Psychologist who helped devise CIA
interrogation program lost Mormon role
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[December 12, 2014]
SPOKANE, Wa. (Reuters) - One of the
chief architects of the CIA's harsh interrogation program said on
Thursday he had to quit as leader of his Mormon church in 2012 amid
controversy about his role in fighting terrorism.
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No senior policymakers or CIA officials have been charged for the
maltreatment of suspects, but at least for former Air Force
psychologist Bruce Jessen there has been a repercussion at a local
level for his part in the so-called "war on terror."
Jessen resigned as bishop of a Mormon congregation in Spokane,
Washington after civil liberties and human rights activists
criticized his professional past in the local newspaper.
"I just felt it would be unfair for me to bring that controversy to
a lot of other people, so I decided to step down," Jessen told
Reuters outside his home south of Spokane.
The CIA paid $80 million to a company run by Jessen and another
former Air Force psychologist, James Mitchell, according to a U.S.
Senate report released this week. The report said the pair
recommended waterboarding, slaps to the face and mock burial for
prisoners suspected of being terrorists.
The pair are referred to by pseudonyms in the report but
intelligence sources have identified them by name. Mitchell said
earlier this week the report was a "bunch of hooey." Jessen said a
nondisclosure agreement prevented him from commenting.
"It’s a difficult position to be in," he said. “You want to set the
record straight." He accused the media of publishing "distortions”
about CIA interrogation methods.
Jessen, 65, had only spent a week in the role as head of his
300-member Spokane congregation when he stepped down in October,
2012.
“This was due to concerns expressed about his past work related to
interrogation techniques,” said Eric Hawkins, a national spokesman
in Salt Lake City for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, as the Mormon faith is formally known.
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The position of bishop is unpaid and part-time but well-respected in
the Mormon world.
“Local leaders met with Jessen and together determined that it would
be difficult for him to serve as an effective leader in that
position,” Hawkins said.
A bishop normally serves three to six years, he added. Jessen
remains a member of the same congregation.
The American Psychological Association – to which Jessen and
Mitchell do not belong and are thus not subject to discipline - has
called for the pair to be held accountable. But U.S. officials say
there will be no criminal charges.
(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick in Washington DC and Jacob Jones in
Spokane. Writing by Alistair Bell, editing by Ross Colvin)
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