Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Stress positions: Prisoners are forced to stand, handcuffed and with their feet shackled to an eye bolt in the floor (and/or wall), for more than 40 hours, causing the prisoners' weight to be placed on just one or two muscles. This creates an intense amount of pressure on the legs, leading first to pain and then muscle failure.

  3. Dec 10, 2014 · Stress Positions — The purpose of these techniques are to stimulate mild discomfort from extended muscle use, according to a description in a government document obtained by the ACLU. Two such...

  4. Dec 4, 2019 · The Senate Intelligence Committee study of the C.I.A. program concluded that waterboarding and other techniques were “brutal and far worse than the C.I.A. represented.”. Its use induced ...

  5. Stress positions . A variety of stress positions may be used. You have informed us that these positions are not designed to produce the pain associated with contortions or twisting of the body. Rather, somewhat like walling, they are designed to produce the physical discomfort associated with muscle fatigue.

  6. deprivation of detainees kept in stress positions, or sensory deprivation of detainees who were shackled and in solitary confinement. This document explains what the so-called “enhanced interrogation” and related interrogation techniques are, and the physical and psychological effects of their use. Waterboarding.

  7. Nov 9, 2010 · It also describes the use of sleep deprivation for up to 180 hours, painful stress positions, sexual threats and humiliation. The controversial methods were used by CIA interrogators at...

  8. B. Prolonged Shackling and Stress Positions. Over 30 FBI agents told the OIG in survey responses or interviews that they saw or heard about the use of prolonged shackling or stress positions on detainees at GTMO. 128 Many described a particular practice known as "short chaining" or "short-shackling" in which the detainee's hands and feet were ...

  1. People also search for