Trump pardons security contractors in deadly Iraq shooting
President Donald Trump on Tuesday pardoned four
former government contractors convicted in a 2007 massacre in Baghdad that left
more than a dozen Iraqi civilians dead and caused an international uproar over
the use of private security guards in a war zone.
Supporters of the former contractors at Blackwater
Worldwide had lobbied for the pardons, arguing that the men had been
excessively punished in an investigation and prosecution they said was tainted.
All four were serving lengthy prison sentences.
“Paul Slough and his colleagues didn’t deserve to
spend one minute in prison,” said Brian Heberlig, a lawyer for one of the four
pardoned defendants. “I am overwhelmed with emotion at this fantastic news.”
The pardons, issued in the final days of Trump’s
single term, reflect Trump’s apparent willingness to give the benefit of the
doubt to American servicemembers and contractors when it comes to acts of
violence in warzones against civilians. Last November, he pardoned a former
U.S. Army commando who was set to stand trial next year in the killing of a
suspected Afghan bombmaker and a former Army lieutenant convicted of murder for
ordering his men to fire upon three Afghans.
The Blackwater case has taken a complicated path
since the killings at Baghdad’s Nisoor Square in September 2007, when the men,
former veterans working as contractors for the State Department, opened fire at
the crowded traffic circle.
Prosecutors asserted the heavily armed Blackwater
convoy launched an unprovoked attack using sniper fire, machine guns and
grenade launchers. Defense lawyers argued their clients returned fire after
being ambushed by Iraqi insurgents.
They were convicted in 2014 after a months-long
trial in Washington’s federal court, and each man defiantly asserted his
innocence at a sentencing hearing the following year.
“I feel utterly betrayed by the same government I
served honorably,” Slough told the court in a hearing packed by nearly 100
friends and relatives of the guards.
Slough and two others, Evan Liberty and Dustin
Heard, were sentenced to 30 years in prison, though after a federal appeals
court ordered them to be re-sentenced, they were each given substantially
shorter punishments. A fourth, Nicholas Slatten, whom prosecutors blamed for
igniting the firefight, was sentenced to life in prison.
A federal appeals court later overturned Slatten’s
first-degree murder conviction, but the Justice Department tried him again and
secured another life sentence last year.
Heard’s lawyer, David Schertler, said they were
“thrilled and grateful” for the pardon. “We have always believed in Dustin’s
innocence and have never given up the fight to vindicate him. He served his
country honorably and, finally today, he has his well-deserved freedom.”
A lawyer for Liberty, Bill Coffield, said, “These
are four innocent guys and it is completely justified.”
The American Civil Liberties Union decried the
pardons. Hina Shamsi, the director of the organization’s national security
project, said in a statement that the shootings caused “devastation in Iraq,
shame and horror in the United States, and a worldwide scandal. President Trump
insults the memory of the Iraqi victims and further degrades his office with
this action.”
The trial was held years after a first indictment
against the men was dismissed when a judge ruled that the Justice Department
had withheld evidence from a grand jury and violated the guards’ constitutional
rights. The dismissal outraged many Iraqis, who said it showed Americans
considered themselves above the law.
Joe Biden, speaking in Baghdad in 2010 as the vice
president, expressed his “personal regret” for the shootings in declaring that
the U.S. would appeal the court decision. The Justice Department later revived
the case.
Blackwater contractors were notorious in Baghdad at
the time and frequently accused of firing shots at the slightest pretext,
including to clear their way in traffic. The shooting in the traffic circle
stood out for the number killed, but was far from an isolated event in Iraq at
the time.
Armed militants opposed to the U.S. presence in Iraq
frequently deployed vehicle bombs next to Western and Iraqi motorcades in
traffic, making the ubiquitous armed guards accompanying most dignitaries extra
jittery — and in Blackwater’s case, insistent about not allowing other vehicles
near them.
The Blackwater firm was founded by Erik Prince, an
ally of Trump and the brother of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. It has since
been renamed.



