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Scottish Dragon6/14/2011 12:57:21 pm PDT

O/T but interesting…

The murder of Iraqi prisoner Manadel al-Jamadi is being investigated. He died of blunt force trauma injuries and asphysiation apparently during interrogation while being subjected to a stress position kinown as strappado.
From wikipedia:

U.S. Navy SEALs had apprehended al-Jamadi following the October 27, 2003, bombing of Red Cross offices in Baghdad that killed 12 people. At approximately 4 am on November 4, 2003, al-Jamadi was led by American forces into the prison, naked from the waist down wearing only a purple shirt and jacket with a green sandbag over his head, while answering questions in both Arabic and English with his handlers.[1][3]

A ghost prisoner who was not logged in the records said he was passive and nervous “like a scared child”, and there was reportedly “no need to get physical with him”, though an interrogator soon started shouting at him, demanding to know where weapons were hidden.[3]

The cause of his death was not generally known until February 17, 2005, when it was revealed that he had died after a fruitless half-hour interrogation, during which he was suspended from a barred window by his wrists, which were bound behind his back. News reports introduced the term “Palestinian hanging.” Associated Press correspondent Seth Hettena reported that 30 minutes after beginning his questioning of the prisoner, the CIA interrogator Mark Swanner called for guards to reposition al-Jamadi, who he believed was “playing possum” as he slouched with his arms stretched behind him. But the guards found otherwise:

“After we found out he was dead, they were nervous,” Specialist Dennis Stevanus said of the CIA interrogator and translator. “They didn’t know what the hell to do.”[1]

Captain Donald Reese, company commander of the 372nd Military Police Company, gave testimony about al-Jamadi’s death, saying that he saw the dead prisoner. Reese was quoted as saying that “I was told that when he was brought in, he was combative, that they took him up to the room and during the interrogation he passed […] (the body) was bleeding from the head, nose, mouth.”[4] Reese stated that the corpse was locked in a shower room overnight and the next day was fitted with an intravenous drip; he said that this was an attempt to hide what occurred from other inmates. Reese said the body was then autopsied, establishing the cause of death as a blood clot from trauma.

Sgt. Ivan Frederick wrote an account to his family in November 2003 that interrogators had “[s]tressed him out so bad that the man died. [Prison personnel] put his body in a body bag and packed him in ice for approximately twenty-four hours in the shower. […] The next day the medics came and put his body on a stretcher, placed a fake IV in his arm and took him away”.[5]

Al-Jamadi came to be known by some Abu Ghraib personnel as “The Iceman” and “Mr. Frosty”. Others called him “Bernie”, a reference to the movie Weekend at Bernie’s in which a dead body is treated as if still alive.[6]