Thomas Pappas is the subject or is mentioned in the following stories:
Commentary: Many top Bush officials guilty of violating anti-torture laws
At least a score of high Bush Administration officials authorized, and hundreds of US military and other government employees committed, crimes involving the torture of prisoners captured in the Middle East, published reports and legal documents in
Lynndie England sentenced to three-year prison term
US Army private Lynndie England was sentenced to three years in prison and granted a dishonorable discharge by a military court on Tuesday for her role in abusing Iraqi prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad.
Woman bomber attacks Iraq police recruits, five killed
A woman suicide bomber killed at least five people in an attack on Wednesday on a police recruitment center in the former insurgent stronghold of Tal Afar in northern Iraq, police said.
Colonel punished for dog use at Abu Ghraib
The commander of a US intelligence brigade has been reprimanded and fined for dereliction of duty for authorizing the use of dogs in interrogating a prisoner at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, army officials said on May 11.
Analysis: Abu Ghraib scandal toll one year on
One year after CBS' "60 Minutes II" released photos of Iraqi prisoners being humiliated and abused at Abu Ghraib prison, seven enlisted soldiers have been court-martialed for the abuse and two more await trial.
Abu Ghraib trials to be moved to the US
The US military said on Thursday that the courts-martial early next year of three US soldiers accused of Iraqi prisoner abuse in the Abu Ghraib scandal would be moved from Iraq to the United States. The trials of Specialist Charles Graner, facing the la
UN experts seek right to visit suspects in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo
In a highly unusual joint statement, 31 United Nations human rights experts said on Friday they wanted to visit all people held on suspicion of terror offences in Iraq, Afghanistan and at the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
UN seeks right to visit suspects in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo
In a highly unusual joint statement, 31 United Nations human rights experts said on Friday they wanted to visit all people held on suspicion of terror offences in Iraq, Afghanistan and at the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
