CACI disowned by insurers
Danny | 19.05.2009 21:42 | Iraq | Other Press
The CACI corporation, a preferred UK government contractor, has been legally disowned by it's own insurer over already proven yet unprosecuted allegations it tortured Iraqis in Abu Ghraib. This is more significant that it may seem at first glance. It's also a bit of a tease, I'll add more when the Telegraph has finished exposing MPs.
An insurance company has no duty to defend a U.S. contractor in Iraq against claims alleging torture and abuse at Abu Ghraib and other Iraqi prisons, the 4th Circuit ruled. A three-judge panel held that the policy limits coverage to the United States and Canada.
"Under well-established principles of insurance law, the place of the injury - not the place of some precipitating cause - determines the location of the "event" for coverage purposes," Judge Wilkinson wrote.
In 2003, the U.S. government contracted CACI International to provide logistical and intelligence support for its operations in Iraq, including screening and interrogating detainees at Abu Ghraib and other prisons.
CACI's commercial liability policies with St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. covered the costs of defending the contractor against any suit for injuries or damage up to $2 million.
The coverage territory was defined as the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, but St. Paul said it would cover injuries that occurred elsewhere if they were caused by a CACI employee who is away for a "short time."
In 2004, two groups of former Iraqi detainees and their survivors sued CACI, claiming its employees stripped the detainees, threatened them with dogs, kicked and beat them, and forced them to watch family members being tortured, among other forms of torture and abuse. One of the lawsuits accused CACI and other contractors of implementing a "torture conspiracy," whereby they profited by extracting "intelligence" through torture.
St. Paul refused to indemnify CACI, saying the complaints fell outside the covered territory.
The district court and the federal appeals court in Richmond, Va., agreed.
Refusing to apply the "short-time" provision, Judge Wilkinson noted that the complaints "allege a pattern and conduct that spanned several years."
The judge added: "These descriptions make it difficult to infer that those engaged in such activities were present in Iraq for only a few days."
However, CACI insisted that some of its employees were "arguably covered."
The appellate court remained unconvinced. "[T]he underlying complaints present no allegations of abuse resulting from the activities of a CACI employee who was in Iraq for only a short time," Wilkinson concluded.
"Under well-established principles of insurance law, the place of the injury - not the place of some precipitating cause - determines the location of the "event" for coverage purposes," Judge Wilkinson wrote.
In 2003, the U.S. government contracted CACI International to provide logistical and intelligence support for its operations in Iraq, including screening and interrogating detainees at Abu Ghraib and other prisons.
CACI's commercial liability policies with St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. covered the costs of defending the contractor against any suit for injuries or damage up to $2 million.
The coverage territory was defined as the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, but St. Paul said it would cover injuries that occurred elsewhere if they were caused by a CACI employee who is away for a "short time."
In 2004, two groups of former Iraqi detainees and their survivors sued CACI, claiming its employees stripped the detainees, threatened them with dogs, kicked and beat them, and forced them to watch family members being tortured, among other forms of torture and abuse. One of the lawsuits accused CACI and other contractors of implementing a "torture conspiracy," whereby they profited by extracting "intelligence" through torture.
St. Paul refused to indemnify CACI, saying the complaints fell outside the covered territory.
The district court and the federal appeals court in Richmond, Va., agreed.
Refusing to apply the "short-time" provision, Judge Wilkinson noted that the complaints "allege a pattern and conduct that spanned several years."
The judge added: "These descriptions make it difficult to infer that those engaged in such activities were present in Iraq for only a few days."
However, CACI insisted that some of its employees were "arguably covered."
The appellate court remained unconvinced. "[T]he underlying complaints present no allegations of abuse resulting from the activities of a CACI employee who was in Iraq for only a short time," Wilkinson concluded.
Danny
Homepage:
http://www.courthousenews.com/2009/05/18/Insurer_Isn_t_Liable_for_Iraq_Torture_Allegations.htm
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The cases against CACI
20.05.2009 16:04
If you investigate the abuse at Abu Ghraib then you risk hating not just the participants, not just Americans, but all of humanity. The more you investigate though, the more truly decent people you uncover who are an inspiration and an antidote to dispair. Interrogators who acted professionally, GI's who reported the abuse and refused to investigate, and brave people like the CCR who are intent on prosecution. Susan Burke has been interviewed a few times on Democracy Now! so I'll include one of those as background.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to turn now to another company. Blackwater is not the only private US corporation facing lawsuits for alleged abuses in Iraq. On Monday, hundreds of Iraqis held at Abu Ghraib and other Iraqi prisons filed a lawsuit against the private military contractor, CACI. The company itself calls itself CACI.
The suit alleges the Iraqis were repeatedly sodomized, threatened with rape, kept naked in their cells, subjected to electric shock, attacked by unmuzzled dogs, subjected to serious pain inflicted on sensitive body parts while being held at Abu Ghraib. The suit alleges employees of CACI directed soldiers to mistreat prisoners at Abu Ghraib and that employees of the company were involved in the wrongful deaths of three Iraqi men at Abu Ghraib.
The lawsuit was filed, once again, by Susan Burke and the Center for Constitutional Rights, joining us today in our studio, as we’ve been talking to her through the hour. Talk about this lawsuit you’ve just filed in the last day.
SUSAN BURKE: Well, this is actually a continuation of a lawsuit that we previously filed back in June of 2004. We had brought it as a class action after the leaking of the Taguba Report and after we had been approached by some of the victims of the Abu Ghraib torture.
And one thing I would point out is that this—CACI’s conduct in this instance—CACI employees were directly involved in torturing prisoners. This is information that’s known. It’s information that is known to the Department of Justice. Yet, there have not been any criminal prosecutions. So when you think about the passage of time here, you have to ask: why have there been no criminal prosecutions? It’s very troubling, and it’s very concerning that our civil action is the only current mechanism for accountability for the private participation in the Abu Ghraib scandal.
The other comment I would make is that there’s a perception that it was just the Abu Ghraib scandal and that that’s the only place where the torture occurred. You know, sadly, that’s just not true. The same type of conduct was happening elsewhere. People were being mistreated in other facilities. And again, CACI was not in all of the facilities, but they were in a substantial number, and their employees participated.
AMY GOODMAN: We invited CACI to join us on the program today, but they declined our request. CACI spokesperson Jody Brown issued the following statement, though. She said, “CACI totally rejects and denies all the plaintiffs’ allegations and clams in their amended legal filing of December 17, 2007. These accusations and allegations in their latest and ever-changing lawsuit are a rehash of their original baseless submissions. The attempt by plaintiffs’ counsel to portray CACI as engaged in a conspiracy to abuse detainees is unmitigated fiction perpetrated by plaintiffs’ counsel as part of their big lie propaganda campaign to keep their lawsuit afloat and their personal political agendas in the public light. Three-and-a-half years after filing their original complaint, not one of the more than 200 plaintiffs has connected their generic allegations of abuse to any CACI personnel. No CACI employee or former employee has been charged with any misconduct in connection with CACI’s interrogation work in Iraq. From day one, CACI has rejected the outrageous allegations of this lawsuit and will continue to do so.” Susan Burke, your response?
SUSAN BURKE: Well, the reality is that the information that we have is information that is under oath testimony from court-martials. And so, there are—the co-conspirators, the people that are serving time in prison, are the ones that are identifying Big Steve and DJ and the others as having given them the orders to torture. So for CACI to be—it’s interesting that CACI is so aggressive in their denials, when they know that on the record in under oath testimony is direct evidence.
AMY GOODMAN: What do you mean, court-martial testimony?
SUSAN BURKE: There were a series of court-martials, when Charles Graner was convicted, Frederick—Sergeant Frederick was convicted. And so, the testimony from the convicted torturers has labeled—
AMY GOODMAN: You’re talking about CACI directing US soldiers?
SUSAN BURKE: Yes, the CACI interrogators were placed in the role of the military intelligence.
Danny
Homepage: http://www.democracynow.org/2007/12/19/military_contractor_caci_accused_of_widespread