Dear Dan:
I am sure you would agree that American citizens should be treated with the same respect that we give to captured terrorists. The national media went amuck over photos of interrogation of suspected terrorists in Iraq, but there is barely a mention of a videotapes likely showing similar abuse of an American citizen.
I know that you have heard of his case, Mr. Rather. His name is Dr. Charles Thomas (Tom) Sell, and he has been held in jail for about seven years without a trial. He is a member of the Army Reserve who was summoned in 1993 for the Waco raid in Texas. He now says that he was targeted for prosecution based on his outspokenness against what happened.
For years the government tried to drug Dr. Sell on the premise that mind-altering medications would render him fit for trial on fraud and conspiracy charges. The government psychologists claimed that he was mentally unfit for trial, and that only forced drugging of him could enable a trial to go forward.
One reason for claiming that Dr. Sell was incompetent was disbelief of his allegations of bizarre abuse similar to that uncovered by the press concerning the Iraqi prisons. Long before the sadomasochism in Iraq came to light, Dr. Sell described similar treatment of himself.
Dr. Sell has long alleged a videotaped humiliation of his being stripped naked and then tormented by scalding water for ten minutes in front of a female onlooker. He even identified the date of this atrocity as February 19, 2000. For years he has sought release of this and similar videotapes to the public so that people could become aware of the injustice.
He alleged that this occurred repeatedly, but the government responded by calling him paranoid and delusional. He said there were videotapes to prove his claims. The government at first insisted that the videotapes no longer existed until they suddenly reappeared.
Has the bizarre psychiatric sadism against the Iraqi prisoners been used against our own citizen? Are taxpayer dollars being spent to take every step possible to keep these videotapes a secret? If so, isn?t this case every bit as newsworthy as the one involving the captured Iraqis, many of whom killed American soldiers?
The seven-year imprisonment of Dr. Sell has been kept from greater publicity by an extraordinary sealing of key records in the case. When Dr. Sell's attorneys were finally allowed to view the videotapes of his abuse, the judge even gagged them by ordering them not to tell others what the tapes reveal.