US Appeals Court Tosses Ex-Blackwater Guard's Conviction In 2007 Baghdad Massacre
A federal appeals court has thrown out the murder conviction
of an ex-Blackwater security guard and ordered three others to be re-sentenced
in connection with the 2007 massacre of 14 unarmed Iraqi civilians in Baghdad.
The high-profile incident called into question the role played by U.S. security
contractors in Iraq.
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit said Friday that Nicholas Slatten, who was convicted
in 2014 of first-degree murderand later sentenced to life in prison, should
be allowed a new trial. The judges said Slatten, who was the only defendant
charged with murder, should have been tried separately from the other three and
that a new trial would allow him to introduce evidence that he wasn't the first
to open fire.
Separately, the judges also ordered the re-sentencing of
Slatten's former Blackwater colleagues, Paul Slough, Dustin Heard and Evan
Liberty, who had each been serving 30 years on manslaughter and weapons
charges. In a split ruling, the judges found the length of those sentences
constituted "cruel and unusual punishment."
On Sept. 16, 2007, the guards opened fire with machine guns
and grenade launchers in Baghdad's Nisour Square, killing the 14
unarmed civilians and wounding 17 others. Prosecutors have described the
episode as an ambush of innocent civilians; however, defense attorneys said at
trial that the killings occurred as the Blackwater guards returned fire from
Iraqi insurgents, although there was no witness testimony to support that claim
at trial.
Slatten was convicted of murdering the driver of a white Kia
that was stopped in the square. The court's opinion states, "The
government's case against Slatten hinged on his having fired the first shots,
his animosity toward the Iraqis having led him to target the while Kia unprovoked."
However, the court said that one of Slatten's co-defendants,
who is not named, had said in an earlier statement that he had been the first
to "engage and hit the driver." The judges said that if Slatten had
been tried separately, the co-defendant who claims to have fired first could be
called as a witness in Slatten's defense.
The latest ruling by the appeals court adds another twist in
what has become a protracted and meandering legal saga. The four were
originally charged in 2008, but the case was thrown out after prosecutors
relied on statements that the guards gave believing they would not be used in
court. A federal appeals court revived the case in 2013, and the four men were
convicted by a jury the following year.
At the time of the shootings, Blackwater Worldwide was a
leading contractor for the U.S. State Department in Iraq.
Blackwater Worldwide — whose founder and former CEO Erik
Prince is the brother of current Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos — has since
changed its name to Xe Services and later to Academi.
The
Military Times reported Thursday that Prince has submitted a proposal
to the Afghan government to bolster the country's air war against the Taliban
by providing it with private combat air wing.
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