The law stood for two years, until the court issued its opinion in the Boumediene case, holding that constitutional rights extended to detainees held in Guantanamo. With that foundation to the ruling, the court continued that the prisoners had habeas rights and that the Military Commissions Act was an unconstitutional suspension of those rights.
Almost all of the men whose names are now linked to those decisions were either released without charges or given a minimal sentence. Rasul and the other members of the Tipton Three—Asif Iqbal and Ruhal Ahmed—were sent back to England in March 2004 after being detained for seventeen months. They were freed the next day. That was not the end of the story. In 2007, both Ahmed and Rasul agreed to appear on a British television show where they would be given a lie-detector test. Ahmed failed, and admitted that he had visited an Islamist training camp and had been trained to use an AK-47. Rasul refused to go through with the test.
Also in 2004, Hamdi—who had been captured in Afghanistan with Taliban fighters—was sent back to Saudi Arabia, on condition that he renounce his American citizenship. After being held for two and a half years, he also was never charged.
Salim Hamdan was the first Guantanamo detainee to be tried by military commission. In the case, which was heard in 2008, Hamdan was charged with conspiracy and providing support for terrorists. After eight hours of deliberation, the military officers on the jury found Hamdan guilty only on the second count. The prosecution urged the judge to sentence Hamdan to a term of thirty years to life; the defense sought forty-five months. In a rebuke to the administration’s portrayal of Hamdan as a dangerous terrorist, the judge sentenced him to sixty-six months but credited him with the sixty-one months he had already been held. Hamdan was released after five months. He now lives in Yemen with his family.
The story of the Algerian Six proved to be the most disturbing. They had been arrested in Bosnia under accusations that they were plotting to bomb the American embassy in Sarajevo; that allegation was dropped when their case was finally heard before a review board at Guantanamo. Instead, the administration argued that they should continue to be held on the basis of bizarre allegations: that one of the men taught karate to orphans; that another, during his compulsory military service in Algeria, had worked as a cook; that a third wore a ring similar to those favored by a group connected to Hamas. Only a single claim rose to the level of an actual charge—that one of the men had joined al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters in the battle at Tora Bora. The claim was false—at the time of the Tora Bora conflict, he was in a Sarajevo prison at the insistence of Bush administration officials.
The men were held for almost seven years and saw the inside of a civilian court only because of the ruling in Boumediene. In their filings, the men contended that there was no basis for their detention, and federal judge Richard J. Leon agreed. He tossed out all charges against five of the men, but ruled that the secret intelligence information against the sixth justified his detention.
In dismissing the case against the five, Leon said, “To allow enemy combatancy to rest on so thin a reed would be inconsistent with this court’s obligation. The court must and will grant their petitions and order their release.” Their seven-year detention, Leon declared, had been illegal.
• • •
By the summer of 2008, the world was closing in on Dr. Bruce Ivins.
The investigation into the anthrax killings of 2001 had overtaken his life. No longer was he the FBI’s golden boy, the scientific brains behind the inquiry. Instead, he had become the government’s lead—and only—suspect.
A technological breakthrough was the first step in Ivins’s transformation from hero to villain. The new test allowed researchers to detect minor mutations that served as a biological fingerprint for anthrax; samples of the bacteria could all be linked to the original source. Using that technique, the government determined that the anthrax used in the attack had been derived from RMR-1029, a batch developed by and in the possession of Ivins.
While some scientists argued that the test was far from conclusive, other evidence developed by the FBI was even more compelling. Investigators reviewed Ivins’s unapproved efforts in April 2002 to decontaminate his work area and determined that the spots he had chosen to clean invariably were tainted with anthrax, an anomaly that went far beyond statistical chance—Ivins, the agents concluded, knew where to look.
The government also learned of his bizarre obsession with the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, and discovered that a Kappa location was just 175 feet from the mailbox in Princeton where the anthrax letters were mailed—again, an improbable coincidence. Moreover, the bureau determined that in the days leading up to the anthrax mailings, Ivins had uncharacteristically worked nights in the lab, a change in routine that would have given him time to prepare the deadly weapon. They caught him in lie after lie.
Then there was the code. A review of the first mailings revealed an exceedingly complex message hidden within sentences, specifically, in the letters that had been written in boldface—TTT, AAT, and TAT. Each was an accepted scientific code for the three acids involved in the makeup of DNA, playing a role in the production of phenylalanine, asparagine, and tyrosine; the single-letter designation for each was F, N, and Y. The first letter of each acid—PAT—spelled out the name of one of the women who had been a target of his obsessions. The letter designation—FNY—was a slang term for “fuck New York,” a city that was also one of Ivins’s fixations and that he hated with a deep-seated passion.
Detecting ciphers hidden in DNA was not an invention by Ivins; the book Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid dealt in part with hidden messages, including DNA codes. Ivins was fascinated by the book, which had been given to him long before by the microbiologist from Kappa Kappa Gamma whom he had stalked for years. When he realized that he was a suspect, Ivins went out late at night and threw the book into the garbage. The FBI was watching, and agents immediately snapped up the trash as evidence.
Ivins had been exposed by his own deceit and lies. He was forced to testify before a federal grand jury at least twice. Agents had searched his house, his office, and his cars—anyplace where he might have hidden something. Indeed, nothing in the anthrax researcher’s life was private anymore. Everyone he knew—including people he hadn’t spoken with in years—was questioned. Other raids of his garbage turned up more than a dozen pornographic magazines and fourteen pairs of semen-stained panties. If that wasn’t embarrassing enough, the bureau demanded that he submit to a DNA test to determine if the semen was his.
But the investigation was about to reach a new stage. The government was preparing to indict Ivins for committing murder through the use of a weapon of mass destruction. His lawyer notified him that he would soon be arrested.
What little remained of Ivins’s sanity cracked. He had often told his therapists of his desire to kill himself or others, and his homicidal thoughts were escalating. By July, his obsessions focused on Kathryn Price, a law school lecturer who participated in a television reality show called The Mole. Under the rules in that program, a group of ten contestants compete in various tests; however, one of them is the mole, secretly responsible for sabotaging the efforts of other participants. On the final day of the program, Price was revealed as the mole, and Ivins flew into a rage about what he perceived as her betrayal.
On July 6, Ivins opened a new Yahoo e-mail account under the name “Stanford Hawker,” a name apparently derived from his fixation on the schools attended by the woman who was now in his crosshairs. Price held degrees from both Stanford Law School and the University of Kansas, where the sports teams were known as the Jayhawks. For the password, he typed a sentence as one word: killkathrynprice.
When Price admitted to being the mole, one of the contestants should have killed her, Ivins said in diatribes posted on YouTube. “He should have taken the hatchet and brought it down hard and sharply across her neck, severing her carotid artery and jugular vein,” he said. “Then when she hits the ground, he comple
tes the task on the other side of the neck, severing her trachea as well.”
Now that the show was over, Ivins wrote, he could only hope that somebody else would give her the punishment she deserved. “The least someone could do would be to take a sharp ballpoint pen or letter opener and put her eyes out.”
Three days later, Ivins’s fury was boiling over, this time at his colleagues and the FBI. That evening, he attended his regular group therapy session, which was being run by two counselors, including one named Jean Duley. Members of the group were engaged in role-playing, exploring bonds between fathers and sons. As the evening unfolded, Ivins—whose own father had frequently told him that he had been unwanted—grew increasingly agitated.
Duley noticed. “Bruce, is there something you want to discuss?”
Ivins clenched his teeth, shifting his gaze rapidly back and forth across the floor. “There’s nothing,” he said. “I’m fine.”
“Come on, Bruce, this is a safe place. We’re here for you. What’s troubling you?”
His head jerked up. “All these damn people! The FBI, the government, the whole system! They have been doing everything they can to destroy me! They shouldn’t take me on! I’m the wrong guy to take on. I’m not going to let them do this!”
“Bruce,” Duley said, “try to focus.”
“I’m not going to face the death penalty!” he snapped. “I’ll kill myself first!”
Duley leaned in. She needed to explore this suicide threat, to find out whether Ivins was serious.
“Bruce,” she said, “do you have a plan for how you would kill yourself?”
Ivins face locked in a bizarre smile. “Yeah, I’ve got a plan,” he said. “I’ve got a list. I’ve got a bulletproof vest and I’m going to get a Glock handgun from my son. I can’t go get it. The FBI is watching me. But my son can get it. I have a list. My coworkers, the FBI agents, everyone who’s gone after me, everyone who’s betrayed me. They’re all on it. I’m going to get them all.”
No one spoke.
Ivins’s words rushed out as he jumped from topic to topic. “I’ve been walking around the ghetto areas of Frederick at night, looking for someone to try and hurt me. I’d just call out ‘Come on, nigger boy!’ Then I’d stab them in the eye with this sharp pen.”
He removed a pen from his pocket and showed the other members of the group. “This is what I would use,” he said. “Slam it right in the eye.”
Back to the plot for a killing spree. “It could be done,” he said. “I’ve got a bulletproof vest, I can get a gun. It’s a good plan. I’ve really thought it out well. Cleaning it all up could be done. It would all work.”
One of the other group members spoke. “If you’re innocent, then why are you doing what you plan to do?”
Ivins smiled, but said nothing.
“I’m not going to do anything in the next twenty-four hours, because I’m not ready,” he said.
The other members of the group listened to his ravings with fear. Finally, someone told Ivins he was making everyone uncomfortable, and the conversation moved on. After the meeting, Ivins spoke to one of the attendees.
“You’ll see me in the papers,” he said.
To Duley, Ivins’s statements did not sound like fictitious ramblings, so the next morning, she contacted the Frederick Police Department. The authorities obtained an order allowing them to involuntarily commit Ivins to a hospital. He was arrested that day at Fort Detrick and driven to Sheppard Pratt Health System in Baltimore, where he was admitted to the psychiatric unit.
• • •
The FBI was notified of Ivins’s statements at his group therapy session and raided his house again. They discovered hundreds of rounds of ammunition, smokeless handgun power for semiautomatic and automatic weapons, a bulletproof vest, and a shield that could be used for body armor. The plans he described for mass murder, the agents concluded, had been real.
• • •
Ivins was released from Sheppard Pratt on July 24. A family member protested, urging the hospital to keep him in long-term care, but the doctors ignored the objection. He was given an August 11 appointment for a psychiatric follow-up, eighteen days later.
After his release, Ivins headed to a Giant Eagle store to purchase some groceries, his prescriptions, and Tylenol PM. Just under an hour later he returned, and bought a second seventy-count bottle of the painkiller.
After a quick stop at the C. Burr Artz Library in Frederick, where he used a computer to check on the progress of the anthrax investigation, Ivins headed home. Broken and lethargic, he went straight upstairs to the second-floor bedroom. As he slept, his wife, Diane, left a letter for him on an end table, describing her pain and confusion about his actions over the previous few weeks. He had been cruel to her. And, inexplicably, he had been ignoring his lawyer’s advice to stay away from the lab at night and to stop contacting two women he had harassed in the past.
There were also signs of danger. “You tell me you aren’t going to get any more guns,” she wrote, “then you fill out an online application for a gun license.”
Ivins woke later and saw the letter. After reading it, he flipped the page over and grabbed a pen. “I have a terrible headache,” he wrote. “I’m going to take some Tylenol and sleep in tomorrow.”
He added, “Please let me sleep. Please.” Then he scratched out those words.
Ivins stayed in bed for the next two days. Diane let her husband rest, looking in on him every so often to see if he was all right. Outside, FBI agents were keeping the house under surveillance to make sure that Ivins did not have the chance to leave and start on his promised rampage.
On the night of July 26, Diane checked on her husband at nine; he was fine. She headed to a first-floor bedroom where she had been sleeping and read a book before drifting off again.
But at some point that day, Ivins swallowed dozens of Tylenol tablets, washing them down with wine. As any doctor knew, such an overdose would destroy his liver and kill him. Late that night, he made his way into the bathroom and collapsed on the floor.
Diane awoke at 1:00 A.M. and headed upstairs to check on her husband. She found him, still alive and lying in a pool of his own urine. He was cold to the touch and unresponsive. Diane called 911, and Ivins was rushed to Frederick Memorial Hospital. The FBI surveillance unit followed the ambulance.
Six hours later, a nurse called Ivins’s name loudly and he awakened almost imperceptibly.
“Bruce,” the nurse said, “did you intentionally try to commit suicide?”
Groggily, Ivins nodded. Then he attempted to pull out the tubes in his body; he was placed in restraints. The next day, with Ivins fully unresponsive, he was moved to the intensive care unit. The massive overdose had led to kidney failure and was destroying his liver.
There was little that could be done to save him, and Diane insisted that he would not want to be resuscitated if his heart failed. By the next morning, the doctors concluded that Ivins would not awaken again. They consulted Diane, who decided to stop all aggressive life support. Three hours went by, and at 10:47, with his family at his bedside, his heart stopped beating.
Bruce Ivins, the man deemed by the FBI to be the anthrax killer, was dead.
• • •
An elderly, bearded man knelt down beside a palm tree and moved one of the stones encircling the trunk. This was his garden, such as it was, an incongruous patch of pastoral harmony surrounded by the thick walls of a military prison. The vast power he once wielded was gone. A life of gardening, writing, praying, and answering questions was all that remained for Saddam Hussein.
The hunt for Saddam after the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 had taken many months. He had stayed hidden in Baghdad until the week of April 10, when he concluded that the city would soon fall to the coalition. At that point he gathered his senior deputies for a final meeting, telling them that they would now begin to “struggle in secret.” He left the city and gradually sent away his bodyguards to avoid attracting attention.
Eight months later, he was staying in a mud hut with a lean-to in Ad-Dawr, near his hometown of Tikrit. The military received information that Saddam was hiding out in the area and launched a search mission called Operation Red Dawn. As the First Brigade Combat Team of the army’s Fourth Infantry Division swooped in, Saddam went to the backyard, where a small, underground hiding place had been built years before. He climbed through a “spider hole” that had been dug into the ground, big enough to hide one person. His housemates covered it with a Styrofoam plug, some dirt, and a few ratty carpets. Saddam lay down in the coffinlike space and stayed quiet as the military searched above him. Soon, the soldiers discovered the hole and Saddam climbed out, his hands raised in surrender.
Now he was High Value Detainee Number 1 at Camp Cropper, the military facility at the Baghdad International Airport. His interrogations had begun on February 7, 2004, with the interviewer, FBI supervisory special agent George Piro, using the tried-and-true relationship-building techniques. Each day of questioning began early in the morning and lasted for hours, with Saddam offered breaks to eat, pray, and putter around in the garden.
The first few weeks had focused on Saddam’s history in Iraq. But by March, as it became clear that Iraq possessed no weapons of mass destruction, Piro’s supervisors told him to find out why. How could intelligence agencies worldwide have been so wrong?
On May 13, Saddam returned from a break to his nine-by-twelve tiled cell and took a seat on a metal chair across from Piro. The FBI agent and the former dictator of Iraq engaged in a casual conversation, and the discussion soon turned to Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.
“The U.N. weapons inspections achieved their objectives,” Saddam said simply. “Iraq does not have any WMD and has not for some time.”
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