Abu Dhabi | Prison Break | prison | Abu Ghraib | New York State Prison Inspector | San Quentin State Prison | Mount Abu | Abu Bakr | Mumia Abu-Jamal | Abu Zubaydah | Fresnes Prison | Her Majesty's Prison Service | Battle of Abu Klea | Abu Sayyaf | Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse | Spandau Prison | Prison | Portsmouth Naval Prison | Newgate Prison | HM Prison Pentridge | Changi Prison | Ahmed Omar Abu Ali | Abu Qubays | Abu Musab al-Zarqawi | Abu Mu'az al-Jeddawi | Abu Hamad | Prison warden | Folsom State Prison | Butyrka prison | Abu Sufyan ibn Harb |
In May 2008, four former Abu Ghraib prison inmates, who were all released without charge, brought separate lawsuits in four US courts against CACI and L-3 Communications as well as against three civilians.
The movie tells the story of four detainees, and how healthcare professionals working for the United States Army and the Central Intelligence Agency implemented enhanced interrogation techniques, and covered up signs of torture at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp and Abu Ghraib Prison.
She was one of eleven military personnel convicted in 2005 by Army courts-martial in connection with the torture and prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad during the occupation of Iraq.
He also defended Javal Davis (who was charged along with Lynndie England) an Army reservist from Roselle, NJ who in 2005 admitted abusing detainees at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, as well as PFC Corey R. Clagett who was convicted in the Iron Triangle Murders.
The film depicts Yunis Khatayer Abbas, an Iraqi journalist who was detained by US troops in 2003 and later imprisoned at Abu Ghraib prison for nine months.
Major General George Fay was appointed by General Paul Kern to conduct an investigation of prisoner abuse at the Joint Interrogation Debriefing Center (JIDC) in Abu Ghraib prison.