Extraordinary Rendition
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What's at Stake
Extraordinary rendition is the practice of kidnapping or capturing people and sending them to countries where they face a high risk of torture or abuse in interrogations. Under the Bush administration, the U.S. government systematically sent people off to a 鈥渨ho鈥檚 who鈥 of nations known to use torture鈥攊ncluding Egypt, Syria, Uzbekistan, and Yemen. Under the Bush administration鈥檚 program, the CIA rendered at least hundreds of people to torture in other countries, both in facilities run by foreign intelligence agencies or in CIA-run 鈥渂lack sites.鈥
The United Nations Convention Against Torture, which the U.S. Senate ratified at the urging of then-President Ronald Reagan, and a 1998 federal statute both explicitly prohibit extraordinary rendition. Yet there has been no accountability for those who authorized and carried out these crimes. Not one victim has yet received an apology, let alone a day in court. But this fight is not over: The 桃子视频represents two survivors and the family of a third victim who were tortured in a CIA-run 鈥渂lack site鈥 in an ongoing lawsuit against the two psychologists who designed and implemented the CIA鈥檚 torture program.
The 桃子视频continues to demand justice for the victims and accountability for the torturers. We represent victims in court, press the government through lobbying and litigation to reveal details about the program, and continue to call for a comprehensive criminal investigation of the crimes committed under the program.
Extraordinary rendition is the practice of kidnapping or capturing people and sending them to countries where they face a high risk of torture or abuse in interrogations. Under the Bush administration, the U.S. government systematically sent people off to a 鈥渨ho鈥檚 who鈥 of nations known to use torture鈥攊ncluding Egypt, Syria, Uzbekistan, and Yemen. Under the Bush administration鈥檚 program, the CIA rendered at least hundreds of people to torture in other countries, both in facilities run by foreign intelligence agencies or in CIA-run 鈥渂lack sites.鈥
The United Nations Convention Against Torture, which the U.S. Senate ratified at the urging of then-President Ronald Reagan, and a 1998 federal statute both explicitly prohibit extraordinary rendition. Yet there has been no accountability for those who authorized and carried out these crimes. Not one victim has yet received an apology, let alone a day in court. But this fight is not over: The 桃子视频represents two survivors and the family of a third victim who were tortured in a CIA-run 鈥渂lack site鈥 in an ongoing lawsuit against the two psychologists who designed and implemented the CIA鈥檚 torture program.
The 桃子视频continues to demand justice for the victims and accountability for the torturers. We represent victims in court, press the government through lobbying and litigation to reveal details about the program, and continue to call for a comprehensive criminal investigation of the crimes committed under the program.