WAR ON TERRORISM - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Pummeled MP sues Pentagon - Soldier was impersonating unruly Guantanamo detainee in training |
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by David Zucchino The San Francisco Chronicle Entered into the database on Saturday, June 18th, 2005 @ 18:14:46 MST |
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A U.S. military policeman who was beaten by fellow MPs during a botched training
drill at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, prison for detainees has sued the Pentagon
for $15 million, alleging that the incident violated his constitutional rights. Spec. Sean Baker, 38, was assaulted in January 2003 after he volunteered to
wear an orange jumpsuit and portray an uncooperative detainee. Baker said the
MPs, who were told that he was an unruly detainee who had assaulted an American
sergeant, inflicted a beating that resulted in a traumatic brain injury. Baker, a Persian Gulf War veteran who re-enlisted after the Sept. 11 terror
attacks, was medically retired in April 2004. He said the assault had left him
with seizures, blackouts, headaches, insomnia and psychological problems. In the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Lexington, Ky., Baker demanded
reinstatement in the Army in a position that would accommodate his medical disability.
He said the Army put him on medical retirement against his wishes. "Somebody has to step up to serve, and I still want to serve," Baker
said Friday in a telephone interview from his home in Georgetown, Ky. A Pentagon spokeswoman declined to comment, saying she had not seen the lawsuit
and could not discuss pending litigation. The Pentagon first said that Baker's hospitalization after the training incident
was not related to the beating. Later, officials conceded that he had been treated
for injuries suffered when a five-man MP "internal reaction force"
choked him, slammed his head several times against a concrete floor and sprayed
him with pepper gas. Baker said he had put on the jumpsuit and squeezed under a prison bunk after
being told by a lieutenant that he would be portraying an unruly detainee. He
said he was assured that MPs conducting the "extraction drill" knew
it was a training exercise and that Baker was an American soldier. As he was being choked and beaten, Baker said, he screamed a code word, "red,"
and shouted: "I'm a U.S. soldier! I'm a U.S. soldier!" The beating
continued, he said, until the jumpsuit was yanked down during the struggle,
revealing his military uniform. No one has been disciplined or punished for the assault, said Baker's attorney,
T. Bruce Simpson Jr. Simpson said the Army's Criminal Investigation Division
told him last month that it had completed an investigation and had referred
it to the Army's legal section for review. A CID spokesman did not respond to
a request for comment Friday. Baker receives $2,350 a month in military disability benefits, plus $1, 000
a month in Social Security, Simpson said. Separately Friday, the Pentagon announced that a subsidiary of Houston- based
Halliburton had been awarded $30 million to build an improved 220-bed prison
at Guantanamo. Kellogg Brown and Root Services Inc. of Arlington, Va., is to build a two-
story prison that includes day rooms, exercise areas, medical bays, air conditioning
and a security control room, according to the Pentagon. It is to be completed
by July 2006. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., issued a statement criticizing the deal, calling
Halliburton the "scandal-plagued former employer of Vice President (Dick)
Cheney." Lautenberg has sought hearings into the contracts awarded to Halliburton
for work in Iraq. |