Louis Vitale, 75, a Franciscan priest, and Steve
Kelly, 58, a Jesuit priest, were each sentenced to five months
in federal prison for attempting to deliver a letter
opposing the teaching of torture at Fort Huachuca in Arizona.
Both priests were taken directly from the courtroom to jail
after sentencing.
Fort Huachuca is the headquarters of military
intelligence in the U.S. and the place where military and civilian
interrogators are taught how to extract information from prisoners.
The priests attempted to deliver their letter to Major General
Barbara Fast, commander of Fort Huachuca. Fast was previously
the head of all military intelligence in Iraq during the atrocities
of Abu Ghraib.
The priests were arrested while kneeling in
prayer halfway up the driveway to Fort Huachuca in November,
2006. Both priests were charged with trespass on a military
base and resisting orders of an officer to stop.
In a pre-trial hearing, the priests attempted to introduce evidence
of torture, murder, and gross violations of human rights in
Afghanistan, Abu Ghraib in Iraq, and at Guantanamo. The priests
offered investigative reports from the FBI, the US Army, Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch, and Physicians for Social
Responsibility documenting hundreds of incidents of human rights
violations. Despite increasing evidence of the use of torture
by U.S. forces, sanctioned by President Bush and others, the
federal court in Tucson refused to allow any evidence of torture,
the legality of the invasion of Iraq, or international law,
to be a part of the trial.
Outside the courthouse, before the judge ordered
them to prison, the priests explained their actions:
"The real crime here has always been the
teaching of torture at Fort Huachuca and the practice of torture
around the world. We tried to deliver a letter asking that
the teaching of torture be stopped and were arrested. We tried
to put the evidence of torture on full and honest display
in the courthouse and were denied. We were prepared to put
on evidence about the widespread use of torture and human
rights abuses committed during interrogations at Abu Ghraib
and Guantanamo in Iraq and Afghanistan. This evidence was
gathered by the military itself and by governmental and human
rights investigations.”
Fr. Vitale, a longtime justice and peace activist
in San Francisco and Nevada, said:
“Because the court will not allow the
truth of torture to be a part of our trial, we plead no contest.
We are uninterested in a court hearing limited to who was
walking where and how many steps it was to the gate. History
will judge whether silencing the facts of torture is just
or not. Far too many people have died because of our national
silence about torture. Far too many of our young people in
the military have been permanently damaged after following
orders to torture and violate the human rights of other humans.”
Fr. Kelly, who walked to the gates of Guantanamo
with the Catholic Worker group in December of 2005, concluded:
“We will keep trying to stop the teaching
and practice of torture whether we are sent to jail or out.
We have done our part for now. Now it is up to every woman
and man of conscience to do their part to stop the injustice
of torture."
The priests were prompted to protest by continuing
revelations about the practice of torture by U.S. military and
intelligence officers. The priests were also deeply concerned
after learning of the suicide in Iraq of a young, devout female
military interrogator in Iraq, Alyssa Peterson of Arizona, shortly
after arriving in Iraq. Peterson was reported to be horrified
by the mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners.
Investigation also revealed that Fort Huachuca
was the source of infamous “torture manuals” distributed
to hundreds of Latin American graduates of the U.S. Army School
of Americas at Fort Benning, GA. Demonstrations against the
teaching of torture at Fort Huachuca have been occurring for
the past several years each November and are scheduled again
for November 16 and 17 this year.
Bill Quigley served as counsel for
Frs. Vitale and Kelly. For more about the trial, see TortureOnTrial.org.
BC Columnist Bill
Quigley is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola
University, New Orleans. He has been an active public interest
lawyer since 1977 and has served as counsel with a wide range
of public interest organizations on issues including Katrina
social justice issues, public housing, voting rights, death
penalty, living wage, civil liberties, educational reform, constitutional
rights and civil disobedience. He has litigated numerous cases
with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., the
Advancement Project, and with the ACLU of Louisiana, for which
he served as General Counsel for over 15 years. Click
here to contact Mr. Quigley.