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War Profiteer Blackwater Faces Trial

By Jeremy Scahill, AlterNet. Posted August 26, 2006.


A federal judge has ruled that a wrongful death suit against the mercenary firm can proceed.

In a major blow to one of the most infamous war profiteers operating in Iraq, Afghanistan and New Orleans, a federal appeals court has ruled that a wrongful death lawsuit filed against the mercenary firm Blackwater USA can proceed in North Carolina's state courts. The suit was brought by the families of the four Blackwater contractors ambushed and killed in Falluja, Iraq, on March 31, 2004. Blackwater had tried to have the case dismissed or moved to federal court.

"I've been bawling ever since I've heard the decision," says Katy Helvenston, whose son Scott was killed in Falluja, his charred body hung from a bridge. "It's been overwhelming. I am so glad that they ruled this way. Blackwater has stalled and stalled. Look at the hundreds of millions of dollars in profits in Iraq and New Orleans they've made since my son was killed. It's time to go to trial and let the chips fall where they may."

The lawsuit, filed in January 2005, alleges that Blackwater cut corners in the interest of profits, leading to the brutal deaths of the four men: Scott Helvenston, Jerko "Jerry" Zovko, Mike Teague and Wes Batalona. "It has now been more than a year and a half since the lawsuit was filed, and Blackwater has managed to stall and frustrate the litigation," Marc Miles, an attorney for the families, told me. "I anticipate that this matter will now be on a fast track to trial, and believe that a jury will ultimately find Blackwater liable for its wrongful conduct in causing the deaths of these four Americans."

In its motion to dismiss the case in federal court, Blackwater argued that the families of the four men are entitled only to government insurance payments under the federal Defense Base Act. Many firms specializing in contractor law advertise the DBA as the best way for corporations servicing the war to avoid being sued. "What Blackwater is trying to do is to sweep all of their wrongful conduct into the Defense Base Act," says Miles. Blackwater spokesperson Chris Taylor told the Associated Press, "We are reviewing the decision."

Blackwater argued in its appeal that the four men "were performing a classic military function … with authorization from the Office of the Secretary of Defense that classified their missions as 'official duties' in support of the Coalition Provisional Authority" and therefore any court, federal or state, "may not impose liability for casualties sustained in the battlefield in the performance of these duties." In other words, because Blackwater was supporting the occupation with its forces, the company is immune from damages or lawsuits. The court said this argument "proves too much" to permit, saying Blackwater's "constitutional interpretations" were "too extravagantly recursive for us to accept."

The ruling Thursday by the three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals gives "the green light" to a trial that the families believe will show that Blackwater was ultimately responsible for the deaths of their loved ones, says attorney Miles. The incident sparked the first U.S. siege of Falluja, in April 2004, resulting in the deaths of more than 600 Iraqis.

"The message that this ruling sends to Blackwater is that it must now face the evidence in this case, including answering tough questions and producing critical documents, which it has refused to do for more than a year and a half," says Miles. "Blackwater cannot be allowed to get away with murder and that's what they're trying to do," adds Helvenston. "There's got to be accountability."

Digg!

Jeremy Scahill, an independent journalist who reports frequently for the national radio and TV program Democracy Now!, has spent extensive time reporting from Iraq and Yugoslavia. He is currently a Puffin Writing Fellow at The Nation Institute.

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I Hope This Creates Legal Precedent to Sue War Profiteers
Posted by: colleenwhalen on Aug 26, 2006 3:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the families of dead Americans win their lawsuit it would create a terrific precedent to go after ALL the war profiteers such as Bechtel and Halliburton.

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was doing
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 26, 2006 3:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All Blackwater was doing was making excess profits from killing and being killed. Lots of other, more "respectable" businesses were making excess profits from making war. The cure for this abominable situation is to make it illegal for any corporation to make any profit from making all these disgusting and immoral weapons. This would end war as we know it and would also end the associated mass murder. Can't happen too soon. When can this happen? After the Bushie regime is impeached or otherwise thrown out of office.

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» RE: was doing Posted by: acidrain69
Lets go back to making war profiteering a death penalty offense.
Posted by: Prophit on Aug 26, 2006 4:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think that will solve the problem. That is what happens when you privatize everything. Its then about greed and not public service as financed by the taxpayers.

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There's Something About Blackwater
Posted by: Tom Degan on Aug 26, 2006 6:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excuse me, but isn't the very idea of Blackwater unconstitutional? It seems to me that the second ammendment mentions a "well regulated state militia". I don't recall any mention of the need for a private mercenary firm regulating our lives in this country or any other for that matter. Never did they suggest the possibility that military duties be handed over to the private sector. There's something about the whole thing that gives be a serious case of the jitters. To me, they've been acting like George W. Bush's very own private gestapo. Who hired them to go into Iraq? Who hired them to patrol the streets of New Orleans? Isn't that why we have a military?....Oh right, I forgot....Our military has been depleted by this asshole's errand overseas.

Call it a hunch but I have a strong suspicion that Blackwater could be put out of buisness in a capable and well thought out legal showdown. Never did the Founding Fathers advocate something so crazy.

Just a thought.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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A Sewer of Cronyism and Corruption
Posted by: sofla100 on Aug 26, 2006 7:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The government created civil service to protect against cronyism and corruption going all the way back to the time of Andrew Jackson. Today, we see how the Bush people have turned back the clock with privatization. Blackwater is one example of rampant misue of public money. Along with Halliburton, Bechtel and the whole lot of them. Meanwhile, these same companies, with their K Street influcence peddlers, have unloaded campaign cash on our corrupt legislators to get what they want. Privatization is the govenment sewer of cronyism and corruption. But, even worse, its potentially a throw back to the days of the King's private armies and militias. These private thugs can carry out whatever nefarious actions the ruler wants, all hidden from public view and scrutiny.

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BillyBlastoff
Posted by: BillyBlastoff on Aug 27, 2006 2:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the news of the deaths of the "Contractors" first hit the airwaves I was troubled by the language used by the press reporting the incident. The war was still young and I was still surprised at the ease with which many Americans accepted our occupation of Iraq. I had no faith in "imbedded" reporters accurately portraying the facts of the United States' invasion of Iraq and I interpreted the reporting of the four "Contractor's" deaths as ongoing manipulation of the gullible American public.

I discussed the incident with many angered friends, colleagues, and family members. Not one of the people incensed by the brutal deaths of the four Blackwater employees knew what the workers were contracted to do. By using the word "contractor" the Press had effectively portrayed the mercenaries as innocents unjustly murdered by a gang of ignorant and ungrateful Iraqi thugs who could not conceptualize the gift of freedom America was attempting to bomb into their cities. The people I discussed the incident with seemed to accept the attack as reason to condemn the Iraqi people. The media had successfully misled the public by portraying the Blackwater mercenaries as "contractors".

I think the media's successful deception of the American public is the big story that will never be told. I've also read that some Blackwater employees were contracted to torture prisoners at Abu Ghirab which would explain the anger of the citizens of Falluja. It has been reported that many innocent residents of the city were imprisoned in massive sweeps and later tortured in desperate attempts to gather information on the terrorists fighting the American freedom fighters.

In my opinion Rumsfeld's hope of building a private army is one of the ugliest and most damaging stories of this war. I sincerely hope Blackwater is severely damaged by this lawsuit.

My expectation is the story will ultimately be reported as another frivolous lawsuit.

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» Just desserts? Posted by: YogiBear
Intelligence Operation Gone Right
Posted by: pjrsullivan on Aug 27, 2006 9:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These men were slain as part of a well planned Intelligence operation, useful for the evening news.

They were set up to be slain by the more clever folks, their betters.

Their slayings were also useful to stir American forces to commit Atrocities against the local people.

This is why our vaunted leadership can't wipe the smirk off of their faces.

This is part of the reason why Israel and the Anglo-Zionist Terrorist network, (The Herdsmen) are so useful to the war machine operators, they know how to 'Get the job done.'
.

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More info needed
Posted by: Elmowilcox on Aug 27, 2006 11:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now I'm all about some screwing over corporations, particularly war-profiteers, but I need more info on this situation to know what to think about it. From what I see here, some people enlisted to serve this company, who was then contracted to go to this war, where they were then killed. Now the families are suing the company foooorrrr? I don't get something here, I must've missed it. Granted the whole war is illegal, where is the liability on the part of the company in this one? Putting them in an unsafe situation? That's kinda what they signed up for isn't? Unless the company like handed over the employees to the killers, what did they do wrong exactly? The fact that they are making a killing off of killing people is beside the point, that has nothing to do with these people being killed. It's wrong, but it is what it is.
So someone please tell me what negligence came into play here please? Is it in the employee's contract that they were to not be placed in a warzone, or that if they were there was a promise they wouldn't die or what? I'm confused....

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Trial
Posted by: Maryanne on Aug 27, 2006 11:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is one thing to be tried; it is another whether the result will be guilt--- or innocence.

After all, we have a judicial system that has been moved systematically toward the right.

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Uhhh...
Posted by: luminousball on Aug 27, 2006 2:07 PM   
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Weren't these guys mercenaries? There for some cold, hard, cash? What is sown is what is reaped. As a parent, I feel for the families of the dead mercenaries. However, they made a BAD CHOICE. Blackwater did not draft anyone. This is no different than an enforcer for La Cosa Nostra getting whacked on the job, aside from the source of the pay. As Kurt Vonnegut was fond of saying: "So it goes."

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» RE: Uhhh... Posted by: Elmowilcox
Misleading headline
Posted by: YogiBear on Aug 28, 2006 1:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article with its selective headline "War Profiteer Blackwater faces trial" makes one think that they are being sued for the type of work they were doing. That is not the case. They are being sued because the families believe the company did not do enough to protect the employees who contracted with them.

It's been some time since I read the account of the incident, but there was a security foul-up that led to the ambush. There may have been other foul-ups as well. By all means, the families should have the right to sue.

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money money money
Posted by: ShoShenQ on Aug 28, 2006 2:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seems that the 4 bastards who died ( filthy mercs) inherited their lust for money from their parents, I'm not saying that Blackwater shouldnt be sued or that they are the good guys in the story, but you wont see me dropping a single tear on such paid murderers. I hope they are burning in hell right now, just as they should be.

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» RE: money money money Posted by: stevefoagardner