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US colonel punished for dog use at Abu Ghraib

The commander of a US intelligence brigade has been reprimanded and fined for dereliction of duty for authorizing the use of dogs in interrogating a prisoner at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, army officials said Wednesday.

Published on: May 12, 2005 06:36 PM IST
PTI | By , Washington
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The commander of a US intelligence brigade has been reprimanded and fined for dereliction of duty for authorizing the use of dogs in interrogating a prisoner at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, army officials said Wednesday.

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No decision has yet been made whether to relieve Colonel Thomas Pappas of command of the 205th Military Intelligence Brigade despite the verdict, an official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Pappas was responsible for the military intelligence personnel who conducted interrogations at the Iraqi prison during late 2003 and early 2004 when American guards were photographed abusing and sexually humiliating prisoners.

Military police guards implicated in the scandal have said interrogators encouraged them to soften up the inmates. Newspaper photographs printed around the world showed US guards holding unmuzzled army dogs close to reeling inmates.

Major General Bennie Williams on Tuesday found Pappas guilty of two counts of dereliction of duty at the end of a hearing at Kaiserslautern, Germany in which the colonel presented evidence in his defense, the officials said.

"He was also alleged to have failed to obtain the approval of superior commanders before authorizing a non-sanctioned interrogation technique, specifically, the presence of military working dogs during the questioning of a detainee," it said.

Williams "found that colonel Pappas had committed both offenses as alleged."

Pappas received a written reprimand, which was placed in his permanent file, and made to forfeit 4,000 dollars in pay a month for two months.

The decision came just days after the army demoted and relieved of command Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, who commanded the prison. She was found guilty of dereliction of duty for general leadership failures and for shoplifting at a US base, but not for specifically contributing to the abuses at the prison.

Karpinski, who has said she was being made a scapegoat for actions of the military intelligence unit at the prison, is the highest-ranking US military officer punished so far in the Abu Ghraib scandal.

An army official said the case of Lieutenant Steve Jordan, who was in charge of interrogations at the prison, remains open.

The army's inspector general has cleared Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, the US commander in Iraq at the time, of responsibility in the scandal.

Major General Walter Wojdakowski, then deputy commander in Iraq, and Major General Barbara Fast, the top military intelligence officer in Iraq, and Colonel Marc Warren, the command's legal adviser, also were cleared, the army said.

 
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