Jury Convicts Four in 2007 Blackwater Iraq Massacre Case

The Slatest
Your News Companion by Ben Mathis-Lilley
Oct. 22 2014 2:03 PM

Jury Convicts Four in 2007 Blackwater Iraq Massacre Case

rtr28h0o
Dustin Heard in 2010.

Chris Detrick/Reuters

Four former employees of the Blackwater security company have been convicted of a number of charges related to the 2007 shooting deaths of 14 Iraqis and the wounding of 17 others in Baghdad's Nisour Square. From the Washington Post:

The jury of eight women and four men deliberated 27 days before convicting Nicholas A. Slatten, of Sparta, Tenn., of murder. The panel also convicted Paul A. Slough of Keller, Tex., of 13 counts of manslaughter and 16 counts of attempted manslaughter; Evan S. Liberty of Rochester, N.H., of eight counts of manslaughter and 12 counts of attempted manslaughter; and [Dustin] Heard of Knoxville, Tenn., of six counts of manslaughter and 11 counts of attempted manslaughter.
Slough, Liberty and Heard were also convicted of using military firearms while committing a felony.
Advertisement

Slatten could be sentenced to life in prison, while the others face a minimum of 30 years. Another Blackwater employee, Jeremy Ridgeway, previously pleaded guilty to manslaughter and testified for the prosecution in this trial.

The convicted guards were attempting to clear a secure route for a U.S. official who was fleeing the scene of an earlier bombing when they opened fire in Nisour Square. The ex-Blackwater guards argued in their defense that they were responding to incoming AK-47 gunfire, an assertion supported by some witnesses. But none of the Iraqis killed or injured were insurgents, the Post says, and some were reportedly attempting to flee the scene when they were killed.

One defendant's lawyer has already said that he will appeal, while the Wall Street Journal writes that appeals related to evidence used in the case are "likely."  

Ben Mathis-Lilley edits the Slatest. Follow @Slatest on Twitter.

TODAY IN SLATE

Technology

Driving in Circles

The autonomous Google car may never actually happen.

Where Ebola Lives Between Outbreaks

Gunman Killed Inside Canadian Parliament; Soldier Shot at National Monument Dies

Sleater-Kinney Was Once America’s Best Rock Band

Can it be again?

The Simpsons World App Is Here, and Nearly Perfect

Science

“I’m Not a Scientist” Is No Excuse

Politicians brag about their ignorance while making ignorant decisions.

Politics

The Right to Run

If you can vote, you should be able to run for public office—any office.

Ben Bradlee’s Fascinating Relationship With JFK

Renée Zellweger’s New Face Is Too Real

  News & Politics
The World
Oct. 22 2014 2:05 PM Paul Farmer Says Up to Ninety Percent of Those Infected Should Survive Ebola. Is He Right?
  Business
Continuously Operating
Oct. 22 2014 2:38 PM Crack Open an Old One A highly unscientific evaluation of Germany’s oldest breweries.
  Life
Education
Oct. 22 2014 4:45 PM Welcome to 13th Grade! Several Oregon high schools are offering a fifth year of high school. Every district should consider it.
  Double X
The XX Factor
Oct. 22 2014 4:27 PM Three Ways Your Text Messages Change After You Get Married
  Slate Plus
Working
Oct. 22 2014 6:00 AM Why It’s OK to Ask People What They Do David Plotz talks to two junior staffers about the lessons of Working.
  Arts
Brow Beat
Oct. 22 2014 4:10 PM Skinny Mark Wahlberg Goes for an Oscar: The First Trailer for The Gambler
  Technology
Future Tense
Oct. 22 2014 2:59 PM Netizen Report: Twitter Users Under Fire in Mexico, Venezuela, Turkey
  Health & Science
Wild Things
Oct. 22 2014 2:42 PM Orcas, Via Drone, for the First Time Ever
  Sports
Sports Nut
Oct. 20 2014 5:09 PM Keepaway, on Three. Ready—Break! On his record-breaking touchdown pass, Peyton Manning couldn’t even leave the celebration to chance.