LYNNDIE ENGLAND COURT-MARTIAL (2005)

COMPREHENSIVE RESEARCH FILE

Case: United States v. Private First Class Lynndie R. England
Date: September 21 – September 27, 2005 (Second Trial)
Location: Fort Hood, Texas (Williams Judicial Center)
Charges: Conspiracy, Maltreating Detainees, Committing an Indecent Act
Verdict: GUILTY ON SIX OF SEVEN COUNTS


SECTION 1: DEFENDANT PROFILE

1.1 Personal Information

Field Detail
<strong>Full Name</strong> Lynndie Rana England
<strong>Birth</strong> November 8, 1982, Ashland, Kentucky
<strong>Age at Trial</strong> 22 years old
<strong>Military Rank</strong> Private First Class (PFC), later demoted to Private
<strong>Military Unit</strong> 372nd Military Police Company
<strong>MOS</strong> Records Clerk

1.2 Family Background

Father: Kenneth R. England Jr.

  • Railroad maintenance worker
  • Worked at station in Cumberland, Maryland

Mother: Terrie Bowling England

  • Worked at a manufacturing plant
  • Remained publicly supportive of daughter throughout trial

Upbringing:

  • Born in Ashland, Kentucky
  • Moved to Fort Ashby, West Virginia at age two
  • Raised in a trailer park between a sheep farm and a saloon
  • Area described by locals as “a backwoods world”

Siblings: One younger brother, one married sister

1.3 Education and Early Life

  • Attended Frankfort High School, Short Gap, West Virginia
  • Diagnosed with selective mutism (anxiety disorder) as a child
  • Identified as having learning disabilities in kindergarten
  • Required special education assistance throughout schooling
  • Member of Future Farmers of America
  • Aspired to become a storm chaser/meteorologist
  • Graduated with her class despite learning disability
  • Known for wearing combat boots and camouflage fatigues to school

1.4 Marriages and Children

First Marriage:

  • Husband: James L. Fike
  • Met while working as cashier at IGA store during junior year
  • Married: 2002 (after high school graduation)
  • Divorced: Before deployment to Iraq (within months)

Child:

  • Son: Carter Allan England
  • Born: October 2004 (while awaiting trial)
  • Father: Charles Graner Jr. (confirmed by DNA test)
  • Graner initially denied paternity
  • Graner refused involvement in raising the child

SECTION 2: MILITARY CAREER

2.1 Enlistment and Training

Army Reserve Enlistment:

  • Enlisted: 1999, Cumberland, Maryland
  • Age: 17 (during junior year of high school)
  • Unit: 372nd Military Police Company
  • Location: Army Reserve unit based in Cresaptown, Maryland

Basic Training:

  • Fort Jackson, South Carolina
  • Attended during summer after junior year while classmates were on vacation
  • Completed additional training after graduation

Employment Prior to Deployment:

  • Worked night shift at a chicken-processing plant in Fort Ashby
  • Worked as cashier at IGA grocery store

2.2 Deployment to Iraq

Initial Deployment:

  • Date: June 2003
  • First Location: Al Hillah, Iraq
  • Unit: 372nd Military Police Company

Transfer to Abu Ghraib:

  • Date: October 2003
  • Reason: Tenfold increase in prison population without corresponding staff increase
  • Position: Records administration clerk (not trained as prison guard)
  • Assignment: Support specialist processing paperwork for Military Police

2.3 Unit Structure and Command

372nd Military Police Company:

  • Army Reserve unit from Cresaptown, Maryland
  • Part of 320th Military Police Battalion
  • Under 800th Military Police Brigade

Chain of Command at Abu Ghraib:

Position Name
Commander, 800th MP Brigade Brigadier General Janis Karpinski
Commander, 205th Military Intelligence Brigade Colonel Thomas Pappas
Unit Commander, 372nd MP Company Captain Donald Reese

Other Soldiers in England’s Unit Charged:

  • Specialist Charles Graner Jr. (ringleader)
  • Staff Sergeant Ivan “Chip” Frederick II
  • Specialist Sabrina Harman
  • Specialist Megan Ambuhl
  • Specialist Jeremy Sivits
  • Specialist Javal Davis
  • Specialist Armin Cruz

SECTION 3: ABU GHRAIB PRISON ABUSE SCANDAL

3.1 Background on Abu Ghraib Prison

Historical Context:

  • Location: Abu Ghraib district, approximately 20 miles west of Baghdad
  • Under Saddam Hussein: Notorious torture and execution facility
  • Estimated 50,000 prisoners held during Hussein regime
  • Reopened by U.S. military: August 2003
  • Function: Largest American detention facility in Iraq

Conditions at Abu Ghraib (October-December 2003):

  • Overcrowded and under-resourced
  • Frequent mortar attacks on facility
  • Inadequate staffing levels
  • Limited supervision on night shift
  • Volatile mix of detainees
  • Lack of clear operational standards

3.2 The Abuse Period

Timeline of Abuse:

  • Duration: October – December 2003
  • Location: Tier 1-A (high-security cellblock)
  • Shift: Overnight/night shift

Types of Abuse Documented:

  • Physical abuse and beatings
  • Sexual humiliation
  • Forced nudity
  • Stacking prisoners in human pyramids
  • Use of dog leashes on detainees
  • Threatening detainees with military dogs
  • Photographing abuse for amusement
  • Forcing detainees to simulate sexual acts
  • Hooding and stress positions

3.3 England’s Documented Involvement

Photographs Showing England:

  • Holding leash attached to naked prisoner (“Gus”) lying on floor
  • Standing next to pyramid of naked detainees
  • Pointing at genitals of naked prisoner while smoking cigarette
  • Giving thumbs-up gesture near humiliated prisoners
  • Smiling while posing with abused detainees

England’s Later Statements About Involvement:

  • Claimed she visited Tier 1-A after work hours to see boyfriend Graner
  • Stated she was instructed by Graner and others to pose for photographs
  • Testified she believed Graner when he said it was standard procedure
  • Claimed she did not know her actions were wrong at the time

3.4 Discovery and Investigation

January 13, 2004:

  • Specialist Joseph M. Darby discovered photographs on CD
  • Downloaded from Specialist Charles Graner’s computer
  • Darby reported images to Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID)

January 19, 2004:

  • Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez ordered investigation
  • Major General Antonio Taguba appointed to lead inquiry

The Taguba Report (February-March 2004):

  • Official Title: AR 15-6 Investigation of the 800th Military Police Brigade
  • Submitted: March 9, 2004

Key Findings:

“Between October and December 2003, at the Abu Ghraib Confinement Facility, numerous incidents of sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses were inflicted on several detainees. This systemic and illegal abuse of detainees was intentionally perpetrated by several members of the military police guard force (372nd Military Police Company, 320th Military Police Battalion, 800th MP Brigade).”

Contributing Factors Identified:

  • Poor training
  • Inadequate staffing
  • Dysfunctional leadership
  • Poor morale
  • Failure of commanders to recognize pressures
  • Lack of clear standards and SOPs

3.5 Public Disclosure

April 28, 2004:

  • CBS News program 60 Minutes II broadcasts story
  • First public airing of abuse photographs
  • Report delayed two weeks at Pentagon request
  • Dan Rather conducted interviews for segment

April 30, 2004:

  • Seymour Hersh article published in The New Yorker
  • Additional photographs and details released
  • Article titled “Torture at Abu Ghraib”

May 2004:

  • Taguba Report leaked to media
  • Global condemnation of abuse
  • President George W. Bush apologizes publicly
  • Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld testifies before Congress

SECTION 4: LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

4.1 Initial Charges and Pre-Trial

Formal Charges Filed: May 2004

Transfer for Pre-Trial:

  • Transferred to Fort Bragg, North Carolina (March 18, 2004)
  • Reason: Pregnancy required stateside medical care
  • Visibly pregnant during initial court appearances

Original Charges (9 counts):

  • Multiple counts of conspiracy to maltreat prisoners
  • Assault consummated by battery
  • Maltreating detainees
  • Committing indecent acts
  • Creation and possession of sexually explicit photographs
  • Failure to obey a lawful order
  • Dereliction of duty

Maximum Possible Sentence: 16½ years to 38 years (various reports)

4.2 Article 32 Hearing

Date: August 2004
Location: Fort Bragg, North Carolina
Presiding Officer: Colonel Denise Arn

Purpose: Determine if evidence sufficient for court-martial (equivalent to grand jury)

Defense Witness List Submitted:

  • Included high-ranking officials
  • Attempted “chain of command defense”
  • Sought to implicate Pentagon leadership

4.3 First Court-Martial (May 2005) – MISTRIAL

Location: Fort Hood, Texas
Presiding Judge: Colonel James L. Pohl
Start Date: May 2, 2005

Plea Agreement:

  • England pleaded guilty to 7 of 9 counts
  • Prosecutors dropped 2 charges in exchange
  • Maximum sentence reduced to 11 years
  • Reports indicated 30-month sentencing cap negotiated

Charges in Plea:

  • Two counts of conspiracy
  • Four counts of maltreating prisoners
  • One count of dereliction of duty

Mistrial Declared: May 4, 2005

Cause of Mistrial:

  • Charles Graner testified as defense witness during sentencing phase
  • Graner stated photographs were “legitimate use of force” and “training aids”
  • This contradicted England’s guilty plea that photos were “for amusement”
  • Judge Pohl ruled he could not accept guilty plea with conflicting testimony
  • Entire plea agreement thrown out

Graner’s Pre-Testimony Note to Reporters:

“Knowing what happened in Iraq, it was very upsetting to see Lynn plead guilty to her charges.”

4.4 Second Court-Martial (September 2005) – CONVICTION

Location: Fort Hood, Texas (Williams Judicial Center)
Presiding Judge: Colonel James L. Pohl
Trial Dates: September 21-26, 2005 (testimony); September 27, 2005 (sentencing)

4.5 Charges at Second Trial

Final Charges (7 counts):

  1. Conspiracy (Count 1) – relating to pyramid photograph
  2. Conspiracy (Count 2) – relating to leash photograph
  3. Maltreating detainees (4 separate counts)
  4. Committing an indecent act

Maximum Possible Sentence: 11 years (later reduced to 9 years)

4.6 Prosecution Team

Role Name Rank
Lead Prosecutor Chris Graveline Captain
Assistant Prosecutor Chuck Neill Captain

4.7 Defense Team

Role Name Notes
Lead Defense Counsel Jonathan Crisp Army Captain
Civilian Defense Counsel Rick Hernandez Private attorney
Assistant Defense Counsel Katherine Krul Army Captain

Previous Defense Attorney: Giorgio Ra’Shadd (Denver-based civilian attorney during early proceedings)

4.8 Court Composition

Jury Selection:

  • England opted for all-officer jury (unusual choice)
  • Previous co-defendants had mixed officer/enlisted juries
  • Defense rationale unclear

Final Jury:

  • Five male Army officers
  • All had served in Iraq or Afghanistan

4.9 Key Witnesses

Prosecution Witnesses:

  • Army criminal investigators
  • Fellow soldiers from 372nd MP Company
  • Photographic evidence (primary)

Defense Witnesses:

Name Role/Background
Charles Graner Jr. Former boyfriend, father of her child, convicted ringleader
Ivan Frederick Convicted Abu Ghraib guard
Robert Jones Former Abu Ghraib guard, now Baltimore policeman
Thomas Denne School psychologist (West Virginia)
Stjepan Mestrovic Sociology professor, Texas A&M University
Xavier Amador Psychologist (New York)

Expert Witness Testimony:

Dr. Thomas Denne (School Psychologist):

  • Evaluated England as a child
  • Testified to learning disabilities identified in kindergarten
  • Diagnosed speech impairment
  • Noted trouble learning to read
  • Stated: “I knew I was going to know Lynndie England for the rest of my life”

Dr. Stjepan Mestrovic (Sociologist):

  • Described “poisonous environment” at Abu Ghraib
  • Testified officers “knew or should have known what was going on”
  • Recommended lenient punishment due to chaotic conditions

Dr. Xavier Amador (Psychologist):

  • Described England as having “overly compliant personality”
  • Testified she came from “emotionally abusive family”
  • Noted pre-existing depression and anxiety
  • Diagnosed post-traumatic stress disorder (pre-Iraq deployment)
  • Testified she was prone to clinical depression

4.10 Trial Proceedings

Prosecution Strategy:

  • Relied heavily on photographic evidence
  • Displayed poster-size enlargements of abuse photos
  • Emphasized England’s smiles and gestures as willing participation
  • Used England’s own statement to investigators (January 2004)
  • Argued abuse was done “for their own amusement”

Key Prosecution Argument (Captain Graveline):

“What soldier wouldn’t know that that’s illegal? She is enjoying, she is participating, all for her own sick humor.”

Defense Strategy:

  • Did not deny England appeared in photographs
  • Argued “overly compliant personality” made her susceptible
  • Claimed Graner manipulated and dominated her
  • Presented evidence of learning disabilities
  • Attempted to show lack of leadership at prison

Key Defense Argument (Captain Crisp):

“She was an individual who was smitten with Graner, who just did whatever he asked her to do. Compounding all this is her depression, her anxiety, her fear.”

England’s Statement to Investigators (January 2004):

  • Used by prosecution
  • England implicated herself in abuse
  • Judge initially ruled statements inadmissible
  • Later reversed and allowed one statement into evidence

4.11 England’s Testimony

Pre-Sentencing Statement:

  • Made unsworn statement during sentencing phase
  • Responded to questions from defense attorney Captain Katherine Krul
  • Duration: Approximately 30 minutes

Key Statements:

“I was instructed by persons in higher rank to stand there, hold this leash and look at the camera.”

On Photographs:

  • Said she was embarrassed by the photos
  • Claimed she did not think she was doing anything improper

Apology:

“I heard attacks were made on coalition forces because of the photos. I apologize to coalition forces and their families that lost their life or were injured because of the photos.”

Regarding Victims:

  • Apologized to detainees and their families

4.12 Verdict

Date: September 26, 2005
Deliberation Time: Approximately 2 hours

Verdict:

Count Charge Verdict
1 Conspiracy (pyramid photo) GUILTY
2 Conspiracy (leash photo) NOT GUILTY
3 Maltreating detainees GUILTY
4 Maltreating detainees GUILTY
5 Maltreating detainees GUILTY
6 Maltreating detainees GUILTY
7 Committing an indecent act GUILTY

Overall: Guilty on 6 of 7 counts

England’s Reaction:

  • Stood at attention in Army dress uniform
  • Showed no obvious emotion
  • Remained stoic as verdict was read

4.13 Sentencing

Date: September 27, 2005
Deliberation Time: Approximately 90 minutes

Prosecution Request: 4-6 years imprisonment
Defense Request: No prison time
Maximum Possible: 9 years

Sentence Imposed:

  • 3 years imprisonment
  • Dishonorable discharge from U.S. Army
  • Reduction in rank to Private (from PFC)
  • Forfeiture of all pay and allowances

SECTION 5: OTHER ABU GHRAIB CONVICTIONS

5.1 Complete List of Convicted Soldiers

Name Rank Sentence Notes
Charles Graner Jr. Specialist 10 years "Ringleader," convicted January 2005
Ivan Frederick II Staff Sergeant 8 years Pleaded guilty October 2004
Sabrina Harman Specialist 6 months Convicted May 2005
Javal Davis Sergeant 6 months Pleaded guilty February 2005
Jeremy Sivits Specialist 1 year First conviction, May 2004
Armin Cruz Specialist 8 months September 2004
Roman Krol Specialist 10 months February 2005
Megan Ambuhl Specialist No jail time Dereliction of duty only
Lynndie England PFC 3 years Last to be tried

5.2 Charles Graner Jr. – The “Ringleader”

Background:

  • Age: 36 at time of conviction
  • Hometown: Uniontown, Pennsylvania
  • Previous Employment: Pennsylvania state prison guard
  • History: Accused of domestic battery by ex-wife

Court-Martial:

  • Date: January 10-15, 2005
  • Location: Fort Hood, Texas
  • Verdict: Guilty on all counts
  • Sentence: 10 years, dishonorable discharge, reduction to private

Charges Convicted:

  • Conspiracy
  • Dereliction of duty
  • Maltreatment of detainees
  • Assault
  • Battery
  • Committing indecent acts

Post-Trial:

  • Imprisoned at U.S. Disciplinary Barracks, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
  • Married fellow Abu Ghraib guard Megan Ambuhl (2005, proxy wedding)
  • Released: August 2011 (served 6½ years)
  • Credited with good conduct

5.3 Officers and Senior Personnel

Brigadier General Janis Karpinski:

  • Commander, 800th Military Police Brigade
  • Demoted to Colonel by President Bush (May 2005)
  • Not court-martialed
  • Cited for dereliction of duty

Colonel Thomas Pappas:

  • Commander, 205th Military Intelligence Brigade
  • Relieved of command (May 2005)
  • Received non-judicial punishment
  • Fined $8,000
  • Reprimanded

Lieutenant Colonel Steven L. Jordan:

  • Only officer charged with prisoner abuse
  • Acquitted of all abuse-related charges (August 2007)
  • Convicted only of disobeying order not to discuss investigation
  • Sentenced to reprimand

SECTION 6: INCARCERATION AND RELEASE

6.1 Imprisonment

Incarceration Period:

  • Start: September 27, 2005
  • End: March 1, 2007
  • Total Time Served: 521 days (approximately 17 months)

Location: Naval Consolidated Brig, Miramar, San Diego, California

Release: Paroled after serving approximately half of 36-month sentence

6.2 Post-Release Life

Initial Circumstances:

  • Returned to Fort Ashby, West Virginia
  • Lived with parents
  • Struggled to find employment due to:
  • Felony conviction
  • Dishonorable discharge
  • Public notoriety

Keyser Recreation Board Appointment:

  • Date: July 9, 2007
  • Position: Volunteer recreation board member
  • Location: Keyser, West Virginia

Employment Struggles:

  • Largely unemployed post-release
  • Found seasonal employment as secretary (as of 2013)
  • Difficulty obtaining full-time work

Mental Health:

  • Diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder
  • Prescribed antidepressant medication
  • Experienced anxiety

Single Parenthood:

  • Raised son Carter as single mother
  • Charles Graner refused contact with child
  • Graner denied paternity until DNA test

SECTION 7: PUBLIC STATEMENTS AND INTERVIEWS

7.1 Lack of Remorse

2012 Statement:

  • England stated she did not regret her actions
  • Said she only regretted photographs were taken

Regarding Retaliatory Attacks:

“I heard attacks were made on coalition forces because of the photos.”

7.2 Blaming Media

March 2008 (Stern Magazine Interview):

“If the media hadn’t exposed the pictures to that extent, then thousands of lives would have been saved.”

On Global Distribution:

“Yeah, I took the photos but I didn’t make it worldwide.”

7.3 Regarding Charles Graner

January 2009 (The Guardian Interview):

  • Stated she was pressured by Graner to pose for photos
  • Claimed psychological manipulation

On Trust:

“At the time I thought, I love this man, I trust this man with my life.”

7.4 Unreleased Photographs

March 2008 Interview:
When asked about unreleased Abu Ghraib photographs:

“You see the dogs biting the prisoners. Or you see bite marks from the dogs. You can see MPs holding down a prisoner so a medic can give him a shot.”


SECTION 8: BIOGRAPHY PUBLICATION

Title: “Tortured: Lynndie England, Abu Ghraib and the Photographs that Shocked the World”

Publication: July 2009

Purpose: Book tour intended to rehabilitate public image

Author: Biography written with England’s cooperation


SECTION 9: BROADER SCANDAL CONTEXT

9.1 International Reaction

Global Response to Photographs:

  • Worldwide condemnation of United States
  • Damaged America’s image in Muslim world
  • Sparked debate about Geneva Conventions
  • Questioned “War on Terror” methods
  • United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan: Reconstruction efforts “badly damaged”

Iraqi Response:

  • Deepened resentment against U.S. forces
  • Particularly humiliating in male-dominated society
  • Images of woman humiliating male prisoners especially inflammatory

9.2 U.S. Government Response

President George W. Bush:

  • Publicly apologized for abuse (May 2004)
  • Called acts a “stain on our country’s honor”
  • Stated individuals would be “brought to justice”
  • Administration characterized abuse as “isolated incidents”

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld:

  • Testified before Congress (May 2004)
  • Offered resignation twice (declined by Bush)
  • Stated he was “appalled” by photographs

9.3 Investigations and Reports

Total Investigations Initiated: Over 400 inquiries into detainee abuse

Personnel Punished: 230 enlisted soldiers and officers

Major Reports:

  1. Taguba Report (March 2004)
  2. Schlesinger Report (August 2004)
  3. Fay-Jones Report (August 2004)
  4. Church Report (March 2005)

9.4 Human Rights Organizations’ Position

Red Cross, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch:

  • Disputed “isolated incidents” characterization
  • Claimed abuses were part of systematic pattern
  • Cited similar abuses at Guantanamo Bay and Afghanistan

Human Rights Watch Statement (June 2004):

“The only exceptional aspect of the abuse at Abu Ghraib may have been that it was photographed.”


SECTION 10: ICONIC PHOTOGRAPHS

10.1 The Most Recognizable Images

“The Leash Photo”

  • England holding dog leash/tether
  • Attached to naked Iraqi detainee on floor
  • Detainee known to guards as “Gus”
  • Became most widely circulated image of scandal

“The Pyramid Photo”

  • Stack of naked Iraqi prisoners
  • England and other guards posing nearby
  • Used to demonstrate conspiracy charge

“The Hooded Man” (Separate Photo)

  • Not featuring England
  • Prisoner standing on box with wires attached
  • Became iconic image of Abu Ghraib scandal
  • Subject: Disputed (originally identified as Ali Shallal al-Qaisi)

10.2 Distribution of Images

  • Initially broadcast on CBS 60 Minutes II
  • Published in newspapers worldwide
  • Appeared in The New Yorker with Seymour Hersh article
  • Featured on cover of The Economist
  • Reproduced across all major news outlets globally

SECTION 11: ABOUT THE COURT-MARTIAL

A court-martial is a military court convened to try members of the armed forces for offenses under military law. The Lynndie England case was the final general court-martial of nine low-ranking soldiers from the 372nd Military Police Company charged with abuse at Abu Ghraib prison. The proceedings included an unusual mistrial in May 2005 when testimony contradicted England’s guilty plea, requiring a full retrial in September 2005. The five-member jury of Army officers deliberated approximately two hours before returning a guilty verdict on six of seven counts. The three-year sentence fell in the middle of punishments given to the nine convicted soldiers. No officers were court-martialed for the Abu Ghraib abuses, though several received administrative punishment. Human rights organizations and critics argued that only low-ranking “scapegoats” were prosecuted while those who created policies enabling abuse escaped accountability. The case remains studied as an example of military justice limitations, command responsibility failures, and the power of photographic evidence in war crimes prosecution.


SECTION 12: SOURCE BIBLIOGRAPHY

Primary Sources

  • Court-martial proceedings, Fort Hood, Texas (September 2005)
  • Taguba Report: AR 15-6 Investigation of the 800th Military Police Brigade (March 2004)
  • 60 Minutes II broadcast transcript (April 28, 2004)
  • Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID) records

Secondary Sources

News Organizations:

  • CBS News
  • NPR (National Public Radio)
  • The New Yorker (Seymour Hersh articles)
  • The Washington Post
  • The Guardian
  • Stern Magazine

Academic/Research:

  • ACLU Freedom of Information Act documents
  • Human Rights Watch reports
  • International Committee of the Red Cross reports

Key Articles

  • Hersh, Seymour M. “Torture at Abu Ghraib,” The New Yorker (May 10, 2004)
  • Hersh, Seymour M. “Chain of Command,” The New Yorker (May 17, 2004)
  • Hersh, Seymour M. “The Gray Zone,” The New Yorker (May 24, 2004)

Research compiled from multiple verified historical sources.