physical
abuse.
12. (U) That Mr. John Israel, Contract US
Civilian
Interpreter, CACI, 205th Military Intelligence
Brigade,
be given an Official Reprimand to be placed in
his
employment file and have his security clearance
reviewed
by competent authority for the following acts
or concerns
which have been previously referred to in
the
aforementioned findings:
- Denied ever
having seen interrogation processes in
violation
of the IROE, which is contrary to several witness
statements.
-
- Did not have a security
clearance.
13. (U) I find that there is sufficient
credible information
to warrant an Inquiry UP Procedure
15, AR 381-10, US Army
Intelligence Activities, be
conducted to determine the
extent of culpability of MI
personnel, assigned to the
205th MI Brigade and the
Joint Interrogation and
Debriefing Center (JIDC) at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF).
Specifically, I suspect that COL Thomas
M. Pappas, LTC
Steve L. Jordan, Mr. Steven
Stephanowicz, and Mr. John
Israel were either directly
or indirectly responsible for
the abuses at Abu Ghraib
(BCCF) and strongly recommend
immediate disciplinary
action as described in the
preceding paragraphs as well
as the initiation of a
Procedure 15 Inquiry to
determine the full extent of
their culpability. (ANNEX
36)
OTHER FINDINGS/OBSERVATIONS
1.
(U) Due to the nature and scope of this investigation, I
acquired the assistance of Col (Dr.) Henry Nelson, a
USAF
Psychiatrist, to analyze the investigation
materials from
a psychological perspective. He
determined that there
was evidence that the horrific
abuses suffered by the
detainees at Abu Ghraib (BCCF)
were wanton acts of select
soldiers in an unsupervised
and dangerous setting. There
was a complex interplay
of many psychological factors and
command
insufficiencies. A more detailed analysis is
contained
in ANNEX 1 of this investigation.
2. (U) During the
course of this investigation I conducted
a lengthy
interview with BG Karpinski that lasted over
four
hours, and is included verbatim in the investigation
Annexes. BG Karpinski was extremely emotional during
much of her testimony. What I found particularly
disturbing in her testimony was her complete
unwillingness to either understand or accept that many
of
the problems inherent in the 800th MP Brigade were
caused
or exacerbated by poor leadership and the
refusal of her
command to both establish and enforce
basic standards and
principles among its Soldiers.
(ANNEX 45)
3. (U) Throughout the investigation, we
observed many
individual Soldiers and some subordinate
units under the
800th MP Brigade that overcame
significant obstacles,
persevered in extremely poor
conditions, and upheld the
Army Values. We discovered
numerous examples of Soldiers
and Sailors taking the
initiative in the absence of
leadership and
accomplishing their assigned tasks.
a. (U) The 744th
MP Battalion, commanded by LTC Dennis
McGlone,
efficiently operated the HVD Detention
Facility at
Camp Cropper and met mission
requirements with
little to no guidance from the
800th MP Brigade.
The unit was disciplined,
proficient, and appeared
to understand their basic
tasks.
b. (U)
The 530th MP Battalion, commanded by LTC
Stephen
J. Novotny, effectively maintained the MEK
Detention Facility at Camp Ashraf. His Soldiers
were proficient in their individual tasks and
adapted well to this highly unique and non-doctrinal
operation.
c. (U) The 165th MI Battalion excelled in
providing
perimeter security and force protection
at Abu
Ghraib (BCCF). LTC Robert P. Walters, Jr.,
demanded
standards be enforced and worked
endlessly to
improve discipline throughout the
FOB.
4. (U) The individual Soldiers and Sailors that we
observed
and believe should be favorably noted
include:
a. (U) Master-at-Arms First Class William
J. Kimbro,
US Navy Dog Handler, knew his duties
and refused to
participate in improper
interrogations despite
significant pressure from
the MI personnel at Abu
Ghraib.
b. (U) SPC
Joseph M. Darby, 372nd MP Company
discovered
evidence of abuse and turned it over to
military
law enforcement.
c. (U) 1LT David O. Sutton, 229th
MP Company, took
immediate action and stopped an
abuse, then reported
the incident to the chain of
command.
CONCLUSION
1. (U)
Several US Army Soldiers have committed egregious
acts
and grave breaches of international law at Abu
Ghraib/BCCF and Camp Bucca, Iraq. Furthermore, key
senior leaders in both the 800th MP Brigade and the
205th
MI Brigade failed to comply with established
regulations,
policies, and command directives in
preventing detainee
abuses at Abu Ghraib (BCCF) and at
Camp Bucca during the
period August 2003 to February
2004.
2. (U) Approval and implementation of the
recommendations
of this AR 15-6 Investigation and those
highlighted in
previous assessments are essential to
establish the
conditions with the resources and
personnel required to
prevent future occurrences of
detainee abuse.
Annexes
1.
Psychological Assessment
2. Request for investigation
from CJTF-7 to CENTCOM
3. Directive to CFLCC from
CENTCOM directing investigation
4. Appointment Memo
from CFLCC CDR to MG Taguba
5. 15-6 Investigation 9
June 2003
6. 15-6 Investigation 12 June 2003
7.
15-6 Investigation 13 June 2003
8. 15-6 Investigation
24 November 2003
9. 15-6 Investigation 7 January
2004
10. 15-6 Investigation 12 January 2004
11. SIR
5 November 2003
12. SIR 7 November 2003
13. SIR 8
November 2003
14. SIR 13 December 2003
15. SIR 13
December 2003
16. SIR 13 December 2003
17. SIR 17
December 2003
18. Commander's Inquiry 26 January
2004
19. MG Ryder's Report, 6 November 2003
20. MG
Miller's Report, 9 September 2003
21. AR 190-8, Enemy
Prisoners of War, Retained Personnel,
Civilian Internees,
and Other Detainees, 1 October 1997
22. FM 3-19.40,
Military Police Internment/Resettlement
Operations, 1
August 2001
23. FM 34-52, Intelligence Interrogation, 28
September 1992
24. Fourth Geneva Convention, 12 August
1949
25. CID Report on criminal abuses at Abu Ghraib, 28
January
2004
26. CID Interviews, 10-25 January
2004
27. 800th MP Brigade Roster, 29 January 2004
28.
205th MI Brigade's IROE, Undated
29. TOA Order (800th MP
Brigade) and letter holding
witnesses
30.
Investigation Team's witness list
31. FRAGO #1108
32.
Letters suspending several key leaders in the 800th
MP
Brigade and Rating Chain with suspensions
annotated
33. FM 27-10, Military Justice, 6 September
2002
34. CID Report on abuse of detainees at Camp Bucca,
8 June
2003
35. Article 32 Findings on abuse of
detainees at Camp
Bucca, 26 August 2003
36. AR
381-10, 1 July 1984
37. Excerpts from log books, 320th
MP Battalion
38. 310th MP Battalion's Inprocessing
SOP
39. 320th MP Battalion's "Change Sheet"
40.
Joint Interrogation and Debriefing Center's
(JIDC)
Slides, Undated
41. Order of Battle Slides, 12
January 2004
42. Joint Publication 0-2, Unified Actions
Armed Forces, 10
July 2001
43. General Officer
Memorandums of Reprimand
44. 800th MP Battalion's
TACSOP
45. BG Janis Karpinski, Commander, 800th MP
Brigade
46. COL Thomas Pappas, Commander, 205th MI
Brigade
47. COL Ralph Sabatino, CFLCC Judge Advocate,
CPA Ministry
of Justice
48. LTC Gary W. Maddocks, S-5
and Executive Officer, 800th
MP Brigade
49. LTC James
O'Hare, Command Judge Advocate, 800th MP
Brigade
50.
LTC Robert P. Walters Jr., Commander, 165th MI
Battalion
(Tactical exploitation)
51. LTC James D. Edwards,
Commander, 202nd MI Battalion
52. LTC Vincent Montera,
Commander 310th MP Battalion
53. LTC Steve Jordan,
former Director, Joint Interrogation
and Debriefing
Center/LNO to the 205th MI Brigade
54. LTC Leigh A.
Coulter, Commander 724th MP Battalion and
OIC
Arifjan Detachment, 800th MP Brigade
55. LTC Dennis
McGlone, Commander, 744th MP Battalion
56. MAJ David
Hinzman, S-1, 800th MP Brigade
57. MAJ William D.
Proietto, Deputy CJA, 800th MP Brigade
58. MAJ Stacy L.
Garrity, S-1 (FWD), 800th MP Brigade
59. MAJ David W.
DiNenna, S-3, 320th MP Battalion
60. MAJ Michael
Sheridan, XO, 320th MP Battalion
61. MAJ Anthony
Cavallaro, S-3, 800th MP Brigade
62. CPT Marc C. Hale,
Commander, 670th MP Company
63. CPT Donald Reese,
Commander, 372nd MP Company
64. CPT Darren Hampton,
Assistant S-3, 320th MP Battalion
65. CPT John Kaires,
S-3, 310th MP Battalion
66. CPT Ed Diamantis, S-2, 800th
MP Brigade
67. LTC Jerry L. Phillabaum, Commander, 320th
MP Battalion
68. CPT James G. Jones, Commander, 229th MP
Company
69. CPT Michael A. Mastrangelo, Jr.,
Commander, 310th MP
Company
70. CPT Lawrence
Bush, IG, 800th MP Brigade
71. 1LT Lewis C. Raeder,
Platoon Leader, 372nd MP Company
72. 1LT Elvis Mabry,
Aide-de-Camp to Brigade Commander,
800th MP
Brigade
73. 1LT Warren E. Ford, II, Commander, HHC 320th
MP
Battalion
74. 2LT David O. Sutton, Platoon Leader,
229th MP Company
75. CW2 Edward J. Rivas, 205th MI
Brigade
76. CSM Joseph P. Arrison, Command Sergeant
Major, 320th MP
Battalion
77. SGM Pascual
Cartagena, Command Sergeant Major, 800th
MP
Brigade
78. CSM Timothy L. Woodcock, Command
Sergeant Major, 310th
MP Battalion
79. 1SG Dawn J.
Rippelmeyer, First Sergeant, 977th MP
Company
80. SGM Mark Emerson, Operations SGM, 320th MP
Battalion
81. MSG Brian G. Lipinski, First Sergeant,
372nd MP Company
82. MSG Andrew J. Lombardo,
Operations Sergeant, 310th MP
Battalion
83.
SFC Daryl J. Plude, Platoon Sergeant, 229th MP Company
84. SFC Shannon K. Snider, Platoon SGT, 372nd MP
Company
85. SFC Keith A. Comer, 372nd MP Company
86.
SSG Robert Elliot, Squad Leader, 372nd MP Company
87.
SSG Santos A. Cardona, Army Dog Handler
88. SGT Michael
Smith, Army Dog Handler
89. MA1 William J. Kimbro, USN
Dog Handler
90. Mr. Steve Stephanowicz, US civilian
contract
Interrogator, CACI, 205th MI Brigade
91. Mr.
John Israel, US civilian contract Interpreter,
Titan
Corporation, 205th MI Brigade
92. FM 3-19.1, Military
Police Operations, 22 March 2001
93. CJTF-7 IROE and
DROE, Undated
94. CJTF-7 Interrogation and Counter
Resistance Policy, 12
October 2003
95. 800th MP
Brigade Mobilization Orders
96. Sample Detainee Status
Report, 13 March 2004
97. 530th MP Battalion Mission
Brief, 11 February 2004
98. Memorandum for Record, CPT
Ed Ray, Chief of Military
Justice, CFLCC, 9 March
2004
99. SIR 14 January 2004
100. Accountability
Plan Recommendations, 9 March 2004
101. 2LT Michael
R. Osterhout, S-2, 320th MP Battalion
102. Memorandum
of Admonishment from LTG Sanchez to BG
Karpinski, 17
January 2004
103. Various SIRs from the 800th MP
Brigade/320th MP
Battalion
104. 205th MI
Brigade SITREP to MG Miller, 12 December
2003
105.
SGT William A. Cathcart, 372nd MP Company
106. 1LT
Michael A. Drayton, Commander, 870th MP
Company
ENDS