Who is lindy england
She thought it was perverted. She felt it was wrong. So I asked her why she did it, and she said, 'I didn't want to lose him. England was one of seven members of the Maryland-based nd Military Police Company charged with humiliating and assaulting prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison, near Baghdad. England became a sort of poster child for the abuse scandal after photos depicting the abuse of inmates surfaced.
In addition to the leash photo, one photo showed England smiling and giving a thumbs-up sign as she posed beside a pyramid of nude prisoners. Another showed her smoking a cigarette, smiling and pointing at a naked inmate's genitals.
Graner was convicted of abuse charges in January and sentenced to 10 years in prison. Although he is said to be the father of England's son, last month he married another Abu Ghraib defendant, former Spc.
Megan Ambuhl. Ambuhl and three other members of the nd have pleaded guilty in the case. Lynndie England, the woman smiling in a number of the horrible photos showing the torture and abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, can't find a job, can't sleep and certainly can't get a date. In an interview Monday with The Daily , England explained that she's haunted by the fact that the photos from Abu Gharib cost American lives but not necessarily apologetic to the victims she was torturing in those photographs.
They weren't innocent. They're trying to kill us, and you want me to apologize to them? It's like saying sorry to the enemy. She works for an old family friend during tax season doing basic accounting but otherwise can't find anyone to hire her.
Yet his efforts to help people in Pennsylvania and atone for his past offer little solace to those who were subjected to the abuse at the prison. Many of them say they're still feeling the effects of their injuries. Ali al-Qaisi, who became known as the "hooded man" the name refers to the image of a hooded prisoner standing on a box , said in a video posted on Twitter : "It crushed our psyches.
Sivits is right that the country did change after Abu Ghraib. Torture was banned in , shortly after President Barack Obama took office. Military interrogations were restricted and "black site" prisons, CIA-run facilities where detainees were subjected to harsh interrogations, shut down.
A new legal framework was created so that perpetrators, whether they worked for the government or a military contractor, could be more easily held accountable. Yet human-rights advocates say that despite the changes in law and government policy, people are now more accepting of the idea of torture than they were in the past.
The Abu Ghraib photos were shocking but over time outrage faded. Despite widespread rejection of those images, a "disturbing number" of voters later said yes when asked if torture was ever justified, says Katherine Hawkins, an investigator who works for the Project on Government Oversight.
One recent poll suggests two-thirds of Americans think torture can be justified. She and others believe that Abu Ghraib is more than a dark chapter in the nation's past. During the campaign, Donald Trump said that if he were elected president he would bring back waterboarding, an interrogation technique that's banned by federal law, as well as methods that were "a hell of a lot worse" than waterboarding.
He shifted his position after the election, saying he would defer to Defence Secretary James Mattis, who has said torture was a bad idea. But the new national security adviser, John Bolton, has previously said that Americans should have the full range of interrogation methods available to them - and that he's open to the possibility of waterboarding in order to get information from someone.
Trump's nominee for CIA director, Gina Haspel, once oversaw a black site, and human-rights activists say she is not suitable for the role of director because of her role in the harsh interrogation programme under the Bush administration.
She said during her confirmation process she would not re-start the harsh interrogation programme and conceded it was wrong. But it will likely not stop her being confirmed later this month. Nearly a decade and a half after the scandal, Mora says he's not sure people in the US have learned lessons in humility, the kind that Sivits describes. Mora reminds me that the president and many political leaders say that they support the use of torture. The laws against torture remain in place.
But Mora says he worries that if Americans engage in another full-scale war like the one in Iraq, they'll resort to torture again.
Image source, Nubar Alexanian. Sivits looked for work in Martinsburg, where he lived after serving time in prison. A Hyndman native, Robert Clites remembers Sivits as a "courteous kid". Image source, Jana Birchum. Charles Graner, centre, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for his role in the abuse. A couple of weeks ago Wired. Accompanying the article was a series of photos depicting the abuses at Abu Ghraib, one of which shows a female soldier grinning over the body of "The Iceman" below , according to Philip Zimbardo, the psychologist who provided the images.
See update below. Sabrina Harman, a former U. His body was put on ice to keep it from decomposing until it could be disposed of.
In , Time magazine published a story piecing together what is known about Iceman's death , which has been ruled a homicide. The piece depicts what occurred to him in a shower room, which might also reveal some of what occurred to other prisoners whom England says were taken to the shower rooms. Readers might also be interested in this new piece from the New Yorker about Sabrina Harman -- Exposure: The Woman Behind the Camera at Abu Ghraib -- which provides interesting background on her and the photos.
A reader identifying herself as Sabrina Harman contacted me to let me know that the previous image was actually taken at a morgue in Al Hillah and was not of the person referred to as The Iceman. The image now published above is of Harman and al-Jamadi at Abu Ghraib.
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