Cyrus Kar (Born
March 18,
1961 in
Tehran,
Iran) is an
Iranian-born
American film director, part-time professor at the
University of Phoenix, and now-vindicated alleged
terrorist who was captured by
United States forces in
Iraq on
May 17,
2005, while filming a documentary on the life of
Cyrus The Great.
On
July 10,
2005, he was released from custody after his family
sued, accusing the U.S. government of violating his
civil rights and detaining him after his clearance by the
FBI. He was wrongfully accused of smuggling
washing machine timers for use in
improvised explosive devices in a taxi he was riding in to
Baghdad.
Early life
Although born in Iran (
Persia), his family moved to Germany when he was two and then to America when he was five where he was brought up in the American culture. He returned to Iran at the age of nine, where, barring one year in Germany, he lived until returning to America at the age of 14. He attended kindergarten and elementary school in
Utah, high school in
Washington and subsequently entered the
Navy, attaining the rank of Third Class
Petty Officer.
[ , BBC, July 7 2005] After leaving the Navy, he attained degrees from
San Jose State University and
Pepperdine University. He also worked in
Silicon Valley for 13 years before embarking on a film career.
Controversy
Kar began working on a documentary film about his namesake
Cyrus the Great (Persian King) and visited
England,
Germany,
Iran,
Turkey,
Afghanistan, and
Tajikistan for shooting before obtaining permission from the US government to visit Iraq. He arrived in the country on
May 7 and was arrested after 10 days of filming on
May 17 by Iraqi security forces before being handed over to US forces. He was then taken to
Abu Ghraib prison before eventually ending up in
Camp Cropper, where he spent the remainder of his incarceration in solitary confinement. According to the ACLU, he had been permitted three phone calls and a visit from the
ICRC.
On
July 6, the
American Civil Liberties Union filed a petition for
habeas corpus on Kar's behalf. On
July 10, he was released from military custody.
On an
August 24 2005 segment on the
Nightline television show Kar described painful and humiliating abuse from US personnel, while in custody in Iraq.
Lawsuit
On
July 7,
2006 Kar sued
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and other military officials, calling the government's detention policies unconstitutional.
[ , Los Angeles Times, July 7 2006][ , CNN, July 8 2006]He also claimed that he was hooded, threatened, taunted and insulted by US soldiers. The lawsuit said his detention violated his
Civil rights,
Geneva conventions as well as
International law. "Human rights monitors note that the vast majority of the over 15,000 detainees in U.S. military custody in Iraq have never been charged, tried, provided counsel, or allowed to challenge their detention in court, and over one-fifth of them have been detained for over a year in this manner," the suit states. "Mr. Kar was imprisoned by the United States military in Iraq without the slightest hint of legal authority," said Mark Rosenbaum, a spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union, which is filing the lawsuit on his behalf. [Absurdly], "Saddam Hussein has had more due process than Cyrus Kar; this is a detention policy that was drafted by
Kafka", Mark Rosenbaum also stated.
[ , BBC, July 7 2005]In the meantime, Cyrus Kar continues to produce historical documentary films. His official website is *