ONTD Political

Bradley Manning treatment in 'flagrant violation' of military code – lawyer

10:54 am - 08/11/2012
David Coombs claims in Article 13 motion that WikiLeaks suspect is being punished through 'degradation' and 'humiliation'

The harsh conditions forced upon Bradley Manning in military detention have been laid out in detail as part of a court filing in which the US army is accused of a "flagrant violation" of his right not to be punished prior to trial.

The Article 13 motion, published Friday by Manning's civilian lawyer David Coombs on his website, claims that Manning, who is accused of leaking state secrets to WikiLeaks, was held in a 6x8 ft cell for 23 to 24 hours a day. In addition, when not sleeping, Manning was banned from lying down, or even using a wall to support him.

The motion also claims that Manning was punished through "degradation and humiliation", notably by forcing him to stand outside his cell naked during a morning inspection. This, his Coombs claims, was "retaliatory punishment" for speaking out over his treatment.


Manning, 24, is accused of being behind the biggest leak of state secrets in US history. Hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables from US embassies around the world, as well as war logs from Afghanistan and Iraq, were published by the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

The information was provided by Manning from his military base near Baghdad, army prosecutors have claimed. They have indicted Manning on 22 counts, including charges of aiding the enemy – charges that carry a maximum penalty of death, although prosecutors have indicated that they will not seek capital punishment.

Coombs is attempting to get all charges dismissed on the grounds that he was subjected to illegal pre-trial treatment – in violation of the constitutional prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment. The claim relates to the nine months that Manning spent after being transferred to the Quantico marine base in Virginia following his arrest in May 2010.

"Manning was awoken at 0500 hours and required to remain awake in his cell from 0500 to 2200 hours," Coombs claims in the motion, adding that he "was not permitted to lie down on his rack during the duty day. Nor was Manning permitted to lean his back against the cell wall; he had to sit upright on his rack without any back support".

The motion further states that Manning was only allowed 20 minutes of "sunshine call" a day. In addition, he was permitted by guards to take no more than five minutes in the shower. On the rare occasions that he was allowed out of his cell, Manning was forced to wear shackles with metal hand and leg restraints. At least two guards accompanied him at all times.

Manning was handed a pair of running shoes without laces for his trips outside, but they would fall off when he attempted to walk. As a result he "elected to wear boots instead", the document alleges.

The conditions were imposed, the US military has claimed, for Manning's own protection under a so-called "prevention of injury" order, or POI. But Manning's lawyer says there is clear evidence showing that the conditions were not imposed because of a risk of self-harm, and were instead used as a form of punishment. "The Brig's arbitrary policy to keep Manning subject to the harshest conditions possible shows an intent to punish Manning," the document says.

Coombs cites an incident in which Manning was forced to strip for an inspection after he remonstrated over his treatment at the detention centre. "It is well established that forced nudity is a classic humiliation technique. The only permissible inference is that the Brig intended to punish Manning by subjecting him to humiliating treatment because Manning correctly pointed out the absurdity of his POI status," it is claimed.

Manning was eventually transferred from Quantico before his pre-trial hearings. His time at Quantico was later condemned by Juan Mendez, the UN's special rapporteur on torture. A 14-month investigation by Mendez concluded that Manning had been subjected to cruel and inhuman conditions.

The defence motion is brought under Article 13 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. It states that "no person, while being held for trial, may be subjected to punishment or penalty other than arrest or confinement upon the charges pending against him, nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon him be any more rigorous than the circumstances required to insure his presence."

Under Article 13, if a judge decides that a member of the armed forces has been illegally punished before trial, he can grant the prisoner credit on the amount of time they have already served in custody, or can even dismiss all charges outright.

The Guardian
atomic_joe2 11th-Aug-2012 09:34 pm (UTC)
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 5 reads that nobody should be subjected to torture or cruel or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Its time we all practiced what we preach.
qable 11th-Aug-2012 09:47 pm (UTC)
I thought Manning was a woman? Or was that debunked?
poisondusk 11th-Aug-2012 10:23 pm (UTC)
I haven't seen anything debunking it and it's not as if Manning has had any opportunities to clarify things, but whenever someone's trans status might just possibly maybe even a little bit be in question, cis people do tend to fall over themselves insisting that the person couldn't possibly be trans and then proceed to ignore the issue altogether.
zeonchar 11th-Aug-2012 10:31 pm (UTC)
They wouldn't have let him in the military if he has a tras status.
poisondusk 11th-Aug-2012 10:41 pm (UTC)
Trans people aren't allowed in the military if they are on HRT and/or openly trans. There are plenty of trans women who serve in the military as a last attempt to 'fix' themselves. The issue arose from these chat logs between Manning and Adrian Lamo.
zeonchar 11th-Aug-2012 11:36 pm (UTC)
That's interesting. I know that they inspect you before you go in so I'm assuming it's done afterwards? There are also open showers so how do they escape the scrutiny of their peers?
poisondusk 12th-Aug-2012 12:04 am (UTC)
There's nothing to scrutinise on the body of someone who isn't taking hormones, and hasn't had any trans-related surgeries. Open showers wouldn't be a comfortable experience, but the only thing their peers might notice would be nerves.

Someone looking to medically transition (or even openly identify as trans) would have to do so after leaving the military.
zeonchar 12th-Aug-2012 12:17 am (UTC)
Sorry, I had meant physical trans status, not just trans status. I was wondering if anyone had attempted surgery while in the military.
poisondusk 12th-Aug-2012 12:50 am (UTC)
There isn't really a physical trans status - by the very fact that we're trans and we have bodies, all trans people are physically trans. There's such a broad range of medical procedures that trans people use to further their transition that it's impossible to draw a line, and doing so tends to encourage the idea that doing x makes you more trans than someone who hasn't done it.

I can't imagine anyone has tried to get any relevant surgeries while still in the military. These are major surgeries that have a long recovery period that would be impossible to hide from peers.
zeonchar 12th-Aug-2012 02:28 am (UTC)
Thanks for enlightening me and correcting me, especially if I'm using incorrect speech or nouns to refer to transgender people. I don't read too much about the transgender side of things (especially since LGBT-focused stories seem to focus less on transgender people than the other parts) and its nice to get a dose of reality. Thanks you for staying patient with me. Undoubtedly it can be frustrating to explain things over and over again to people who just don't understand or don't want to.
mephisto5 11th-Aug-2012 10:51 pm (UTC)
Breanna Manning is one of many trans* folk who serve/have served in the US military.
zeonchar 11th-Aug-2012 11:39 pm (UTC)
I figured that there were pre-op trans people in the military, but as I've told other people, they inspect you medically before you go into service so I'm not sure how trans people deal with that while in. I don't know the laws regarding trans people in the military (ideally, there would be no laws at all). If you have more information on the issue I would be interested in hearing more about it.
mephisto5 12th-Aug-2012 09:04 am (UTC)
The rules surrounding transition and the US military are in the article I linked to above.
koken23 12th-Aug-2012 02:52 am (UTC)
There is one other reason why the article may keep referring to "Bradley" and "he", and it may not be purely transphobic. It probably is, you're right, but it may not be entirely trans-hate at work here...

PFC Manning enlisted under the name of "Bradley". Anything in the military justice system will fall on you under the name and gender you enlisted as, any punishments are attached to the details of you that they have in the military system - legally, the UCMJ code that Manning is charged under does not apply to Breanna Manning. Breanna Manning didn't enlist.

Somewhere, in another command that's completely unrelated, there's a PFC Breanna Manning who'd get into a lot of trouble if the legal system currently dealing with this Manning suddenly acknowledged that they weren't dealing with "Bradley" at all.
mephisto5 12th-Aug-2012 09:01 am (UTC)
The writer of this article and the majority of commenters here, however, are not part of the US military and therefore have no obligation to refer to her by her enlisted name.
koken23 12th-Aug-2012 10:23 am (UTC)
Well, the writer of the article may have to. If the lawyers and judges and everyone attached to the trial are constantly referring to "Bradley Manning" (which they must, since Manning's service record lists Bradley and not Breanna), then swapping to "Breanna" is effectively not allowed in reporting the case unless we treat one of the names as a pseudonym or a false identity, which neither of them legally are.

If they DID decide to take one name and run with it, "Breanna" would almost certainly be the one to be dropped, since "Bradley" was both the birth name and the name relevant to the UCMJ case.

It's massively unfair to Manning as a trans person, I agree, but legally, it's not usually something the journalist can do. For the purposes of reporting this case, PFC Manning must remain "Bradley", both in court and in any documentation of court procedings or reportage on the case.

The commenters here...yeah, that's on them.
oudeteron 11th-Aug-2012 11:07 pm (UTC)
That's such an easy and completely wrong way to dismiss this issue. As you can already see, there are plenty of ways trans* people can get in there, though none of them exactly ideal in the current state of things. But it happens.
zeonchar 11th-Aug-2012 11:37 pm (UTC)
Not dismissing the issue at all actually, I just know from personal experience that they inspect you medically to make sure you are the sex you say you are before going in so wondering how this occurs. I actually don't know of any examples of trans people in the military so I would be curious to hear more about it.
citiesburning 11th-Aug-2012 10:17 pm (UTC)
I'm glad you posted this. I was wondering what was happening with the case, yesterday while I was at work -- by the time I got home it slipped my mind to look up what was going on. Anyhow, I hope the charges are dropped.

I cannot (... I can, I just don't want to...) understand how anyone could treat another individual like this? Haha, and what's listed above is probably cake compared to what other people are going through, I can't. Awful.
mephisto5 11th-Aug-2012 10:26 pm (UTC)
This post needs the 'absolute gendering fail' tag.
teacoat 12th-Aug-2012 01:10 am (UTC)
Yup. :/
premor 12th-Aug-2012 08:45 am (UTC)
done
citiesburning 11th-Aug-2012 10:48 pm (UTC)
also, just because i dont know this information - and i am curious -- what information was shared? --ive seen/read bits and pieces but do we have like a complied list?...

Edited at 2012-08-11 11:05 pm (UTC)
oudeteron 11th-Aug-2012 11:12 pm (UTC)
Aside from the trans* fail going on here (or at least addressing that it's a possibility that Manning should be referred to as she, rather than this telling silence), this whole case is so distasteful. "Shoot the messenger" indeed. A day would be too long, but nine months of such treatment, am I even reading that right?
phantomlord_lop 12th-Aug-2012 05:24 am (UTC)
Truthfully it could be a lot worse for him. Thanks to the many wonderful laws in place post 9/11 that Bush signed in and Obama has made even worse, Manning could have been declared an enemy combatant and he would have disappeared off the face of the earth.
85redberries 12th-Aug-2012 08:21 am (UTC)
This whole thing makes me so mad. Evil ass government. And I'm upset the news programs I've watched on Manning never mentioned that she's a woman.
mingemonster 12th-Aug-2012 08:25 am (UTC)
Military code, human rights, common decency... The last few paragraphs sound promising, but I doubt the judge could make that call without being punished for it
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