A group of American human rights
lawyers asked German prosecutors last Monday to investigate U.S.
Attorney General nominee Alberto Gonzales on allegations of war crimes
as part of a requested probe of U.S. officials' actions in Iraq, the
group said. Attorneys from the New York-based Center for Constitutional
Rights filed a suit with German federal prosecutors last November
charging that U.S. officials, including Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld and former CIA director George Tenet, are responsible for acts
of torture committed at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The attorneys
said they chose Germany because it has legislation that allows for the
prosecution of war crimes and human rights violations across national
boundaries. Because the United States is not a member of the
International Criminal Court, they could not take their case there.
Documents submitted Monday detail how Gonzales' testimony before the
U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee "implicates him in the war crimes that
were committed in Iraq," the group said in a statement. The new documents include a letter from CCR attorneys detailing how
Alberto Gonzales’s own testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee
implicates him in the war crimes that were committed in Iraq, including
the torture at Abu Ghraib. Scott Horton, an expert on international law and
the Chair of the International Law Committee of the Association of the
Bar of the City of New York said “…no such criminal investigation or
prosecution would occur in the near future in the United States for the
reason that the criminal investigative and prosecutorial functions are
currently controlled by individuals who are involved in the conspiracy
to commit war crimes.” . [more] and [more] and [more]
Rumsfeld considers war crime prosecution risk [more]
ACLU Calls on Attorney General Gonzales to Show Commitment to Justice,
Appoint Special Counsel on Torture Abuses to Uncover Truth [more]