December 8, 2008
5 Blackwater Guards Surrender
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 2:51 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Blackwater Worldwide
security guards opened machine gun fire on innocent, surrendering
Iraqis and launched a grenade into a girls' school during a gruesome
Baghdad shooting last year, prosecutors said Monday in announcing
manslaughter charges against five guards.
A sixth guard involved in the attack cut a plea deal with
prosecutors, turned on his former colleagues, and admitting killing at
least one Iraqi in the 2007 shooting in Baghdad's Nisoor Square.
Seventeen Iraqis were killed in the assault, which roiled U.S.
diplomacy with Iraq and fueled anti-American sentiment abroad.
The five guards surrendered Monday and were due to ask a federal judge in Utah for bail.
''None of the victims of this shooting was armed. None of them was
an insurgent,'' U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Taylor said. ''Many were shot
while inside civilian vehicles that were attempting the flee from the
convoy. One victim was shot in the chest while standing in the street
with his hands up. Another was injured from a grenade fired into a
nearby girls' school.''
The guards were charged with 14 counts of manslaughter and 20 counts
of attempted manslaughter. They are also charged with using a machine
gun to commit a crime of violence, a charge that carries a 30-year
minimum prison sentence.
The shootings happened in a crowded square where prosecutors say
civilians were going about their lives, running errands. Following a
car bombing elsewhere in the city, the heavily armed Blackwater convoy
sought to shut down the intersection. Prosecutors said the convoy,
known by the call sign Raven 23, violated an order not to leave the
U.S.-controlled Green Zone.
''The tragic events in Nisoor Square on Sept. 16 of last year were
shocking and a violation of basic human rights,'' FBI Assistant
Director Joseph Persichini said.
Witnesses said the contractors opened fire unprovoked. Women and
children were among the victims and the shooting left the square
littered with blown-out cars. Blackwater, the largest security
contractor in Iraq, says its guards were ambushed and believed a slowly
moving white Kia sedan might have been a car bomb.
''We think it's pure and simple a case of self-defense,'' defense
attorney Paul Cassell said Monday as the guards were being booked.
''Tragically people did die.''
Prosecutors said the Blackwater guards never even ordered the car to
stop before opening fire. In his plea agreement with prosecutors,
former guard Jeremy Ridgeway, of California, admitted there was no
indication the Kia was a car bomb.
Though the case has already been assigned to U.S. District Judge
Ricardo M. Urbina in Washington, the guards surrendered in Utah. They
want the case moved there, where they would presumably find a more
conservative jury pool and one more likely to support the Iraq war.
The indicted guards are Donald Ball, a former Marine from West
Valley City, Utah; Dustin Heard, a former Marine from Knoxville, Tenn.;
Evan Liberty, a former Marine from Rochester, N.H.; Nick Slatten, a
former Army sergeant from Sparta, Tenn.; and Paul Slough, an Army
veteran from Keller, Texas.
Ridgeway's sentencing on manslaughter, attempted manslaughter and aiding and abetting has not yet been scheduled.
An afternoon court hearing was scheduled on whether to release the
guards. Defense attorneys were filing court documents challenging the
Justice Department's authority to prosecute the case. The law is murky
on whether contractors can be charged in U.S. courts for crimes
committed overseas.
The shootings caused an uproar, and the fledgling Iraqi government in Baghdad wanted Blackwater, which protects U.S. State Department personnel, expelled from the country. It also sought the right to prosecute the men in Iraqi courts.
''The killers must pay for their crime against innocent civilians.
Justice must be achieved so that we can have rest from the agony we are
living in,'' said Khalid Ibrahim, a 40-year-old electrician who said
his 78-year-old father, Ibrahim Abid, died in the shooting. ''We know
that the conviction of the people behind the shooting will not bring my
father to life, but we will have peace in our minds and hearts.''
Defense attorneys accused the Justice Department of bowing to Iraqi pressure .
''We are confident that any jury will see this for what it is: a
politically motivated prosecution to appease the Iraqi government,''
said defense attorney Steven McCool, who represents Ball.
Based in Moyock, N.C., Blackwater is the largest security contractor
in Iraq and provides heavily armed guards for diplomats. Since last
year's shooting, the company has been a flash point in the debate over
how heavily the U.S. relies on contractors in war zones
The company itself was not charged in the case. In a lengthy
statement, Blackwater stood behind the guards and said it was
''extremely disappointed and surprised'' that one of the guards had
pleaded guilty.
Associated Press writers Jennifer Dobner and Paul Foy in Salt Lake
City and Sameer N. Yacoub in Baghdad contributed to this report.