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U.S. Women Working in Iraq Continue to be Sexually Assaulted While Their Rapists Go Free

By Karen Houppert, The Nation. Posted April 17, 2008.


Sexual assault crimes by military contractors are going unprosecuted, not for a lack of legal tools, but a lack of will.
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As news broke of the rape of yet another US military contractor employee in Iraq, convened a hearing April 9 to demand that the Justice Department explain why it has failed to prosecute a single sexual assault case in the theater since the Iraq War began.

"American women working in Iraq and Afghanistan continue to be sexually assaulted while their assailants go free," said Senator Bill Nelson, who called the hearing. Because squabbles about who has jurisdiction in these cases have proliferated, Nelson arranged to have representatives from the Defense, State and Justice departments sit down together in front of him. They were forced to listen while the latest victims testified.

Dawn Leamon, who worked for a subsidiary of KBR and had told her story to The Nation a week before, described -- with her back to the packed room and her voice (mostly) steady -- being sodomized and forced to have oral sex with a KBR colleague and a Special Forces soldier two months earlier. When she reported the incident to KBR supervisors, she met a series of obstacles, she said. "They would tell me to stay quiet about it or try to make it seem as if I brought it on myself or lied about it."

Another woman, Mary Beth Kineston, who worked as a commercial trucker for KBR in Iraq, testified that she had been raped in the cab of her truck by a KBR subcontractor employee at night while waiting in line to fill her water tanker truck. She immediately reported the incident to her supervisors; no one did a rape kit test, referred her for medical treatment or even offered to escort her back through the dark to her quarters that night.

Also at the hearing was Jamie Leigh Jones, whose story made the news in December, when she alleged that her 2005 gang rape by Halliburton/KBR co-workers in Iraq was being covered up by the company and the government. Jones, who has formed a nonprofit to support the many other women with similar experiences, says forty employees of US contractors have contacted her with stories of sexual assault or sexual harassment -- and accounts of how Halliburton, KBR and the Cayman Island-based Service Employees International Inc. (SEII), a KBR shell company, either failed to help them or outright obstructed them.

As the number of women coming forward rises, Congress has begun to question why these crimes are not being prosecuted. In fact, there are several laws on the books that would allow these cases to proceed: the problem is not a lack of legal tools but a lack of will. "There is no rational explanation for this," says Scott Horton, a lecturer at Columbia Law School who specializes in the law of armed conflict. Prosecutorial jurisdiction for crimes like the alleged rapes of Jones and Leamon is easily established under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act and the Patriot Act's special maritime and territorial jurisdiction provisions. But somebody has to want to prosecute the cases.

Senator Nelson noted that the Defense Department, which has reported 742 sexual assaults against soldiers and civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan, has claimed that it was unable to prosecute cases involving civilians -- like defense contractor employees -- until recently. (Even among those cases where it clearly had jurisdiction, a close look at the DoD's own stats reveals a far from stellar record: among the 684 sexual assault complaints lodged by US soldiers in the Middle East, only eighty-three cases have led to courts-martial. Meanwhile, last year alone, 2,688 sexual assaults were reported globally against women serving in the US Armed Forces; disposition of these cases is pending.)

Worse, those figures represent only the official count. Given that so many women are now coming forward complaining that they have been hushed by their private-military-contractor supervisors, it's clear that the real tally is likely far higher. Even in cases where the victims do report the incidents, most complaints never see the light of day, thanks to the fine print in employee contracts, which compels employees into private arbitration instead of allowing their charges to be heard in a public courtroom. Todd Kelly, a lawyer in Houston who is trying to fight the legality of private arbitration, says his firm alone has fifteen clients with sexual assault, sexual harassment or retaliation complaints (for reporting assault and/or harassment) against Halliburton and its former subsidiary KBR, as well as SEII.

Obviously, US military contractors have an interest in avoiding the bad publicity that would follow if these complaints were not kept secret. With huge sums hanging in the balance -- KBR has an estimated $16 billion in contracts -- the stakes are high.

But such a financial incentive cannot explain why the Justice Department has failed to act. Although it has the authority to pursue criminal cases involving US military contractor employees, it has hemmed and hawed over even the tiny fraction of cases that have made their way through the maze of obstacles to land in the Justice Department's offices. Grilling Justice about these twenty-four civilian sexual assault cases, Senator Nelson demanded to know exactly how many cases Justice was pursuing -- and whether there had been a single conviction. "I don't know of any convictions for sexual assault," admitted Sigal Mandelker, deputy assistant attorney general for the Criminal Division. But, she stammered, "we do have active investigations ... somewhere about ... somewhere upwards of ... somewhere between four and six, I believe is the number." (Leamon's attorney just learned that the department is initiating an investigation into her case.)

At the hearing, Nelson dryly observed that there was a very quick way to make sure US contractors did not force employees into private arbitration, and an easy way to force contractors to follow established protocols for sexual assault and harassment: "This might be something you want to require and include in your contracts -- before you award them," he said. To which, in quick succession, the Defense, State and Justice department representatives responded that, well, they couldn't respond because this was, er, beyond their area of expertise.

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See more stories tagged with: rape, halliburton, department of justice, kbr, jamie leigh jones, defense department, contracters, dawn leamon, senate foreign relations

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War
Posted by: 23skidoo on Apr 17, 2008 5:38 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shouldn't we be worried about ending the war, instead of worrying about the working conditions of mercenaries?

I would like to see some investigations of all the people being KILLED in Iraq..

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Crimminals & those who assist them
Posted by: phindrup on Apr 17, 2008 5:56 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is how American women are treated. That is women who if they are brave enough can lodge a complaint. Women who, if they are lucky, may even be listened too.
What of the Iraqi women — women who are not in a position to even lodge a complaint, in fact the Iraqi population generally?
What is clear is that the ‘contractors’, all the way from those who grant the contracts down to many of those who ‘work’ for them, are thugs.
It is probable that the world wide reputation of the US cannot sink any lower, but if the US was interested in the beginning the long, long climb back to being regarded as ‘possibly capable of being to civilised’, they could take no better first step than to prosecute theses ‘contractors’ for their brutal behaviour and those who granted them the contracts in the first place.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

a 100 rapes is always more important
Posted by: leta on Apr 17, 2008 9:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
than a 100,000 dead men.

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» no. Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
Rapes of American Women, Add it to the list
Posted by: drmagal53 on Apr 19, 2008 12:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Again we are told about atrocities performed by KBR employees. Again, the accusers must walk through fire to be heard. Again, nothing happens. This current complaint is a drop in the overflowing bucket of non-stop wrong-doing by companies acting on our behalf (ha ha ha ha) in the Middle East.

Ask yourselves - what good have they done any of us? We are paying for it all - so what's our return on our investment? Hmmmmm?

These mercenaries, these Cheney-driven corporate interests, these Republican-supported multinationals have raped all of us - and unfortunately we, unlike the women working in Iraq, seem to be complicit in the crime!

What would happen if the Congress stood up and told KBR they were out of business. What if our US Congress did their job, as designed, and put an end to the administration's duplicity in every criminal venture in this war.

Why, why, why can we not move on these criminals, try them and jail them?

We are all guilty for not standing up against these gutless, corporate, multinational, racist, misogynistic, empire-building cretins from Dick Cheney (mastermind) and W (idiot, pscopath puppet), their companies and families on down.

Ahhhh, the stench of victory for the Republican corporate criminals - burning bodies, oil fires, dead Americans, dead Iraquis, dead everyone but their own children..... can ya smell it?

And for some reason, we the sheep, keep paying and paying and paying, while they, the entitled keep taking and taking and taking.

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