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Military contracting firm suing families of slain employees to shut them up

post #1 of 24
Thread Starter 
After the haunting story of Col. Westhusing's suicide in Iraq, this story caught my attention because news of Blackwater is so sparce, despite these suits and countersuits going on for a couple of years. There's something scary about a force that's paid to kill (among other things) with so little oversight from anyone, least of all the military and/or govt, especially when it reacts in such an extreme way when confronted.

Quote:
Blackwater Heavies Sue Families of Slain Employees for $10 Million in Brutal Attempt to Suppress Their Story
By Daniel J. Callahan and Marc P. Miles
AlterNet

Friday 08 June 2007

The following article is by the lawyers representing the families of four American contractors who worked for Blackwater and were killed in Fallujah. After Blackwater refused to share information about why they were killed, the families were told they would have to sue Blackwater to find out. Now Blackwater is trying to sue them for $10 million to keep them quiet.

Raleigh, NC - The families of four American security contractors who were burned, beaten, dragged through the streets of Fallujah and their decapitated bodies hung from a bridge over the Euphrates River on March 31, 2004, are reaching out to the American public to help protect themselves against the very company their loved ones were serving when killed, Blackwater Security Consulting. After Blackwater lost a series of appeals all the away to the U.S. Supreme Court, Blackwater has now changed its tactics and is suing the dead men's estates for $10 million to silence the families and keep them out of court.

Following these gruesome deaths which were broadcast on worldwide television, the surviving family members looked to Blackwater for answers as to how and why their loved ones died. Blackwater not only refused to give the grieving families any information, but also callously stated that they would need to sue Blackwater to get it. Left with no alternative, in January 2005, the families filed suit against Blackwater, which is owned by the wealthy and politically-connected Erik Prince.

Blackwater quickly adapted its battlefield tactics to the courtroom. It initially hired Fred F. Fielding, who is currently counsel to the President of the United States. It then hired Joseph E. Schmitz as its in-house counsel, who was formerly the Inspector General at the Pentagon. More recently, Blackwater employed Kenneth Starr, famed prosecutor in the Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky scandal, to oppose the families. To add additional muscle, Blackwater hired Cofer Black, who was the Director of the CIA Counter- Terrorist Center.

After filing its suit against the dead men's estates, Blackwater demanded that its claim and the families' existing lawsuit be handled in a private arbitration. By suing the families in arbitration, Blackwater has attempted to move the examination of their wrongful conduct outside of the eye of the public and away from a jury. This comes at the same time when Congress is investigating Blackwater.

Over 300 contractors have been killed in Iraq with very little inquiry into their deaths. The families claim that Blackwater is attempting to cover up its incompetence, its cutting of corners in favor of higher profits, and its over billing to the government. Due to lack of accountability and oversight, Blackwater's private army has been able to obtain huge profits from the government, utilizing contacts established through Erik Prince's relationships with high-ranking government officials such as Cofer Black and Joseph Schmitz.
Read the rest at Alternet.
post #2 of 24
three cheers for the military-industrial complex. jesus.

and this part is very telling:
Quote:
"Blackwater quickly adapted its battlefield tactics to the courtroom. It initially hired Fred F. Fielding, who is currently counsel to the President of the United States."
post #3 of 24
That's completely and totally fucked up and evil. What the hell?!
post #4 of 24
There's a special place in hell for defense contractors.
post #5 of 24
yeah, its called the VIP section.
post #6 of 24
Read up on the history of word company some time. The modern corporations have never really evolved from their mercenary forbearer. There is just nothing new under the sun.
post #7 of 24
Blackwater's work in Iraq, Afghanistan and New Orleans is fucked up, no doubt about it. But their "expansion plans" to provide special forces-level private security (read: mow down locals, protestors, etc.) to western corporations already paying off local governments to mine/drill/extract natural resources out of third world nations is what might be even scarier. There have always been mercenaries masquerading as private corporate security overseas, but a truly CIA/Christian Coalition/U.S. governmentally-wired in company like Blackwater could become that Orwellian super-army we've all been waiting for to take "globalization" to the next level.
post #8 of 24
These guys scare me. They even have a logo. And black airships.
post #9 of 24
If this happened in a movie, it would be considered too over-the-top to believe. No company could possibly be that cartoonishly evil. That's the world we live in now.
post #10 of 24
Blackwater sucks; too bad so many guys take the money.
post #11 of 24
What strikes me is not so much the large scale corporate evil on display here, but the individual evil. The article just ran down a list of people prepared to look a grieving family in the eye, as they sit across a table and fuck them over.
post #12 of 24
/hums nazi theme from Last Crusade
post #13 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by 555
yeah, its called the VIP section.

It's times like these that I wish I believed in hell.
post #14 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by yt
After the haunting story of Col. Westhusing's suicide in Iraq, this story caught my attention because news of Blackwater is so sparce, despite these suits and countersuits going on for a couple of years.
I read the story about Col. Westhusing, yt, and I've been thinking about it for several days. It reinforces an adage of mine: beware of true believers; for when true believers turn, they turn hardest of all. Col. Westhusing was a true believer, no doubt about it. Long after IAs (involuntary augmentees) began sardonically referring to themselves as "minesweepers," Col. Westhusing was still enthusiastically arguing for the Administration's line. When he turned, and when he spiralled into depression, he felt his deeply-held beliefs, beliefs which he allowed to define him, so thoroughly betrayed that (I conjecture) he felt he had no "self" left.

I wonder how a guy like that made it all the way to colonel.

Col. Westhusing's case is particularly sad because, although the military services provide a great deal of anti-suicide training, no one acted on this guy's obvious warning signs and took steps to get him the help he needed to get out of theatre and into care. A few months ago, one of the guys I flew medevacs with shot himself - he couldn't handle the horror of working with the devastatingly injured any longer. No one saw it coming but, as I learned more about this guy's life prior to his assignment, I found out that he had been a true believer. His facade cracked in the days leading to his suicide, too, but those who worked most closely with him failed to spot the telltale signs of depression - they were unable to believe that a true believer like him could pass over to darkness in the face of the same trials they were facing every day. To me, the guy was just another "Hi how are ya." I wish I'd known.

Perhaps America needs a little less "Hail to the heroes" and little more "Willy and Joe." Bill Mauldin's WWII cartoons provided both humor and military characters the average guy could relate to. Willy and Joe weren't true believers, but they were survivors. They thought most everyone above them was full of shit, and they thought most everyone around them was full of shit, too. But they slogged it out, day by day, until they made it to Berlin. Perhaps if Col. Westhusing had put down his National Review and picked up an old book of Mauldin's cartoons, he'd still be alive today.
post #15 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by Subotai
Blackwater sucks; too bad so many guys take the money.
This reminds me, I have a buddy (a former green beret, and an incredibly funny guy) who took a Blackwater job in Iraq. I need to find out if he's still alive.
post #16 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paulpatine
There's a special place in hell for defense contractors.
Yeah, to hell with those guys who make body armor, life rafts, and air surveillance radars!
post #17 of 24
And now the Iraqi Interior Ministry has kicked Blackwater out of the country.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/...l?iref=topnews
post #18 of 24
A brain-damaged Blackwater vet is the villain in my as-of-yet-unfinished screenplay.
post #19 of 24
Quote:
And now the Iraqi Interior Ministry has kicked Blackwater out of the country.
All except the alleged perpetrators. They get to stay. Still, I think the odds of their being tried in Iraq, by Iraqis, are slim.
post #20 of 24
post #21 of 24
Thread Starter 
Waxman is going to hold hearings. I really hope this snowballs to Bush/Cheney's doorstep. The buck has to stop somewhere.

Quote:
Oversight Committee to Hold Hearings on Blackwater

Oversight Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman released the following statement this afternoon following the press accounts that Iraq had revoked the license of U.S. contractor Blackwater:

“The controversy over Blackwater is an unfortunate demonstration of the perils of excessive reliance on private security contractors. The Oversight Committee will be holding hearings to understand what has happened and the extent of the damage to U.S. security interests.”

One of the first hearings held by the Oversight Committee in the 110th Congress was on February 17, 2007, “Iraqi Reconstruction: Reliance on Private Military Contractors.” Family members of four Blackwater employees killed in Fallujah testified about what they view as profiteering by Blackwater USA, including the company’s alleged failure to provide armored vehicles and other critical safety equipment. The Committee examined the costs of Blackwater’s security operations to the taxpayer and the adequacy of federal oversight of Blackwater and other security contractors. Kathryn Helvenston-Wettengel, mother of one of the employees, gave an opening statement (pdf) delivered on behalf of the families of all four Blackwater employees killed in the infamous Fallujah incident on March 31, 2004:
From here.
post #22 of 24
Looks like it's back to business as usual in Iraq!
post #23 of 24
Quote:
Security duties of companies encompass certain geographic areas in Iraq: Blackwater guards State Department officials in the Baghdad region, Tricanopy operates in the south, and Dyncorp in the north.
It's like some shitty sci-fi movie starring Jean Claude Van Damme.

Playing twins.
post #24 of 24
Thread Starter 
This is fascinating. Bill Moyers has Jeremy Scahill on the Journal and examines Blackwater. Erik Prince reminds me of Tom Berenger's character in Costa-Gavras's Betrayed.
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