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Blackwater Chief To Flee the Country?
Three unnamed sources tell The Nation that Blackwater owner Erik Prince may be planning a permanent vacation to the United Arab Emirates in the wake of federal indictments against top company executives. Prince has not yet been hit with any formal accusations, but his closest deputies are facing conspiracy, weapons, and obstruction of justice charges, and there's reason to suspect that he'll be targeted next. Last year, two former employees testified that Prince had transported "illegal" weapons into Iraq and that "Mr. Prince and his employees murdered, or had murdered, one or more persons who have provided information, or who were planning to provide information, to the federal authorities about the ongoing criminal conduct." In 2008, two Blackwater employees were indicted for murder after a shooting in Afghanistan, and The Nation reports that Prince is currently facing several new civil lawsuits, including one put forth by the company's Iraqi victims. The company has spent the past several years trying to duck bad press—it has renamed itself "Xe Services" and the "US Training Center"—but the efforts have largely been unsuccessful. At the moment, Blackwater is the target of multiple federal investigations, which Prince has likened to a "giant proctological exam." Because Blackwater is so deeply entangled in classified government activity, The Nation speculates that Prince may be laying the groundwork for amnesty by participating in "graymail"—threatening to leak sensitive data in order to escape prosecution. He's also been shedding parts of the multimillion dollar company over the past several months. Earlier this year, Prince sold Blackwater's aviation division for $200 million, and last week, he put the whole thing up for sale. With the government closing in, internal sources tell The Nation that Blackwater's "sale is going to be a fast move within a couple of months" and that Prince is on his way out. The UAE does not have an extradition treaty with the United States, which is likely a key factor in Prince's decision. According to international law expert Scott Horton, the Emirates are "definitely a jurisdiction where Prince could count on it not being simple for the US to pursue him legally." - - - No need to pursue him legally if he flees to the UAE...just have him shot. |
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