
Jan 14, 2008 12:03 am US/Eastern
Blackwater May Have Tainted Shooting Evidence
WASHINGTON (AP) ―
Blackwater Worldwide repaired and repainted its trucks immediately
after a deadly September shooting in Baghdad, making it difficult to
determine whether enemy gunfire provoked the attack, according to
people familiar with the government's investigation of the incident.
Damage to the vehicles in the convoy has been held up by North
Carolina-based Blackwater as proof that its security guards were
defending themselves against an insurgent ambush when they fired into a
busy intersection, leaving 17 Iraqi civilians dead.
U.S. military investigators initially found "no enemy activity
involved" and the Iraqi government concluded the shootings were
unprovoked.
The repairs essentially destroyed evidence that Justice Department
investigators hoped to examine in a criminal case that has drawn
worldwide attention. The Sept. 16 shooting has strained U.S. relations
with the Iraqi government, which wants Blackwater expelled from the
country. It also has become a flash point in the debate over whether
contractors are immune from legal consequences for their actions in a
war zone.
Blackwater's four armored vehicles were repaired or repainted
within days of the shooting, and before FBI teams went to Baghdad to
collect evidence, people close to the case said. The work included
repairs to a damaged radiator that Blackwater says is central to its
defense.
The damage and subsequent repairs were described to The Associated
Press by five people familiar with the case who discussed it in
separate interviews over the past month. All spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.
The repair work creates a hurdle for prosecutors as they consider
building a case against any of the 19 guards in the Sept. 16 convoy. It
also makes it harder for Blackwater to prove its innocence as it faces
a grand jury investigation and multiple lawsuits over the shooting. The
company is the target, too, of an unrelated investigation into whether
its contractors smuggled weapons into Iraq.
Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said any repairs "would have
been done at the government's direction." Blackwater's contract with
the State Department requires that the company maintain its vehicles
and keep them on the road.
The State Department would not comment on whether it ordered the repairs to the vehicles involved in the shooting.
Blackwater's chief executive, Erik Prince, has pointed to the
damaged trucks to counter accusations that his contractors acted
improperly.
In interviews this fall, he said three of Blackwater's armored
vehicles were struck by gunfire and that the radiator from one was
"shot out and disabled" during the shooting in Baghdad's Nisoor Square.
An early two-page State Department report supports Prince's statements.
The report noted the Blackwater command vehicle was "disabled during
the attack" and had to be towed.
Prince has indicated he expects the FBI investigation to clear his
company. Yet people close to the case say the vehicles and radiator
alone probably will not be enough to do that because repairing the
trucks made it difficult for investigators to say whether the convoy
was fired on - or not.
As for the radiator, investigators have verified that it was
damaged. But it, too, was repaired before the FBI arrived two weeks
after the shooting.
No bullets were found inside the radiator to prove it had been
shot, as opposed to being broken during routine use. That makes it hard
for scientists to say for certain what caused the damage or when,
according to those close to the case.
The preliminary State Department report noted "superficial
damage" to the vehicles; and photographs exist showing bullet damage.
People who have seen the photos said there are no time stamps or other
indications of when and where that damage occurred.
One photo, obtained and broadcast by CBS News, bore no notations
indicating when it was taken or even if the vehicle pictured was
involved in the shooting.
The evidence gaps will force investigators to rely more heavily on
testimony and other statements from witnesses. But even those efforts
have been hampered by a State Department deal that gave Blackwater
guards limited immunity for their statements following the incident. As
a result, the Justice Department cannot use those interviews in its
criminal investigation.
There were 19 security guards at the scene. Investigators believe
only a few fired their weapons. Investigators are pushing ahead with
the search for additional evidence and so far are focusing on as many
four guards who could face criminal charges.
Over the past two months, prosecutors have brought several guards
before a Washington grand jury to describe their recollection of the
shooting. According to the initial State Department report, the
shooting occurred as the Blackwater convoy was responding to a car
bombing about a mile outside the U.S.-protected Green Zone, which
houses the Iraqi government and several embassies.
James Sweeney, a lawyer representing several guards, would not
discuss the forensic gaps or whether the grand jury investigation is
helping authorities bridge them. He said Blackwater guards are
patriots, not aggressors.
"They are good, solid intelligent Americans. They're good people," Sweeney said. "They're protecting U.S. diplomats."
Blackwater is the largest private security company protecting U.S.
officials in Iraq. It has been paid more than $1 billion from federal
contracts since 2001. Despite criticism, Blackwater notes that no
official under its protection has been killed or seriously injured.
Blackwater also strongly denies wrongdoing in a weapons smuggling
investigation by federal officials in North Carolina. Two former
employees, who prosecutors say are aiding the investigation, were
sentenced to probation Thursday on gunrunning charges.
Blackwater and other contractors operate in a legal gray area. They
are immune from prosecution in Iraqi courts. If the Justice Department
wants to bring criminal charges such as assault, manslaughter or murder
in a U.S. court, prosecutors would have to do so under the Military
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act.
That would require the government to show that State Department
contractors were "supporting the mission of the Department of Defense
overseas." Defense lawyers are expected to argue that guarding
diplomats was a purely State Department function, one independent from
the Pentagon.
The Justice Department has said it could be some time before it decides whether it will bring charges in the case.
(© 2008 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)