Feral Jundi

Monday, December 8, 2008

Iraq: My Husband Was a Blackwater Hero, By Marybeth Laguna

Filed under: Iraq — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 10:37 AM

   And to provide some balance to the perception of what the media tries to present, here is the widow of a  deceased Blackwater employee and her heartfelt plea for understanding.  Art was killed while trying to protect employees of the US government in Iraq.  His helicopter was shot down, and he is no less the hero because he was a ‘civilian pilot working for Blackwater’.  Not to mention Art’s service in the military as a pilot during the war.  Why is Art less of a patriot or not worthy of our respect, just because he worked for Blackwater and was killed in the line of duty?  Rest in peace Art, and my heart goes out to Marybeth. –Head Jundi

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My Husband Was a Blackwater Hero

 

By Marybeth Laguna

Sunday, November 30, 2008; B03

 

My husband, Art Laguna, was a hero. He was a man of honor — he kept his word and he valued truth and honesty, and he expected no less from anyone else. His life was spent in service to his country and his family.

Here at home, Art served as a sheriff’s reserve deputy. He was a volunteer helicopter pilot and flew medical evacuation missions with the California National Guard out of Sacramento ‘s Mather Field. He was the father of four and grandfather of six.

Art was proud of his three-decade career with the U.S. Army and the National Guard. He served in Iraq three times and he deployed once to Bosnia. In 1998, he was awarded a medal of valor from the California Department of Corrections for piloting a National Guard helicopter that helped save a California man who’d been stranded by floodwaters on the roof of his car. And last June, the military awarded him the Legion of Merit for exceptional conduct in the performance of outstanding services and achievements. I accepted this most recent honor on his behalf.

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Legal News: Five Blackwater Guards Surrender to Feds, in Utah

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,Utah — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:00 AM

   Good move and this will help their case.  The photo below, is the photo that the news has just posted.  The irony is that the photo shows each one in their former military uniform, and rightly so.  It is a reminder to the public that these guys not only served their country as civilian contractors, but also served as Soldiers and Marines.  Does that mean they are less patriotic, or that their sacrifice is any less significant, now that they are security contractors? I don’t think so, and the way the press demonizes this industry is despicable.  How many civilian contractors have died in support or defense of the client?  So 230,000 plus civilian contractors supporting and defending an all volunteer military and diplomatic corps in this war, and this is the thanks we get?  

     I want justice served, just like anyone else out there.  But to make out these men to be public enemy number one, is crap.  These men were tasked with protecting people in a war zone, a war zone in which the enemy wears no uniform and obeys no laws.  This is a war, where vehicles are used as weapons, and suicide bombers could be a woman or child, and survival sometimes requires extreme measures to defend against such things.  I will not second guess what these men had to do to survive this incident, because I wasn’t there. To me, these men are innocent until proven guilty, and that their service to country in this war, both in the military and as a civilian contractors, is significant. Perhaps we should bring back the draft, just to show the other half of this country how significant that service really is? Thanks to Jeff for sending me this by the way, and Semper Fi. –Head Jundi

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Blackwater 

5 Blackwater guards surrender to feds

Charged with killing 17 civilians, they seek trial in pro-gun state, not D.C.

The Associated Press

Dec. 8, 2008

WASHINGTON – Five Blackwater Worldwide security guards surrendered Monday in an investigation into a deadly 2007 shooting in a busy Baghdad intersection.

The five guards are charged with manslaughter and using a machine gun in a crime of violence. Though they are charged in a sealed indictment in Washington, they surrendered at a federal courthouse in Salt Lake City. The Justice Department is preparing to make the charges public later Monday.

Seventeen Iraqis were killed in the September 2007 shooting. Witnesses said the heavily armed U.S. contractors opened fire unprovoked, killing innocent motorists and children at a crowded intersection. Blackwater, the largest security contractor in Iraq, says its guards were ambushed by insurgents while responding to a car bombing.

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Saturday, December 6, 2008

Film: House of Saddam Trailer, HBO Series, Dec 7

Filed under: Film,Iraq — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:07 AM

Legal News: SOFA Discards Contractors and the Rule of Law

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:53 AM

   I want to applaud Tara for writing this, and I agree with this assessment. Especially this part, which includes that crap that the New York Times wrote. –Head Jundi

 

“The New York Times editorial board has called the SOFA’s exclusions of protection for contractors “an acceptable price to pay to show this country’s commitment to the rule of law.” A diplomatic concession that blatantly and offensively treats one class of American citizen differently than others hardly demonstrates the U.S. commitment to the rule of law.” 

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SOFA Discards Contractors and the Rule of Law

December 04, 2008

JURIST Guest Columnist Tara Lee, a former Navy JAG now a partner at DLA Piper (US) LLP, says that having a Status of Forces Agreement with Iraq that abdicates the jurisdictional reach of the United States over contractors (not just security contractors) who are US citizens acting on its behalf is too high a price to pay for recognizing Iraq’s sovereignty….

Earlier this week the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq issued a report that is highly critical of the absence of due process in Iraq’s criminal justice system. The UN Report notes that “many detainees have been deprived of their liberty for months or even years, often under precarious physical conditions, without access to defence counsel, or without being formally charged with a crime or produced before a judge. Continuing allegations of widespread torture and ill-treatment of inmates are of particular concern.” The report is particularly timely, given that as of January 1, 2009, U.S. citizens who are contractors in Iraq will be subject to the jurisdiction of Iraqi criminal and civil courts, according to the terms of the Status of Forces Agreement signed on November 17, 2009.

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News: Blackwater Guards Indicted In Deadly Baghdad Shooting

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:17 AM

     So this is what the prosecutors have to come to?  Using some weapons related drug law to get these guys?  That’s pretty low. Or the debate about jurisdiction will be interesting.  How are they not connected with the State Department, when their job is to protect DoS employees.  Hell, they even have to train to a specific State Department standard, just to be a protector of DoS and contract with them. Not to mention a clearance, so they can actually be around DoS folk.  

     In my opinion, DoS needs to do the right thing and own up to the fact that Blackwater was working for them and do more to stand up for them.  It’s the least they could do.  How many Blackwater employees died while protecting DoS people?  And from what I gather, out of all of the thousands of missions, not one DoS employee was killed over in Iraq.  That is a record that speaks for itself.  –Head Jundi

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Blackwater Guards Indicted In Deadly Baghdad Shooting

5 Face Trial Over Incident That Killed 17 Civilians, Sources Say

By Del Quentin Wilber

Washington Post Staff Writer

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Five Blackwater Worldwide Security guards have been charged in a September 2007 shooting that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead and raised questions about the U.S. government’s use of security contractors in combat zones, according to two sources familiar with the case.

The guards, all former U.S. military personnel, worked as security contractors for the State Department, assigned to protect U.S. diplomats and other nonmilitary officials in Iraq.

Federal prosecutors obtained the indictment Thursday, and it was sealed. Channing Phillips, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District, declined to comment on the investigation. The exact nature of the charges could not be determined. The five security guards are expected to surrender to authorities on Monday, the sources said.

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