For daring to report illegal arms sales, Navy veteran Donald Vance says he was imprisoned by the American military in a security compound outside Baghdad and subjected to harsh interrogation methods.
There were times, huddled on the floor in solitary confinement with that head-banging music blaring dawn to dusk and interrogators yelling the same questions over and over, that Vance began to wish he had just kept his mouth shut.
He had thought he was doing a good and noble thing when he started telling the FBI about the guns and the land mines and the rocket-launchers - all of them being sold for cash, no receipts necessary, he said. He told a federal agent the buyers were Iraqi insurgents, American soldiers, State Department workers, and Iraqi embassy and ministry employees.
The seller, he claimed, was the Iraqi-owned company he worked for, Shield Group Security Co.
"It was a Wal-Mart for guns," he says. "It was all illegal and everyone knew it."
So Vance says he blew the whistle, supplying photos and documents and other intelligence to an FBI agent in his hometown of Chicago because he didn't know whom to trust in Iraq.
For his trouble, he says, he got 97 days in Camp Cropper, an American military prison outside Baghdad that once held Saddam Hussein, and he was classified a security detainee.
Saturday, August 25, 2007
Whistleblowers on Fraud Facing Penalties
This isn't the country I thought I grew up in
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This is really beginning to get to me. I live every day of my life here in Japan knowing that I am not, as Stephen Colbert would put it, a Premium customer when it comes to human rights, that anyone at anytime could assault me and that fighting back will likely land me in jail. Well, it's only temporary, I have told myself. I'll soon be back in the land of the free. Now I realize that the Constitution in my homeland is essentially inoperative and the Democrats have still not impeached anyone.
The rule of law. Ahh, now those were the good old days.
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