Xe - Blackwater Sued for Drunken Killing of Iraqi VP's Guard and Alleged Cover Up,...

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Fri Mar 20, 2009 10:33am EDT

Xe - Blackwater Sued for Drunken Killing of Iraqi VP's Guard and Alleged Cover
Up, According to Burke O'Neil LLC

WASHINGTON, March 20 /PRNewswire/ -- A heavily intoxicated Blackwater
"shooter" randomly murdered an Iraqi vice presidential guard after a Christmas
Eve party in Baghdad in 2006 and the company then attempted to cover up the
incident before reneging on promises to fully compensate the dead guard's
family, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday in California federal court.

The lawsuit alleges that several Blackwater-related defendants - now operating
as Xe and other names under the control of chairman Erik Prince - attempted to
evade responsibility after former Blackwater employee Andrew Moonen fatally
shot Raheem Khalaf Sa'adoon, a 32-year-old married father of two who worked as
a security guard for Iraqi Vice-President Adel Abdul Mahdi.

The plaintiffs are Mr. Sa'adoon's widow, Wijdan Mohsin Saed, and their two
sons - 11-year-old Sajjad Raheem Khalaf and eight-year-old Ali Raheem Khalaf.

The family is represented by attorneys Susan L. Burke, William T. O'Neil, and
William F. Gould, of Burke O'Neil LLC, of Washington, D.C. and
Charlottesville, Va., and Joseph L. Oliva and Michael S. Faircloth, of Oliva &
Associates ALC, of San Diego.

According to the complaint, Mr. Moonen left the holiday party and lost his way
in a section of Baghdad known as Little Venice. Visibly intoxicated, he
encountered Mr. Sa'adoon on guard duty and pulled out and fired his
company-issued Glock at Mr. Sa'adoon, killing him for no reason.

Xe - Blackwater also is accused of spiriting Mr. Moonen out of Iraq, bribing
an Iraqi government official, and destroying documents and other evidence
relating to the Moonen shooting and other Xe - Blackwater shootings.

The complaint also alleges that:

    --  After high-level Xe - Blackwater executives Gary Jackson and Dave
        Jackson met with company personnel to discuss ongoing U.S. Department
of
        Justice investigations, company employees began to destroy documents
and
        other evidence relating to the Moonen shooting and other legal
        proceedings.



    --  Illegal Xe - Blackwater conduct is captured on videotape and
audiotape,
        but rarely reported or punished. Records of illegal conduct are
        routinely destroyed by the defendants.



    --  Company mercenaries who murdered innocent Iraqis ("bad
        shoots") were not disciplined or fired or placed on a "do not
        use" list. Instead, Xe - Blackwater continued to rehire and deploy
        mercenaries known to have killed innocents.



    --  Heavily armed "shooters" were routinely sent by Xe -
        Blackwater into the streets of Baghdad under the influence of steroids
        and other judgment-altering substances.



    --  Xe - Blackwater - which suggests that it primarily uses retired
American
        military personnel - has hired former military personnel from at least
a
        dozen nations. Some recruits and hires are known to have been involved
        in human rights abuses in Latin America and elsewhere. The defendants
        also hire and deploy to Iraq foreign nationals even though they were
        forbidden by the laws of their country from serving as mercenaries.



    --  The widow of Mr. Sa'adoon was promised a series of payments to
        compensate for the death of her husband. Xe - Blackwater paid a small
        sum initially, but then made no further payments.




Susan L. Burke, of Burke O'Neil LLC, stated, "By all accounts, the death of
Raheem Khalaf Sa'adoon was senseless. His death is part of a pattern of
illegal Xe - Blackwater shootings around the globe known to company
management. From Mr. Sa'adoon's death to the litany of other civilian
shootings by Xe - Blackwater personnel, the company has created, fostered and
refused to curb a culture of lawlessness and unaccountability."

William F. Gould, of Burke O'Neil LLC, stated, "Blackwater's clever new name
cannot obscure the legal consequences of the company's use of excessive and
deadly force on innocents. A new logo for Erik Prince's mercenary operation
cannot change the fact that a guard for an Iraqi vice president was randomly
murdered by a Blackwater employee in an act that has absolutely no connection
to the protection of U.S. or Iraqi interests."

The defendants include Mr. Prince, Mr. Moonen, Xe, various Prince-controlled
entities such as Blackwater, The Prince Group, Falcon, Greystone Limited,
Total Intelligence Solutions, EP Investments, and Raven Development Group.

Xe - Blackwater is accused in the complaint of committing war crimes, assault
and battery, wrongful death, intentional infliction of emotional distress,
negligent infliction of emotional distress, negligent hiring, training and
supervision, and tortious spoliation of evidence.

Mr. Moonen, of Seattle, Washington, eventually was fired for "violating
alcohol and firearm policy," according to Mr. Prince's testimony before
Congress in 2007.

The case is "Estate of Raheem Khalaf Sa'adoon v. Xe, formerly known as
Blackwater Worldwide, et al.," in the U.S. District Court for the Southern
District of California (Case No. 09CV0561 W LSP).

Attorney Contacts: Susan L. Burke, of Burke O'Neil LLC, Washington, D.C.,
202.445.1409; William F. Gould, of Burke O'Neil LLC, Charlottesville, Va.,
434.466.3505.

Media Contact: Erin Powers, Powers MediaWorks LLC, for Burke O'Neil LLC,
281.703.6000, info[at]powersmediaworks.com.


SOURCE  Burke O'Neil LLC

Susan L. Burke, Washington, D.C., +1-202-445-1409, or William F. Gould,
Charlottesville, Va., +1-434-466-3505, both of Burke O'Neil LLC; or media,
Erin Powers of Powers MediaWorks LLC, +1-281-703-6000,
info[at]powersmediaworks.com, for Burke O'Neil LLC
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