Search for: "Abu Ghraib Prison" Results 121 - 140 of 660
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30 Apr 2012, 4:37 pm by SO Issues
For example, the percentage of young African-American men in prison is higher than it was in the Jim Crow South, when prisoners were leased out as slave labor. [read post]
25 Apr 2012, 1:03 pm by Suzanne Ito
Interrogators report that the abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay are among the primary reasons that terrorists join the ranks of al Qaeda. 3. [read post]
12 Mar 2012, 11:31 am by Julian Ku
  Abu Ghraib was illegal, and it was treated as illegal at the time when it was discovered. [read post]
9 Feb 2012, 12:54 pm by David Behm
  From the prisoner abuse and torture at Abu Ghraib Prison in Iraq, to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed being waterboarded 183 times, the War on Terror has led not only to the approval of harsh interrogation techniques, but also to some abuses. [read post]
3 Feb 2012, 11:53 am by Tom Parker
The image irresistibly calls to mind Abu Ghraib: In the next picture an inmate lies strapped to a board while two Nazis pour water down his throat. [read post]
3 Feb 2012, 4:44 am by Benjamin Wittes
The SAS handed their prisoner to US forces; the US then took him to an undisclosed location in Iraq – one hopes for his sake not Abu Ghraib – and by June 2004 had sent him to Bagram. [read post]
26 Jan 2012, 3:38 pm by Steve Vladeck
Tomorrow morning, the en banc Fourth Circuit will hear oral argument in the two Abu Ghraib/contractor preemption cases about which we’ve blogged previously. [read post]
15 Jan 2012, 10:51 am by Steve Vladeck
[The brief goes on to note subsequent developments that might obviate the need for such state-law remedies for abuses that occur today, but emphasizes that those remedies weren't in place at the time of the Abu Ghraib abuses.] [read post]
11 Jan 2012, 5:11 pm by Mike "No Man" Navarre
The camera wielding Army soldiers at Abu Ghraib and in the 5th Stryker Brigade brought much of their pain on themselves when they photographed their misdeeds with Iraqi prisoners and Afghan detainees, respectively. [read post]
24 Dec 2011, 7:00 am by Glenn Reynolds
Funny how people who were outraged beyond outrage by the Abu Ghraib pics don’t care much about this. [read post]
19 Dec 2011, 4:48 pm by Lovechilde
Until citizen activist protests six months ago in March, 2011, brought sufficient attention to the harsh conditions of his pre-trial confinement, the US military was treating  him as if he were beyond the scrutiny of the law — as if he were an "enemy combatant" in Guantanamo or Abu Ghraib. [read post]
Allegations that a former detainee sustained an injury during interrogation at Guantánamo, mention of the tension created between the U.S. and the British and Irish governments over those countries’ disapproval of the U.S. government’s extralegal rendition flights, an account of the Yemeni government’s role in facilitating U.S. airstrikes in Yemen, an explanation of why torture at Abu Ghraib made the United States less secure, and a description of pressure… [read post]
Reconsideration of torture resurrects harmful images of Abu Ghraib and the serious damage that abusive practices have done to America’s standing in the past. [read post]
24 Nov 2011, 10:03 am
And, in a fit of macabre recursion, some of the casually pepper-spraying cop meme images reference those very photos from Abu Ghraib. [read post]
16 Nov 2011, 6:04 pm by Larkin Reynolds
”  And finally, information published about a government investigation of the prisoner deaths at Abu Ghraib revealed details about the CIA’s so-called “ghosting” program; this information, in combination with the fact that one of the petitioners had been imprisoned by the respondents at Abu Ghraib, shows that certain components of the government’s detention programs are “designed to evade all forms of oversight. [read post]