Alberto Mora (lawyer): Difference between revisions
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'''Alberto Mora''' was an [[American people|American]] lawyer and public official.<ref name=TheNewYorker2006-02-27/> | '''Alberto Mora''' was an [[American people|American]] lawyer and public official.<ref name=TheNewYorker2006-02-27/> | ||
In early 2002 he was [[General Counsel of the Navy]] when [[David | In early 2002 he was [[General Counsel of the Navy]] when [[David Brant]], then the Director of the [[Naval Criminal Investigation Service]] ([[NCIS]]) informed Mora that interrogators were torturing individuals held in the newly created [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp]]s.<ref name=tjaglcsAlbertoMoraLecture2019/><ref name=witnesstoguantanamo2011-03-11/> | ||
After consulting with colleagues | After consulting with colleagues |
Revision as of 09:03, 5 February 2024
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Alberto Mora was an American lawyer and public official.[1] In early 2002 he was General Counsel of the Navy when David Brant, then the Director of the Naval Criminal Investigation Service (NCIS) informed Mora that interrogators were torturing individuals held in the newly created Guantanamo Bay detention camps.[2][3] After consulting with colleagues David Brant, William Molzahn, Tom Kranz, Peter Murphy, Michael Gelles, Douglas Mohr, Rick Schieke, and Charlotte Wise, Mora wrote a 20 page memo to the Navy's Inspector General, explaining why the Navy should not be involved in torture.[4] In 2006 Mora was chosen by the John F. Kennedy Library as a John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award Recipient, for his efforts to prevent the use of torture.[5] References
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