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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
03.03.2008
Adding Insult to Injury

Remember the story of Jamie Leigh Jones, the 22-year-old former Halliburton worker in Iraq who was allegedly drugged, gang-raped, and locked in a storage shed until the State Department rescued her after her congressman intervened? Thanks to an order signed by Paul Bremer, employees of U.S. contractors in Iraq are beyond the reach of the Iraqi criminal justice system, leaving them effectively in a legal black hole, as Michael Walzer wrote in our last issue. They could technically be tried in U.S. federal court for offenses committed in Iraq, but logistically that would be very difficult and the Justice Department has shown no interest in prosecuting Jones's case, meaning her assailants almost certainly won't face any criminal penalties.

But, to make things worse, as Peggy Garrity points out in an op-ed in today's Los Angeles Times, Jones also will likely be unable to pursue a lawsuit in civil court. For one thing, Halliburton claims it has mysteriously lost the doctor's report and photographs taken by a military doctor the day after the rape occurred, so it would hard for her to build a case in the first place. But even if she could, her employment contract stipulated that disputes would be resolved through a binding arbitration process, which lacks (among other things) a jury, rules of evidence, an appeals process, and--perhaps most importantly--media access and a transcript. Federal courts in Texas, Garrity notes, have recently proven fastidious about upholding binding arbitration clauses in all cases. Now, it's true that she signed the contract of her own volition--binding arbitration clauses are becoming increasingly common in all sorts of agreements, and in some instances genuinely are better suited than civil courts to resolving disputes. But when such clauses are used to preclude civil action even in cases like this one, it certainly seems as though they're being misused.

--Josh Patashnik  

Posted: Monday, March 03, 2008 12:43 PM with 8 comment(s)

Comments

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ratnerstar said:

Mandatory binding arbitration should be outlawed.  I hope Jamie sues the shit out of everyone involved and wins.

March 3, 2008 1:20 PM

arsonplus said:

This really makes me hope that Edwards as AG rumor is true.

March 3, 2008 1:56 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

I can't believe Halliburton has no legal exposure for "losing" something like that.

March 3, 2008 4:12 PM

ratnerstar said:

Agreed, Wandrey.  And I also can't believe this isn't a bigger story.  Why isn't Jamie Leigh Jones' face on the news every night?  Why aren't people talking about this?

This kind of crap makes so &*@$% angry I can't think clearly.  

March 3, 2008 4:25 PM

cspencef said:

Quote:

"her employment contract stipulated that disputes would be resolved through a binding arbitration process"

Rape, or even a rape charge, is a "dispute"?  

(Yes, I know that's not what you're saying, but that truly hideous idea is going to be stuck in my head now...)

March 3, 2008 5:28 PM

hepneck said:

Right on the money, Wandrey. But then money is the issue, isn't it? Binding arbitration should never be held to trump a citizen's right to due process. I would suggest we all boycott Haliburton, but no-bid contracts make that difficult.

March 4, 2008 10:53 AM

dhauck said:

ratnerstar hit it in post 1: mandatory arbitration should be outlawed in all cases.  I know the standard line: "But you don't have to sign the contract."   Sure - I could just not buy a car, own a cell phone, get insurance, or take out a loan.  Or, as in Jones' case, get a job.  As with other "industry standards" that screw customers or employees, this is one of those issues that can't (or won't) be solved by the free market.  It's time for the Fed to step up to the plate.

March 4, 2008 12:55 PM

Shining Light In Dark Corners said:

THE NEW REPUBLIC Remember the story of Jamie Leigh Jones, the 22-year-old former Halliburton worker in Iraq who was allegedly drugged, gang-raped, and locked in a storage shed until the State Department rescued her after her congressman intervened? Thanks

March 5, 2008 9:35 AM