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(詳細はSergeant Heather Cerveny is a member of the United States Marine Corps, and a paralegal who submitted an affidavit describing boasts of abusive treatment meted out to detainees held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba.〔 (Marine says morale miserable at Guantanamo Bay prison ), ''San Jose Mercury'', October 13, 2006 〕〔 (Cerveny's affidavit (.pdf) ), October 4, 2006〕 Her claims were rejected by a military investigator and she was later accused of making a false statement.〔never charged. Now stationed in Washington DC.(Military: No Gitmo Guard Abuse Evident, U.S. Military Investigation Reports No Evidence Guards Beat Guantanamo Detainees – CBS News )〕 The Department of Defense's Inspector General announced that another inquiry would be launched into detainee treatment, based on Cerveny's affidavit.〔 (Pentagon orders probe into Marine's report of Guantanamo detainee abuse ), ''The Jurist'', October 13, 2006〕 Previous inquiries, like the Schmidt report, concluded that abuse at the camps was degrading, but did not rise to the level of "inhumane".〔 (Alleged Guantanamo Abuse Did Not Rise to Level of 'Inhumane' ), ''Department of Defense'', July 13, 2005〕 ==Gag order== Muneer Ahmad, the civilian lawyer for Omar Khadr, reported that Cerveny, and her boss, Colby Vokey, Khadr's military lawyer, had been ordered not to speak to the media pending Marine chief defense counsel Col. Carol Joyce's review of Cerveny's claims.〔 (2 Ordered Not to Discuss Gitmo Claims ), ''Washington Post'', October 14, 2006〕 The report quotes a statement released by the Marines explaining that Col. Joyce: :''... had directed him() not to communicate with the media "pending her review of the facts. This is necessary to ensure all actions of counsel are in compliance with regulations establishing professional standards for military attorneys."〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Heather Cerveny」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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