U.S. Men Guilty In Afghan Case -- Three Convicted of Running Private Jail
/Men claim that senior U.S. and Afghan officials knew of their covert operations
An Afghan court sentenced Jonathan "Jack" Idema and
two other Americans to lengthy prison terms Wednesday, finding them
guilty of running a private prison and torturing Afghan detainees in
what the defendants claimed was a legitimate operation to round up
terrorists. Idema, 48, of Fayetteville, N.C., the group's leader
and a former member of the U.S. Army Special Forces, was given a
10-year term, as was his younger associate Brent Bennett. A third man,
Edward Caraballo, a journalist, received eight years, while four Afghan
employees of the group were sentenced to between one and five years.
The defendants, represented by two American lawyers, presented several
videotapes and documents in court that appeared to strengthen their
claim that senior U.S. and Afghan officials knew of their covert
operations and in some cases assisted them. U.S. military authorities
here have denied any involvement with Idema and his associates aside
from receiving one prisoner from them; Afghan officials who dealt with
them have said they believed the group was operating with U.S.
government approval. [more ]