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September 21, 2007

"Blame Somebody Else" on PBS

"Blame Somebody Else" begins airing on PBS tonight. Check local listings.

After Cam Simpson's investigative report on the trafficking of low-wage foreign workers to U.S. military bases was published in October 2005, the U.S. government promptly responded with base inspections. The inspections found that, indeed, there were deceptive hiring procedures, excessive fees charged by job brokers, substandard living conditions for laborers, violations of Iraqi immigration laws, and a lack of human trafficking "awareness training" on U.S. bases. In April 2006, General George Casey ordered reforms, including a requirement that contractors immediately return passports that had been illegally seized.

But a year later, the same problems have resurfaced. This past July two civilian contractors testified before Congress that foreign workers were brought to Baghdad to work on the new $600 million U.S. embassy there without their consent and that they were abused.

A Kuwaiti firm called First Kuwaiti General Trading & Contracting Co. was awarded the contract to build the embassy after no American company would meet the terms. The Justice Department is investigating First Kuwaiti's labor practices because of trafficking in persons allegations.Rory Mayberry, initially hired by First Kuwaiti as a medical technician, claimed that he had witnessed Filipino workers being “kidnapped” by the company. Mayberry testified before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform that workers put on a plane with him in Kuwait were given boarding passes for Dubai, with no idea they were bound for Iraq, and that passports were confiscated. In addition,First Kuwaiti construction foreman John Owens testified that he found living and working conditions for foreign laborers on the construction site "deplorable," that they were “verbally and physically abused,” and that they worked long hours everyday for very little pay.

The State Department Inspector General Howard Krongard testified he was aware of allegations of trafficking and other abuses but found nothing to support them after two visits himself. Although no one from First Kuwaiti testified before Congress, the company provided a written response and, according to the Post, has called the allegations "ludicrous."

On Tuesday, in response to various documented allegations sent to him after the hearing, Committee Chairman Senator Henry Waxman opened an inquiry into the Inspector General’s actions, noting, among other things, that Krongard had “followed highly irregular procedures in exonerating the prime contractor, First Kuwaiti Trading Company, of charges of labor trafficking.”

>>First Kuwaiti kickbacks, KBR involvement in the news. For more on this developing story, click here.


September 19, 2007

On EXPOSÉ: Human Trafficking to Military Bases

Are U.S. tax dollars fueling an illicit human pipeline that exploits and endangers foreign workers? Reporter Cam Simpson of the CHICAGO TRIBUNE began investigating when he saw a news report about a dozen impoverished men from Nepal who were kidnapped and killed while being transported to Iraq for jobs that supported U.S troops. Simpson retraced their steps back to the subcontractor who originally hired the workers, and uncovered a web of deceit and coercion.

Aired last year, this program has already received a CINE Golden Eagle and has been nominated for a News & Documentary Emmy (winners will be announced September 24).

>> Watch this updated version of EXPOSÉ's award-winning episode about Simpson's reporting: "Blame Somebody Else"

>> Read Cam Simpson's original series "Pipeline to Peril" in the CHICAGO TRIBUNE.


August 22, 2007

"An Inside Job" Available Online

Prisoners attacked by dogs, denied medical attention, and threatened with solitary confinement. No, these allegations weren't from Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo. The alleged abuses happened right here in the U.S. -- at immigrant detention centers.

Immigration reform in the 1990s created a new class of prisoner. Non-citizens, living in the United States either legally or illegally, who committed any crime at any time, are subject to deportation. Pending a decision from the Department of Homeland Security, the immigrants are held at one of hundreds of detention centers around the country.

NPR reporter Daniel Zwerdling first heard of such facilities, and rumors of abuse inside them, from a New York immigrants' advocate. One particularly heinous case stood out: the 2004 death of a 34-year-old Jamaican immigrant held in Louisiana for a decade-old conviction. But confronted with a stone wall from authorities, and little access to the other inmates who witnessed the death, Zwerdling struggled to gain any traction.

This week on EXPOSÉ, how Zwerdling used sources inside the prison to uncover harrowing tales of prisoner abuse on American soil.

>> Listen to Zwerdling's original NPR series investigating the alleged abuse of two men detained by the Department of Homeland Security in two separate New Jersey prisons: "Jailed Immigrants Allege Abuse" and his moving piece using eyewitness testimony from several inmates to take listeners' step-by-step through the events leading up to "The Death of Richard Rust" at Louisiana's Oakdale Federal Detention Center.


August 16, 2007

Meet Bob Jones


To understand more about larger-than-life businessman Bob Jones and his company, the National Center for Employment of the Disabled (NCED), OREGONIAN photographer Faith Cathcart headed to El Paso, Texas, with reporter Jeff Kosseff. "It just felt like this was a terribly important story, and I wanted to do it right," Cathcart recalls.

>> View a slideshow of Cathcart's images.