Marines Murdering Civilians
"I want to kill somebody today,"
Four Hired Guns in an Armored Truck: Bullets Flying, and a
Pickup and A Taxi Brought to a Halt. Who Did the Shooting and
Why?
A Chaotic Day On Baghdad's Airport Road
By Steve Fainaru
Washington Post Foreign Service
04/15/07
Washington Post On the afternoon of July 8, 2006,
four private security guards rolled out of Baghdad's Green Zone
in an armored SUV. The team leader, Jacob C. Washbourne, rode in
the front passenger seat. He seemed in a good mood. His vacation
started the next day.
"I want to kill somebody today," Washbourne said, according to
the three other men in the vehicle, who later recalled it as an
offhand remark. Before the day was over, however, the guards had
been involved in three shooting incidents. In one, Washbourne
allegedly fired into the windshield of a taxi for amusement,
according to interviews and statements from the three other
guards.
Washbourne, a 29-year-old former Marine, denied the allegations.
"They're all unfounded, unbased, and they simply did not
happen," he said during an interview near his home in Broken
Arrow, Okla.
The full story of what happened on Baghdad's airport road that
day may never be known. But a Washington Post investigation of
the incidents provides a rare look inside the world of private
security contractors, the hired guns who fight a parallel and
largely hidden war in Iraq. The contractors face the same
dangers as the military, but many come to the war for big money,
and they operate outside most of the laws that govern American
forces.
The U.S. military has brought charges against dozens of soldiers
and Marines in Iraq, including 64 servicemen linked to murders.
Not a single case has been brought against a security
contractor, and confusion is widespread among contractors and
the military over what laws, if any, apply to their conduct. The
Pentagon estimates that at least 20,000 security contractors
work in Iraq, the size of an additional division.
Private contractors were granted immunity from the Iraqi legal
process in 2004 by L. Paul Bremer, head of the Coalition
Provisional Authority, the U.S. occupation government. More
recently, the military and Congress have moved to establish
guidelines for prosecuting contractors under U.S. law or the
Uniform Code of Military Justice, but so far the issue remains
unresolved.
The only known inquiry into the July 8 incidents was conducted
by Triple Canopy, a 3 1/2 -year-old company founded by retired
Special Forces officers and based in Herndon. Triple Canopy
employed the four guards. After the one-week probe, the company
concluded that three questionable shooting incidents had
occurred that day and fired Washbourne and two other employees,
Shane B. Schmidt and Charles L. Sheppard III.
Lee A. Van Arsdale, Triple Canopy's chief executive officer,
said the three men failed to report the shootings immediately, a
violation of company policy and local Defense Department
requirements for reporting incidents. He said Triple Canopy was
unable to determine the circumstances behind the shootings,
especially since no deaths or injuries were recorded by U.S. or
Iraqi authorities.
"You have to assume that, if someone engages, he is following
the rules and that he did feel a threat," Van Arsdale said,
adding that conflicting accounts, delays in reporting the
incidents and lack of evidence made it impossible to determine
exactly what provoked the shootings. Triple Canopy officials
said they have lobbied for more regulation of contractors since
2004 to better define how incidents such as the July 8 shootings
are reported and investigated.
Many details about the shootings are in dispute. This account is
based on company after-action reports and other documents, court
filings, and interviews with current and former Triple Canopy
employees, including all four men riding in the armored
Chevrolet Suburban that day.
Schmidt and Sheppard said they were horrified by what they
described as a shooting rampage by Washbourne and waited two
days to come forward because they feared for their jobs and
their lives. The two have sued Triple Canopy in Fairfax County
Circuit Court, arguing that the company fired them for reporting
a crime.
But another man in the vehicle, Fijian army veteran Isireli
Naucukidi, said Sheppard, who was driving, cut off the taxi on
Washbourne's orders, giving him a better shot. Naucukidi said
the three American guards laughed as they sped away, the fate of
the Iraqi taxi driver unknown. Schmidt told Washbourne, "Nice
shot," according to Naucukidi.
Naucukidi also said that Schmidt was responsible for an earlier
shooting incident that afternoon involving a white civilian
truck, and that he believed Schmidt and Sheppard had blamed
Washbourne to cover up their own potential culpability. Schmidt
denied responsibility for that shooting but acknowledged in an
interview he had fired a warning shot into the grille of a car
on a separate airport run that morning and had failed to report
it.
Naucukidi left Triple Canopy on his own shortly after the
incidents occurred. Company officials said he was not fired
because, unlike the three other guards, he had reported the
shootings immediately. During an interview on the Fijian island
of Ovalau, where he farms, Naucukidi said he decided not to
return to Triple Canopy because "I couldn't stand what was
happening. It seemed like every day they were covering
something" up.
The presence of heavily armed guards on the battlefield has long
been a wild card in the Iraq war. Insurgents frequently attack
them. Iraqi civilians have expressed fear of their sometimes
heavy-handed tactics, which have included running vehicles off
the road and firing indiscriminately to ward off attacks.
Current and former Triple Canopy employees said they policed
themselves in Iraq under an informal system they frequently
referred to as "big boy rules."
"We never knew if we fell under military law, American law,
Iraqi law, or whatever," Sheppard said. "We were always told,
from the very beginning, if for some reason something happened
and the Iraqis were trying to prosecute us, they would put you
in the back of a car and sneak you out of the country in the
middle of the night."
Naucukidi said the American contractors had their own motto:
"What happens here today, stays here today."
June 2: Hilla
Washbourne sported a shaved head, a goatee and a mosaic of
tattoos and piercings on his muscular, 6-foot-3-inch frame. He
led one of two teams on Triple Canopy's "Milwaukee" project, a
contract to protect executives of KBR Inc., a Halliburton
subsidiary, on Iraq's dangerous roads. He earned $600 a day
commanding a small unit of guards armed with M-4 rifles and 9mm
pistols, the same caliber weapons used by U.S. troops.
The men referred to each other by their radio call signs.
Washbourne was "JW," his initials. Sheppard, a former U.S. Army
Ranger, was "Shrek," for his resemblance to the cartoon monster.
Schmidt, a former Marine sniper, was "Happy," an ironic
reference to his surly demeanor. Naucukidi was "Isi," an
abbreviation of his first name.
Schmidt and Sheppard earned $500 a day. Naucukidi earned $70 a
day for the same work.
One of the largest security firms in Iraq, Triple Canopy was
known for its elite, disciplined guards, including many Special
Operations veterans from all branches of service. The company
provides security at some checkpoints inside Baghdad's Green
Zone. But Triple Canopy officials said the company is not
responsible for protecting the Iraqi parliament building, where
a bomb Thursday killed at least one person and wounded at least
20.
On the Milwaukee project, Washbourne came to symbolize a lack of
discipline that was a departure from the company's approach,
according to several current and former employees.
Unlike the U.S. military, which prohibits drinking, Triple
Canopy employees ran their own bar, called the Gem, inside the
Green Zone. Washbourne sometimes drank so heavily his
subordinates had to roust him for his own operations briefings,
four current and former employees said. Washbourne said he
drank, but seldom to excess.
An incident a month before the shootings underscored doubts
among his colleagues about Washbourne's leadership, several of
them said. On June 2, Washbourne was leading a convoy to a State
Department compound in Hilla, about 60 miles south of Baghdad.
The Suburban in which he was a passenger jumped a curb at a high
rate of speed, shattering the axles and halting the exposed SUV
in the middle of the highway.
A blue civilian truck suddenly flew around a blind curve and
headed toward the convoy, according to Washbourne and Naucukidi,
who was riding with him that day. Washbourne fired more than a
dozen rounds into the oncoming truck with his M-4, wounding the
driver. He later said he felt threatened. Washbourne then
insisted on torching his damaged SUV with incendiary grenades
instead of having it towed.
Washbourne said he was following standard operating procedure,
which calls for a vehicle to be destroyed once it is disabled to
prevent it from falling into the hands of insurgents.
Naucukidi said Washbourne ordered the guards to tell
investigators that the convoy had been attacked by insurgents,
even though many of them believed it had merely been involved in
a traffic accident. Washbourne insisted that a small explosion
precipitated the incident and that the SUV had been run off the
road by another vehicle.
When the team returned to Baghdad, Naucukidi said, it was met by
Ryan D. Thomason, a close friend of Washbourne's who was serving
as acting project manager.
"What happens here today, stays here today," Thomason said,
according to Naucukidi. "Good job, boys."
Thomason instructed the team not to discuss the incident for
security reasons, said his attorney, Michael E. Schwartz. Triple
Canopy recently opened a separate investigation into the
incident after new information about it surfaced during
litigation over the July 8 shootings.
July 8: Baghdad Airport
The July 8 afternoon run was to be Washbourne's last before he
returned to Oklahoma. The team was to travel to Baghdad
International Airport to pick up a client, then return to the
Green Zone.
Washbourne, as team leader, led a pre-mission briefing in the
parking lot. As the briefing concluded, according to Naucukidi,
Washbourne cocked his M-4 and said, "I want to kill somebody
today."
Naucukidi said he asked why. He recalled that Washbourne
replied: "Because I'm going on vacation tomorrow. That's a long
time, buddy."
In an incident report that he later submitted to Triple Canopy,
Sheppard wrote that Washbourne also informed him that he was
"going to kill someone today." In an interview, Schmidt said he
heard a similar remark. Washbourne denied making any comment
about his hope or intention to kill that day.
Naucukidi said he didn't take the comment seriously, because
Washbourne frequently made similar jokes. "He did this really
every mission: 'Okay, let's go shoot somebody,' " Naucukidi
said.
Washbourne sat in the front passenger seat of the "follow"
vehicle -- the third Suburban in a three-truck convoy, which
included a lead vehicle, filled with guards, and what they
called the "limo," a Suburban used to ferry the client. Sheppard
drove. Schmidt and Naucukidi sat behind them facing backward to
protect against a rear attack.
The four men agree on what happened next. The convoy arrived at
Checkpoint 1, just outside the airport, and set up a blocking
position to allow the lead vehicle and the "limo" to proceed
through the checkpoint. The contractors noticed a small white
pickup truck moving up slowly behind them from a distance of
about 200 yards.
At this point, the stories diverge.
Naucukidi said Sheppard moved the Suburban to give Schmidt a
better view. Naucukidi said that he and Schmidt tried to warn
the white truck to stop but that it was still moving forward
when Schmidt fired three times with his M-4. He said the truck
stopped immediately but was still too far away for the men to
see where the bullets hit.
Naucukidi also said the truck was too far away and was moving
too slowly to pose a threat.
Schmidt and Sheppard waited two days before coming forward, then
gave nearly identical accounts of what happened. Both said that
it was Washbourne who shot at the white truck and that he fired
intentionally into the windshield. "His intention was to kill,"
said Schmidt, who claimed he saw a "splash" of glass from the
bullets striking the windshield.
Schmidt and Sheppard said Washbourne warned them not to mention
the incident, quoting him as saying, "That didn't happen,
understand?"
Washbourne said he only recalled firing two warning shots at a
much larger white truck in an incident during a different run
that morning. Naucukidi said he believes Washbourne is confusing
that shooting with yet another incident that had occurred at the
same location a few days earlier.
"There was no comments about 'That didn't happen, you
understand,' or anything," Washbourne said.
"I am not a clever or witty man; I don't say things like that,"
he said. "And I'm not a morbid or sadistic" person.
July 8: Route Irish
The convoy continued through the checkpoint to pick up the KBR
executive at the airport. It then left the airport and began the
return trip.
Sheppard wrote that he observed "an Ambulance and a lot of
activity" where the shooting had taken place. He and Schmidt
said Washbourne threatened them again not to say anything.
Washbourne denied making any threats and said no ambulance was
parked near the checkpoint. Naucukidi also said he did not see
an ambulance.
The convoy continued down the airport road, called Route Irish
by the military and contractors, toward the Green Zone. It
reached speeds of 80 miles per hour.
Schmidt, Sheppard and Naucukidi agree that the convoy then came
upon a taxi.
According to the accounts of Schmidt and Sheppard, Washbourne
remarked, "I've never shot anyone with my pistol before." As the
Suburban passed on the left, Washbourne pushed open the armored
door, leaned out with his handgun and fired "7 or 8 rounds" into
the taxi's windshield, both wrote in their statements.
Schmidt wrote: "From my position as we passed I could see the
taxi had been hit in the windshield, due to the Spidering of the
glass and the pace we were travelling, I could not tell if the
driver had been hit, He did pull the car off the road in an
erratic manner."
Sheppard said Washbourne was "laughing" as he fired.
Washbourne called their accounts "an absolute, total
fabrication." He said the Suburban's high rate of speed and the
wind resistance would have made the shooting "physically
impossible."
"There's not an ounce of truth in it. It did not happen,"
Washbourne said angrily. "And as far as the statement goes where
I said, 'I've never shot anyone with my pistol,' that is a lie.
It was never one time said."
Naucukidi said that Washbourne fired at the taxi with his M-4
and that he ordered Sheppard to cut off the taxi beforehand.
Naucukidi said Sheppard followed the order and used the Suburban
to slow down the taxi and give Washbourne a better position to
shoot from.
"When we were slightly ahead, JW just opened his door and
started shooting the taxi from where we were sitting," Naucukidi
said in an interview.
Naucukidi described the taxi driver as a 60- to 70-year-old man.
He said he saw one hole in the taxi's windshield but could not
tell if the driver had been hit. He said the taxi abruptly
stopped.
"From my point of view, this old man, he was so innocent,
because he was ahead of us with a normal speed," Naucukidi said.
"He couldn't have any danger for us."
Sheppard sped away to catch up to the rest of the convoy,
according to Naucukidi, who added that the three Americans were
laughing and that Schmidt reached over, tapped Washbourne on the
shoulder and told him, "Nice shot."
"They felt that it was so funny," Naucukidi said.
Schmidt denied that he complimented Washbourne. "No, I don't get
a thrill out of killing innocent people," he said. "That was a
moment of shame."
Divergent Reports
When the convoy returned to the Green Zone, members of the team
scattered.
Naucukidi said he immediately told his supervisor, Jona Masirewa,
who served as a liaison between the Fijian contractors and the
Americans, about the incidents. He said Masirewa instructed him
to write up a report to use in case an investigation occurred.
Naucukidi wrote the one-page report on his laptop. It contained
brief summaries of the two afternoon shootings.
Of the first incident, near the airport checkpoint, Naucukidi
wrote that the white truck was approaching slowly and was 200
meters away when Schmidt opened fire: "Happy shot three (3)
rounds from his M4 rifle, and the white bongo truck stopped."
In the second incident, Naucukidi wrote, the Suburban "over took
one white taxi with an Iraqi single pack," or passenger. He
wrote that "our team leader opened his door and fired three
rounds at white taxi."
But Naucukidi said Masirewa feared losing his job and did not
immediately turn over the report. "It was a difficult thing for
us because we are TCNs," or third-country nationals, "and they
are expats," Naucukidi said. "They are team leaders, and they
make commands and reports on us. And the team leaders were
always saying, 'What happens today, stays today,' and if
something like that happens, the team leaders, they start
covering each other up."
Masirewa, who is still employed by Triple Canopy in Iraq, did
not return e-mails seeking comment.
By the time Washbourne went on vacation the following day,
Schmidt and Sheppard had not reported the incidents. Schmidt
said he was concerned about "catching a bullet in the head."
Sheppard said he was so shaken he spent the night at another
location inside the Green Zone.
But other employees did not believe that Schmidt and Sheppard
feared for their safety. Rather, they said, the two men feared
for their high-paying jobs and believed that Thomason, the
assistant project manager, would throw his support behind
Washbourne, his close friend.
On July 10, two days after the incidents on the airport run,
Sheppard finally went to Asa Esslinger, another supervisor, and
reported them to Triple Canopy management.
'Just a Rampant Day'
On July 12, back home in Oklahoma, Washbourne received a call on
his cellphone from Triple Canopy's country manager, Kelvin Kai,
he recalled later.
Washbourne said Kai asked him if he remembered any shooting
incidents July 8. Washbourne said he told Kai that he had
forgotten to file written reports. He said he rushed to his
apartment from a Tulsa pizza restaurant and sent in the reports
from his laptop.
Two hours later, Kai called again from Baghdad. "He said that
allegations were made that it was just a rampant day, is I
believe what he called it, of shooting and mayhem," Washbourne
recalled. "I said, 'No, boss, you got those two reports.' "
Kai could not be reached for comment. Triple Canopy declined to
make him available, citing the ongoing lawsuit.
The following day, Triple Canopy suspended Schmidt and Sheppard
pending an internal investigation. No action was immediately
taken against Washbourne because he was home on leave, according
to the company.
"It is essential that we have your complete cooperation in
reporting the facts and circumstances of all the activities not
only to Triple Canopy but also to officials from DoD and KBR if
necessary," wrote Tony Nicholson, a Triple Canopy vice
president, in letters to Schmidt and Sheppard.
Triple Canopy said it took statements from 30 potential
witnesses for its internal probe. One week later, the three
guards were informed by Raymond P. Randall, a senior vice
president of Triple Canopy, that they had been fired.
"I am personally disappointed that you failed to immediately
recognize the seriousness of this breach of operating procedures
and its potential impact on the company's reputation," Randall
wrote.
The terminations did not preclude the possibility of future
investigations by the military, Randall wrote.
Van Arsdale, a retired colonel in the Army's Delta Force and a
winner of the Silver Star, said Triple Canopy reported the
incidents to KBR and to military officials in the Green Zone.
Triple Canopy officials said that because of the seriousness of
the allegations, they expected that the military would conduct a
separate investigation to determine whether further action was
warranted.
Lt. Col. Michael J. Hartig, the former director of security for
the Green Zone, said Triple Canopy officials approached him in
his office but did not specify the allegations. "They mentioned
they had a couple guys do some things that were questionable on
the road, and that was pretty much it," he said.
Hartig said he informed Triple Canopy that such incidents were
"out of my venue." He said he referred the company to the Joint
Contracting Command for Iraq and Afghanistan, which administers
contracts. "I didn't want to get involved in this because I had
enough going on in my life," Hartig said. "It was like, 'Here's
the point of contact. Have a nice day.' "
Two military spokespeople said they were unaware of any
investigations into the shootings. Maj. David W. Small, a
spokesman for the United States Central Command, which oversees
Iraq, said: "This is not a Centcom issue. It's whoever was
running that contract."
"We're fighting a war here," Small said.
Staff writer Tom Jackman and researcher Julie Tate contributed
to this report.
© 2007 The Washington Post Company
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