CIA
Italy/US: Ruling Expected in Historic CIA Rendition Case
Italian Prosecution Highlights Inaction of US Justice Department
November 3, 2009 -- (Milan) - The verdict expected Wednesday in a landmark case may present a historic legal challenge to the US Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA) rendition program, Human Rights Watch said today.
The trial in Milan of 26 Americans in absentia and seven Italians for the 2003 abduction of an Egyptian imam began in 2007. » read more »
Libya/US: Investigate Death of Former CIA Prisoner
Human Rights Watch Researchers Saw Ibn Al-Sheikh Al-Libi in Late April
May 11, 2009 -- (New York) – The Libyan authorities should carry out a full and transparent investigation of the reported suicide of the Libyan prisoner Ali Mohamed al-Fakheri, also known as Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi, Human Rights Watch said today.
Al-Libi, who was held in secret US and Egyptian detention from late 2001 to at least 2005, was found dead in his cell in Abu Salim prison in Tripoli. Human Rights Watch spoke with him briefly in the Tripoli prison on April 27, though he refused to be interviewed. » read more »
Lawmakers Introduce Legislation to End CIA Coercive Interrogations and Secret Detentions
Measure creates single uniform standard for all government interrogations, complies with U.S. law and international obligations
August 4, 2008 -- Washington, DC – U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), John D. Rockefeller (D-W.Va.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.), Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) have introduced legislation requiring the CIA to follow the Army Field Manual’s rules when conducting interrogations. The manual specifically prohibits the use of waterboarding and seven other coercive techniques.
The Restoring America’s Integrity Act would: » read more »
Chairman Conyers Seeks More Answers at Upcoming Hearings on Administration Interrogation Abuses
May 20, 2008 -- (Washington, DC) - Today, House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) said he is seeking answers to questions raised in a report issued today by the Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General (OIG) released a report entitled, "A Review of the FBI's Involvement in and Observations of Detainee Interrogations in Guantanamo Bay, Afghanistan and Iraq." He released the following statement in response to the report’s release: » read more »
Senator Carl Levin Statement on DoJ Inspector General’s Report on Detainees
May 20, 2008 -- WASHINGTON – Senator Carl Levin, D-Mich., today released the following statement regarding the report released by the Department of Justice Inspector General entitled “A review of the FBI’s involvement in and Observations of Detainee Interrogations in Guantanamo Bay, Afghanistan, and Iraq.”
Bush protesters, March 2007: Photo by Andrew Ciscel (CC)
“Some have suggested that the abuse of detainees in U.S. custody was simply the result of a few bad apples acting on their own. The report released today by the Department of Justice Inspector General is proof that that is simply not true. » read more »
US Report: FBI Complained About CIA Interrogation Tactics
20 May 2008 -- A U.S. Justice Department report says Federal Bureau of Investigation agents raised concerns about controversial interrogation techniques other U.S. agencies used on terror suspects.
The report, issued Tuesday, describes frequent clashes between the FBI and the military and Central Intelligence Agency over interrogation methods used in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Guantanamo protest, Washington, D.C.: Photo by Keith Ivey (CC)
It says the FBI raised concerns about questionable tactics including the use of snarling dogs and forced nudity. » read more »
Human Rights Watch: Italian Court Challenges CIA Rendition Program
Rome Should Seek Extradition of 26 Americans in Cleric’s Abduction
(Milan, April 16, 2008) – The alleged kidnappers of an Egyptian cleric in 2003 will go on trial in Milan on April 16 in what is the first ever legal challenge to the CIA’s controversial rendition program, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch urged the newly-elected Italian government to seek the extradition of 26 American CIA agents implicated in the abduction.
CIA and Italian military intelligence personnel are believed responsible for abducting Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, who is known as Abu Omar, from a Milan street on February 17, 2003. He was then transferred to Egypt, where, Nasr claims, he was badly tortured in detention. » read more »
House Judiciary Committee to Explore Administration Approval of Torture Techniques
April 11, 2008 -- Washington, DC -- House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) today invited several current and former Administration officials to a May 6 hearing to explore the development and legal approval of Bush administration torture policies and other potential abuses of executive power.
John Ashcroft: Photo by World Economic Forum (CC) » read more »
Senator Ted Kennedy Reaction To New Torture Reports
April 10, 2008 -- WASHINGTON, DC— Today, Senator Edward M. Kennedy released the following statement in response to new reports that high-ranking members in the Bush Administration authorized the use of torture in CIA interrogations.
“Today’s press reports bring yet another astonishing disclosure about the Bush administration and its use of torture.
Anti-Bush, anti-torture protester: Photo by jarnocan (CC) » read more »
CIA Director Mike Hayden Announces Leadership Assignments
CIA Director Mike Hayden announced several changes this afternoon to the Agency’s senior leadership team
» read more »CIA Director's Statement on Past Use of Diego Garcia
February 21, 2008 -- Statement to CIA employees by Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, General Mike Hayden on the past use of Diego Garcia:
The British Government announced today that the United States recently provided information on rendition flights through Diego Garcia—a UK territory in the Indian Ocean—that contradicted earlier data from us. Our government had told the British that there had been no rendition flights involving their soil or airspace since 9/11. That information, supplied in good faith, turned out to be wrong. » read more »
Leahy Statement On Passage Of The Intelligence Authorization Act Conference Report
Including A Provision Limiting The CIA To Interrogation Techniques Authorized In The Army Field Manual
February 13, 2008 -- This Report contains a provision that reinforces the prohibition against our Government engaging in torture. It expressly prohibits interrogation techniques that are not authorized by the United States Army Field Manual. » read more »
Senator Kennedy On Legislation Preventing Torture
February 13, 2008 -- WASHINGTON, DC— Today, Senator Edward M. Kennedy released the following statement on the passage by the United States Senate of the Intelligence Authorization Bill, which includes provision that will require all U.S. Government interrogators to comply with the Army Field Manual’s standards on interrogation. » read more »
Senator Ted Kennedy On Upcoming Senate Torture Vote
(As Prepared for Delivery)
February 13, 2008 -- The Senate will soon vote on the Intelligence Authorization Bill, which contains a provision requiring all U.S. government agencies, including the CIA, to comply with the Army Field Manual’s prohibition on torture. This reform is urgently needed, and I commend the Intelligence Conferees for adopting this provision. Its enactment will ensure that the government uses only interrogation techniques that are lawful. » read more »
Carl Levin: Senate Floor Statement on the Army Field Manual Provision in the Intelligence Authorization Conference Report
February 13, 2008 -- "I urge my colleagues to support the Intelligence Authorization conference report which includes a requirement that all government agencies, including the CIA, comply with the Army Field Manual on Interrogations in the treatment and interrogation of detainees. » read more »