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Last updated on May 28, 2012 at 6:14 EDT

Abu Ghraib dog handler guilty of prisoner abuse

March 21, 2006
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By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A U.S. Army dog handler was found
guilty on Tuesday of abusing detainees at Baghdad’s notorious
Abu Ghraib prison and faces up to eight years and nine months
in prison, an Army spokeswoman said.

The sentencing hearing for Army Sgt. Michael Smith, 24, was
set to begin later in the day, Lt. Col. Shawn Jirik said.

Smith was charged with using his dog to harass and threaten
inmates at Abu Ghraib in order to make them urinate and
defecate on themselves in 2003 and 2004.

Disturbing photos of inmates being intimidated by dogs and
sexually humiliated were broadcast around the world after the
abuses became public in 2004, undermining Washington’s efforts
to win support for its war in Iraq.

Several of these photos were introduced as evidence in
Smith’s trial.

Smith’s lawyers maintained that he was unfairly lumped in
with others on the night shift who physically abused detainees
or allowed their dogs to bite them, and was acting at the
request of interrogators and prison authorities.

Other soldiers who worked alongside Smith have already been
sentenced for up to 10 years for abusing inmates.

Smith was found guilty of maltreating one adult and two
juvenile detainees. He was also found guilty of conspiracy,
dereliction of duty and assault.

He was found not guilty of three more maltreatment charges,
one conspiracy charge, and four charges of aggravated assault.

Smith was also found guilty of indecent acts for having his
dog lick peanut butter off a male soldier’s genitals and a
female soldier’s breasts.

A Pentagon spokesman said the verdict proved that the
military is holding lawbreakers accountable.

“As we’ve seen over the past many months, these individual
cases (are) coming to trial and being disposed of in accordance
with the Uniform Code of Military Justice,” Pentagon spokesman
Bryan Whitman said.

One human rights activist who observed the trial said
higher-ranking officials are not being held accountable.

“There was more than enough blame to go around,” said Avi
Cover, a lawyer with the New York-based activist group Human
Rights First. “I think we need to look all the way up the chain
of command.”

Smith’s trial featured testimony from the former top
military intelligence officer at the prison, Army Col. Thomas
Pappas, who was reprimanded and fined in part for authorizing
the use of dogs for interrogation without approval.

Army Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, who helped shape detention
practices at Abu Ghraib, invoked his right to not incriminate
himself earlier this year.

(Additional reporting by Will Dunham)


Source: reuters