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Biden: U.S. to appeal dismissal of Blackwater case

In this photo released by the Iraq Prime Minister's Office, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, left, walks beside U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Baghdad, Iraq, on Saturday, Jan. 23, 2010. Vice President Joe Biden is holding talks with Iraqi leaders amid growing tensions over plans to ban election candidates because of suspected links to Saddam Hussein's regime. (AP Photo/Iraq Prime Minister's Office, HO)In this photo released by the Iraq Prime Minister’s Office, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, left, walks beside U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Baghdad, Iraq, on Saturday, Jan. 23, 2010. Vice President Joe Biden is holding talks with Iraqi leaders amid growing tensions over plans to ban election candidates because of suspected links to Saddam Hussein’s regime. (AP Photo/Iraq Prime Minister’s Office, HO)

BAGHDAD | The U.S. will appeal a court decision dismissing manslaughter charges against five Blackwater Worldwide guards involved in a deadly 2007 Baghdad shooting, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said Saturday.

Biden’s announcement after a meeting with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani shows just how diplomatically sensitive the incident remains nearly three years later. A lawyer for one guard, noting that word of the intended appeal came in Iraq, accused the Obama administration of political expediency and the U.S. was pursuing an innocent man, rather than justice.

Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when the guards opened fire in Nisoor Square, a crowded Baghdad intersection, on Sept. 16, 2007. Seventeen people were killed, including women and children, in a shooting that inflamed anti-American sentiment in Iraq.

Biden expressed his “personal regret” for the shooting and said the Obama administration was disappointed by the dismissal. “A dismissal is not an acquittal,” he said.

The U.S. rebuffed Iraqi demands that the U.S. contractors face trial in Iraqi courts. After a lengthy investigation, U.S. prosecutors charged five of the contractors with manslaughter and took a guilty plea from a sixth.

But the case fell apart when a federal trial judge in Washington, Ricardo Urbina, said in a Dec. 31 ruling that the Justice Department mishandled evidence and violated the guards’ constitutional rights. Prosecutors now face difficult odds getting an appeals court to reinstate the case.

The dismissal outraged many Iraqis, who said it showed the Americans considered themselves above the law. The Iraqi government began collecting signatures for a class-action lawsuit from victims who were wounded or lost relatives.

Lawyers for two of the Blackwater guards — Donald Ball, a former U.S. Marine from West Valley City, Utah, and Dustin Heard, a former U.S. Marine from Knoxville, Tenn. — sharply criticized the U.S. government’s planned appeal.

“By announcing this decision in Iraq, through an elected official, the United States makes clear it has decided to do what is politically expedient, rather than what is just based on Judge Urbina’s unshakable findings that the prosecutors engaged in gross misconduct and intentionally violated Mr. Ball’s constitutional rights,” attorney Steven McCool, who represents Ball, said in a statement. “In the end, the United States has shown it will pursue an innocent man, rather than justice.”

Attorney David Schertler, who represents Heard, said moving ahead with an appeal “appears to be based upon political considerations rather than a careful consideration of the legal merits of the case as it should be.”

White House officials said the U.S. Justice Department decided on the appeal and that Biden’s trip was not originally intended to be the way it would be announced. The White House learned of the Justice decision Friday night, which led to the timing of the announcement.

Messages seeking comment from lawyers for the other three guards who fought the charges were not immediately returned Saturday.

Those guards are Evan Liberty, a former U.S. Marine from Rochester, N.H.; Nick Slatten, a former U.S. Army sergeant from Sparta, Tenn., and Paul Slough, an U.S. Army veteran from Keller, Texas.

The sixth guard, Jeremy Ridgeway of California, pleaded guilty to one count each of manslaughter, attempted manslaughter, and aiding and abetting. It’s unclear what Urbina’s ruling means for him.

Blackwater has said the guards were innocent, contending there were ambushed by insurgents. Prosecutors said the shooting was unprovoked.

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