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4th Circuit hears military contractor’s appeal in $42M Abu Ghraib verdict

The Associated Press//September 9, 2025//

Abu Ghraib

This courtroom sketch depicts a former detainee at Abu Ghraib prison, Salah Al-Ejaili, foreground with glasses, at the trial of CACI, a Virginia-based military contractor accused of contributing to the abuse and torture of detainees at Abu Ghraib, in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Virginia, on April 16, 2024. (Dana Verkouteren Via AP, File )

4th Circuit hears military contractor’s appeal in $42M Abu Ghraib verdict

The Associated Press//September 9, 2025//

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In Brief

  • CACI appealed $42M verdict over Abu Ghraib detainee abuse.
  • Plaintiffs alleged complicity, not direct abuse by contractors.
  • Photos of torture in 2004 sparked worldwide outrage and trials.
  • Case marks first U.S. jury verdict for Abu Ghraib detainees.

RICHMOND, Va. — A federal appeals court heard oral arguments Tuesday about an appeal from a U.S. military contractor ordered to pay $42 million for contributing to the torture and mistreatment of three former detainees at Iraq’s notorious two decades ago.

Reston, Virginia-based CACI appealed last year’s verdict to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The appeal before the three-judge panel centers on whether the lower court had proper jurisdiction.

, and Asa’ad Al-Zubae testified at last year’s trial that they were subjected to beatings, sexual abuse, forced nudity and other cruel treatment at the prison during the U.S. occupation of Iraq. A jury awarded them $3 million each in compensatory damages and $11 million each in .

The three did not allege that CACI’s interrogators explicitly inflicted the abuse themselves, but they argued CACI was complicit because its interrogators conspired with military police to “soften up” detainees for questioning with harsh treatment.

CACI supplied the interrogators who worked at the prison. It has denied any wrongdoing and has emphasized throughout 17 years of litigation that its employees are not alleged to have inflicted any abuse on the plaintiffs in the case.

Photos of the abuse released in 2004 showed naked prisoners stacked into pyramids or dragged by leashes. Photos included a soldier smiling and giving a thumbs-up while posing next to a corpse, detainees being threatened with dogs, and a detainee hooded and attached to electrical wires.

Military police seen in the photos smiling and laughing as they directed the abuse were convicted in military courts-martial. But none of the civilian interrogators from CACI ever faced criminal charges, even though military investigations concluded that several CACI interrogators had engaged in wrongdoing.

Last year’s civil trial and subsequent retrial were the first time a U.S. jury heard claims brought by Abu Ghraib detainees in the 20 years since the photos shocked the world.

None of the three plaintiffs were in any of photos but they described treatment very similar to what was depicted.

The $42 million they were awarded fully matches the amount sought by the plaintiffs. It’s also more than the $31 million that the plaintiffs said CACI was paid to supply interrogators to Abu Ghraib.

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