
	
	by David Edwards and Stephen Webster
	May 15, 2009
	
	from
	
	TheRawStory Website
	
	
	A human rights researcher said Friday that any investigation into abuse of 
	terror war prisoners should focus on what he called the Bush 
	administration’s “homicides” — prisoners who died while being subjected to 
	torture.
	
	
	
	John Sifton, a private investigator with 
	One World Research, appearing on 
	Democracy Now with host Amy Goodman, said that up to 100 terror war 
	prisoners have died in U.S. custody, many of whom were clearly murdered, 
	some by way of torture.
	
		
		“A review of homicide cases, however, shows 
		that few detainee deaths have been properly investigated,” he noted in a 
		feature story for The Daily Beast. 
		
		 
		
		“Many were not investigated at all. 
		And no official investigation has looked into the connection between 
		detainee deaths and the interrogation policies promulgated by the Bush 
		administration.”
	
	
	Senate torture hearings have examined the 
	effectiveness of enhanced interrogation techniques, but Sifton feels this is 
	the wrong focus.
	
		
		“Those are the wrong debates to be having 
		right now,” Sifton said.
		 
		
		“We knew that up to a hundred detainees had 
		died in US custody in Iraq and Afghanistan, and we had published this 
		information previously. But I brought it up again, because I feel like 
		the debate right now about torture is missing the point,” he said.
		
		“These aggressive techniques were not just limited to the high-value 
		detainee program in the CIA. They spread to the military with disastrous 
		results. They led to the deaths of human beings. And when there’s a 
		corpse involved, when there’s a dead body involved, you can’t just have 
		a debate about policy differences and looking forward or looking 
		backward.”
		
		“…[Four] years since the first known death in U.S. custody, only 12 
		detainee deaths have resulted in punishment of any kind for any U.S. 
		official,” found Human Rights Now in a 2006 report on terror war 
		prisoners. 
		
		 
		
		“Of the 34 homicide cases so far identified by the military, 
		investigators recommended criminal charges in fewer than two thirds, and 
		charges were actually brought (based on decisions made by command) in 
		less than half. While the CIA has been implicated in several deaths, not 
		one CIA agent has faced a criminal charge. Crucially, among the worst 
		cases in this list – those of detainees tortured to death – only half 
		have resulted in punishment; the steepest sentence for anyone involved 
		in a torture-related death: five months in jail.”
	
	
	While President 
	Barack Obama and the mainstream 
	media tangled over whether photos of abused prisoners would be released, 
	Sifton said he believes the most vital element still yet to be made public 
	are the CIA’s operational cables.
	
		
		“These are operational cables showing the 
		interrogations’ methodologies, what was approved, who knew about them, 
		showing the notes of meetings in the White House between the principals 
		group, people like Condoleezza Rice, John Ashcroft, Donald Rumsfeld,” he 
		told Goodman. 
		
		 
		
		“These are important documents. I mean, the photographs 
		are important, because they show viscerally what happened, but the memos 
		show who ordered what happened to happen.”
	
	
	Amazingly, Sifton actually went on to name a CIA 
	interrogator believed responsible for the death of Manadel al-Jamadi, a 
	prisoner who was suffocated to death by hanging.
	
		
		“And that’s an interesting death, because 
		that was a case where the CIA inspector general referred the case to the 
		Department of Justice for prosecution, possible prosecution, and yet the 
		Department of Justice never took any action,” said Sifton. 
		
		 
		
		“The name of 
		the CIA interrogator in that case is actually publicly known: Mark Swanner. [...] And he’s, for all I know, still walking around in the 
		United States, even though he is implicated in this homicide.”
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	John Sifton: Torture Investigation Should Focus on 
	Est. 100 Prisoner Deaths
	
	Democracy Now 5/14/09