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posted by martyb on Friday November 16 2018, @03:52AM   Printer-friendly
from the defer-deflect-deny-destroy dept.

Senate Report on CIA Torture is one Step Closer to Disappearing:

The CIA inspector general’s office — the spy agency’s internal watchdog — has acknowledged it “mistakenly” destroyed its only copy of a mammoth Senate torture report at the same time lawyers for the Justice Department were assuring a federal judge that copies of the document were being preserved, Yahoo News has learned.

While another copy of the report exists elsewhere at the CIA, the erasure of the controversial document by the office charged with policing agency conduct has alarmed the U.S. senator who oversaw the torture investigation and reignited a behind-the-scenes battle over whether the full unabridged report should ever be released, according to multiple intelligence community sources familiar with the incident.

The deletion of the document has been portrayed by agency officials to Senate investigators as an “inadvertent” foul-up by the inspector general. In what one intelligence community source described as a series of errors straight “out of the Keystone Cops,” CIA inspector general officials deleted an uploaded computer file with the report and then accidentally destroyed a disk that also contained the document, filled with thousands of secret files about the CIA’s use of “enhanced” interrogation methods.

[...] The 6,700-page report, the product of years of work by the Senate Intelligence Committee, contains meticulous details, including original CIA cables and memos, on the agency’s use of waterboarding, sleep deprivation and other aggressive interrogation methods at “black site” prisons overseas. A 500-page executive summary was released in December 2014 by Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the committee’s outgoing chair. It concluded that the CIA’s interrogations were far more brutal than the agency had publicly acknowledged and produced often unreliable intelligence. The findings drew sharp dissents from Republicans on the panel and from four former CIA directors.

But the full three-volume report, which formed the basis for the executive summary, has never been released. In light of a U.S. Court of Appeals ruling last week that the document is not subject to the Freedom of Information Act, there are new questions about whether it will ever be made public, or even be preserved.


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 16 2018, @06:15AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 16 2018, @06:15AM (#762565)

    Produced by US gov, it's in the public domain. This is how they roll in the Land of the Free, Home of the Brave.

    https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a2/US_Senate_Report_on_CIA_Detention_Interrogation_Program.pdf [wikimedia.org]

    (Just remember that this is only the tip of the iceberg, while the CIA tortured merely dozens, the military does it to thousands.)

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 17 2018, @03:44AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 17 2018, @03:44AM (#762946)

    The CIA has been at the torture game since its founding. Thousands of torture victims-- at least. Millions dead (coups, fomenting civil wars, instigating wars between neighbors, simple and direct murders, genocide).

    The CIA was founded with a bunch of Nazis brought over here after WWII. These were folks involved in horrific crimes in Germany, but found a welcoming new home to practice their "arts" in the USA.