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Destroyed Videotapes Fail to Mask the Ugly Reality of Torture

Fri Dec 7, 2007 6:39pm EST
Congress, Justice Department Must Investigate Destruction of Interrogation
Videotapes

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Open Society Policy Center
(OSPC) today urged Congress to investigate the destruction of videotapes of
interrogations by the Central Intelligence Agency and called for legislation
requiring all CIA interrogations to be videotaped.

"This is truly a case in which a destroyed picture speaks a thousand words,"
said OSPC Deputy Director Stephen Rickard.  

Intelligence experts believe that the CIA was afraid of how the public would
react if they actually saw these interrogations in living color and knew that
the tapes would provoke a strong reaction. 

OSPC called on Congress to conduct oversight investigations into the
destruction of the tapes and to legislate a requirement that all CIA
interrogations be videotaped.  It also demanded that the Justice Department
investigate whether destroying the tapes amounted to a criminal offense. 

"CIA Director Hayden was correct to state that the CIA created these tapes to
make sure that CIA employees obeyed the law. Destroying the tapes undermined
what America stands for.  Congress should mandate that the CIA systematically
videotape interrogations and retain them," said Rickard.


The Open Society Policy Center (OSPC) is a non-partisan organization that
engages in policy advocacy on U.S. and international issues, including
domestic civil liberties, multilateralism, economic development, civil rights,
human rights, women's rights and criminal justice reform.

SOURCE  Open Society Policy Center

Wendy Sefsaf of Open Society Policy Center, +1-202-721-5642



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