Before the Court is defendant CACI Premier Technology, Inc.'s ("CACI" or "defendant") Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. No. 626]. For the reasons that follow, the Motion will be granted in part and denied in part, and Counts 1, 4, and 7 of the Third Amended Complaint will be dismissed. Because portions of the Third Amended Complaint and the parties' briefs were filed under seal, this opinion has redacted references to those sealed materials; however, the Court questions the rationale for such seals and has ordered the parties immediately to show cause why anything in this record should be sealed.
I. BACKGROUND
In this civil action, plaintiffs Suhail Najim Abdullah Al Shimari ("Al Shimari"), Asa'ad Hamza Hanfoosh Al-Zuba'e ("Al-Zuba'e"), and Salah Hasan Nsaif Jasim Al-Ejaili ("Al-Ejaili") (collectively, "plaintiffs")
*763The essence of plaintiffs' claims, which are all brought pursuant to the Alien Tort Statute ("ATS"),
A. Factual Background
As explained in plaintiffs' Third Amended Complaint, the genesis of this civil action goes back to 2003, when the United States of America and various allied forces invaded Iraq and toppled Saddam Hussein's regime. Third Am. Compl. ("TAC") [Dkt. No. 254] ¶ 11.
At least between fall 2003 and spring 2004, the military contracted with CACI to provide interrogators to supplement the military personnel who worked at the Hard Site.
The detainees at the Hard Site were guarded by Military Police ("MPs") from the 372nd Military Police Company.
In February 2004, Sergeant Joseph Darby disclosed evidence of the abuse at Abu Ghraib to military authorities, and the military opened multiple investigations into the conduct at the prison.
Another investigation, conducted by Major General Antonio Taguba, identified CACI employee Stefanowicz
In testimony, MPs who were present at the site have corroborated this connection between MP personnel and CACI employees and have explained that CACI employees assumed supervisory roles at the site. Specifically, Frederick has testified that CACI employees ordered him to "conduct or permit the following abusive acts upon the detainees under his supervision": restriction of detainees' diets; exposure of detainees to extreme hot or cold, including cold water; nudity; stress positions; sleep deprivation; forced physical exertion to the point of exhaustion; humiliation, such as *765forcing detainees to wear female underwear; and the use of unmuzzled dogs.
Frederick has also testified that he "never really knew who was in charge at Abu Ghraib."
In addition to military personnel, detainees themselves have corroborated the structure of this de facto hierarchy, where MPs took orders from CACI personnel. For example, in his deposition, Al-Ejaili testified that "civilian interrogators were seen as authority figures who gave instructions to military personnel" and he recalls guards asking interrogators for instructions about how to punish prisoners.
From these de facto supervisory positions, CACI employees helped establish a system of communication and oversight that enabled them to direct and monitor prisoner abuse. For example, CACI employees used "code words or terms," such as giving detainees "special treatment," "soften[ing] up" detainees, and the "doggie dance," to communicate to military personnel that they wanted the personnel to abuse prisoners in preparation for interrogations.
According to plaintiffs, responsibility for this abuse extended not just to individual CACI employees but also to the corporation. Plaintiffs rely on references to experts who have made clear that interrogators in war theatres will generally "be under intense pressure to produce actionable intelligence" and ensuring that interrogators do not "fall into the trap of acting on the belief that the means justifies the ends" requires proper training, leadership, and supervision.
Plaintiffs further allege that CACI and its employees worked to cover up the prisoner mistreatment and CACI employees' roles in the abuse. In addition to the lies that Stefanowicz told government investigators, individuals at the prison intentionally hid detainees from the Red Cross when the Red Cross inspected the Hard Site.
B. Abuse Suffered by Plaintiffs
All three plaintiffs were detained at Abu Ghraib in late 2003 or early 2004, during the time that the abuse described above was ongoing. Each plaintiff was subjected to a variety of mistreatment while at Abu Ghraib, and each has submitted to a deposition in which he has detailed the abuse he suffered.
*7671. Treatment of Al-Ejaili
Al-Ejaili, a former credentialed reporter for Al-Jazeera, was first arrested by United States Army personnel on November 3, 2003, while he was reporting on an explosion in Iraq's Diyala province. Pl. Opp. [Dkt. No. 639] Ex. A ("Al-Ejaili Dep.") 9:3-:22, 25:5-:12. After about a week of detention in various Army facilities, he was transferred to Abu Ghraib, where he was held for approximately six weeks.
Over the ensuing weeks, Al-Ejaili was interrogated ten to twelve times-approximately once every two or three days.
The mistreatment continued outside of interrogations. The prison personnel forced Al-Ejaili to follow a disruptive sleeping regimen and punished him when he was unable to follow it.
After 48 days at Abu Ghraib, Al-Ejaili was released. Al-Ejaili Xenakis Rep. 4. As a result of his treatment at Abu Ghraib, Al-Ejaili has suffered "severe and debilitating" physical and psychological symptoms.
2. Treatment of Al-Zuba'e
Al-Zuba'e was arrested by American military personnel in November 2003 after he was stopped while driving home with a neighbor. Pl. Opp. Ex. G. ("Al-Zuba'e Dep.") 19:5-24:15. He was taken to Abu Ghraib and put in a large room with a number of other detainees for two days.
A few hours later, the same civilians came back to the room, put bands on Al-Zuba'e's wrists and a black bag on his head, and took him in a Hummer to the Hard Site.
*769After Al-Zuba'e fell, the soldiers dragged him from the bathroom down to the first floor.
The next day, Al-Zuba'e was transported to an interrogation room, where he was interrogated by two apparently civilian interrogators with a civilian interpreter for two to three hours.
After Al-Zuba'e was unchained from the bed, he was left alone in the cell for four or five days.
After this third interrogation, Al-Zuba'e was left in his cell for ten days, until he was taken back to the interrogation room.
As a result of the mistreatment he suffered at the Hard Site, Al-Zuba'e claims he has suffered "severe and debilitating symptoms that have persisted since his release." Pl. Opp. Ex. K ("Al-Zuba'e Xenakis Rep.") 4. He has been diagnosed with "severe posttraumatic stress disorder and major depressive disorder."
3. Treatment of Al Shimari
Al Shimari, who was working as a farmer, was arrested by American forces at his home in early November 2003. Al Shimari Dep. 13:7-15:4. He was originally taken to a United States military camp, where he was held for two days while military personnel conducted an investigation into weapons that were found in his house.
The next day, Al Shimari was handcuffed, had a bag placed over his head, and was taken for his first interrogation.
Al Shimari was interrogated again the next day for about three hours.
About a week later, Al Shimari was taken for a third interrogation, which lasted approximately four hours.
Even after these three initial interrogations, Al Shimari was continuously mistreated during his forty days at the Hard Site. On at least one occasion, guards brought a dog to his cell and threatened him with it, allowing the dog to lunge at him and putting a blanket over his head and allowing the dog to bite it.
The mistreatment Al Shimari suffered resulted in "severe and debilitating symptoms that manifested in the early days of his detention and have persisted since his release." Al Shimari Xenakis Rep. 6. He continues to suffer from multiple "musculoskeletal aches and pains" and has "scarring that he attributes to beatings."
C. Procedural History
On June 30, 2008, Al Shimari filed this civil action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio against then-defendants Dugan; CACI International, Inc. ("CACI International"); CACI; and L-3 Services, Inc., alleging three substantive violations of the law of nations under the ATS: torture, CIDT, and war crimes. [Dkt. No. 2]. For each substantive violation, Al Shimari also alleged separate counts of civil conspiracy and aiding and abetting.
*772
On September 15, 2008, the Amended Complaint, which added Rashid, Al-Ejaili, and Al-Zuba'e as plaintiffs, was filed. [Dkt. No. 28]. CACI and CACI International moved to dismiss the Amended Complaint, arguing that plaintiffs' claims presented nonjusticiable political questions, that defendants were immune from suit, that plaintiffs failed to state factual allegations sufficient to demonstrate a plausible entitlement to relief, that plaintiffs' claims were preempted by the Combatant Activities Exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act ("FTCA"), that plaintiffs' ATS claims were not cognizable, and that plaintiffs had failed to allege facts sufficient to establish respondeat superior liability. [Dkt. Nos. 34 & 35]. CACI and CACI International also filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, arguing that the newly-added plaintiffs' common law tort claims were barred by the statute of limitations. [Dkt. Nos. 44 & 45].
On November 25, 2008, the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment was denied after the court found that Rashid, Al-Ejaili, and Al-Zuba'e fell into the definition of a class proposed in Saleh v. Titan Corp., No. 04-cv-1143 (S.D. Cal.), which tolled the statute of limitations on their tort claims from the time the Saleh civil action was filed until the time class certification was denied. [Dkt. No. 76]. On March 18, 2009, Judge Lee granted the Motion to Dismiss "to the extent that [the Amended Complaint's] claims invoke ATS jurisdiction," because he was "unconvinced that a suit against private civilian interrogators falls within the class of hybrid international norms in existence when the ATS was enacted." Al Shimari v. CACI Premier Tech., Inc.,
CACI and CACI International filed an interlocutory appeal, challenging the rulings on immunity, preemption, and the political question doctrine. The Fourth Circuit reversed the district court, concluding "based on the uniquely federal interests involved in this case, that the plaintiffs' tort claims are preempted and displaced under the reasoning articulated in [ Boyle v. United Technologies Corp.,
On remand, plaintiffs filed a Motion for Reconsideration, in which they asked Judge Lee to revisit his previous ruling dismissing their ATS claims in light of subsequent case law. [Dkt. Nos. 144 &
*773145]. Plaintiffs' motion was granted, and their ATS claims were reinstated. [Dkt. No. 159]. After the claims were reinstated, plaintiffs filed a Second Amended Complaint, which included the same parties and claims as the Amended Complaint. [Dkt. No. 177]. Three weeks later, on January 14, 2013, CACI and CACI International each filed a Motion to Dismiss. [Dkt. Nos. 180 & 183]. CACI argued that the Second Amended Complaint did not appropriately plead conspiracy claims, and CACI International argued that the Second Amended Complaint did not allege facts sufficient to support holding CACI International liable for the actions of the interrogators, who were CACI, not CACI International, employees. [Dkt. Nos. 181 & 184]. Judge Lee granted both motions, dismissing without prejudice plaintiffs' claims alleging a conspiracy between CACI and the United States military and dismissing with prejudice plaintiffs' claims alleging a conspiracy between CACI International and CACI or between CACI and its employees, as well as all claims against CACI International. [Dkt. No. 215].
Concurrently with these motions, defendants also filed a Motion for Reconsideration, in which they asked Judge Lee to reconsider his earlier decision denying their summary judgment motion as to Rashid's, Al-Ejaili's, and Al-Zuba'e's common law claims in light of intervening precedent from the Virginia Supreme Court. [Dkt. Nos. 161 & 162]. On March 19, 2013, Judge Lee granted defendants' motion, vacated his previous Order, and dismissed with prejudice Rashid's, Al-Ejaili's, and Al-Zuba'e's common law claims. [Dkt. No. 226]. On the same day, he granted plaintiffs leave to file a Third Amended Complaint but instructed them to limit any amendments to those related to conspiracy allegations between CACI and the United States military. [Dkt. No. 227].
On March 28, 2013, plaintiffs filed their Third Amended Complaint [Dkt. No. 251]. As before, the Complaint contained nine counts under the ATS brought by all plaintiffs.
*774Plaintiffs timely filed a notice of appeal. [Dkt. No. 461].
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit considered two jurisdictional questions: the extraterritorial application of the ATS, as discussed by Judge Lee in his opinion, and also the political question doctrine, which CACI raised as a separate argument for lack of jurisdiction. See Al Shimari v. CACI Premier Tech., Inc. (Al Shimari III),
On remand, Judge Lee reopened discovery to allow for limited jurisdictional discovery, ordered briefing on the political question doctrine and the elements of plaintiffs' ATS claims, and instructed the parties not to file any motions that were unrelated to those two issues. [Dkt. No. 507]. After the close of discovery, CACI filed a Motion to Dismiss, in which it argued that the political question doctrine deprived the court of subject matter jurisdiction. [Dkt. Nos. 516 & 517]. On June 18, 2015, Judge Lee granted CACI's motion and dismissed plaintiffs' Third Amended Complaint. Al Shimari v. CACI Premier Tech., Inc.,
Judge Lee began by explaining that the Fourth Circuit has "formulated a test for considering whether" lawsuits "brought against government contractors who perform services for the military" are "justiciable under the political question doctrine."
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit clarified the appropriate standard for application of the political question doctrine and vacated the district court's judgment. Al Shimari v. CACI Premier Tech., Inc. (Al Shimari IV),
With respect to the second Taylor factor, the Fourth Circuit found that the district court conducted an "incomplete" analysis because it "fail[ed] to draw a distinction between unlawful conduct and discretionary acts that were not unlawful when committed."
In sum, with respect to the application of the political question doctrine, the Fourth Circuit held
that any conduct of the CACI employees that occurred under the actual control of the military or involved sensitive military judgments, and was not unlawful when committed, constituted a protected exercise of discretion under the political question doctrine. Conversely, any acts of the CACI employees that were unlawful when committed, irrespective whether they occurred under actual control of the military, are subject to judicial review. Thus, the plaintiffs' claims are justiciable to the extent that the challenged conduct violated settled international law or the criminal law to which the CACI employees were subject at the time the conduct occurred.
In addition to joining the unanimous majority opinion, Judge Floyd concurred to "articulate [his] understanding of one aspect of [the] holding."
On remand, Judge Lee recused himself from this civil action, and it was reassigned to the undersigned judge. [Dkt. No. 562]. After holding a status conference to determine the appropriate path forward, the Court ordered plaintiffs' counsel to arrange for the deposition of Al Shimari, Al-Zuba'e, and Rashid
On June 28, 2017, the Court issued a Memorandum Opinion clarifying the appropriate legal framework for analyzing plaintiffs' ATS claims. Al Shimari v. CACI Premier Tech., Inc.,
With this legal framework in place, the Court provided defendant an opportunity to file a motion addressing any arguments that it wished to raise under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12. CACI has filed a Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. No. 626], in which it argues that the political question doctrine precludes judicial review of plaintiffs' claims; that plaintiffs' allegations are not cognizable under the ATS because they do not constitute torture, CIDT, or war crimes; that plaintiffs' direct liability claims should be dismissed because they have failed to allege direct involvement in their abuse by CACI employees; that plaintiffs' conspiracy claims must be dismissed for failure to state a claim; that plaintiffs' aiding and abetting claims fail; and that plaintiffs' ATS claims are preempted by the Constitution, the FTCA, Coalition Provisional Authority ("CPA") Order 17, and the ATA and TVPA. CACI's Motion to Dismiss has been fully briefed [Dkt. Nos. 627, 639, & 645] and oral argument has been heard. For the reasons that follow, CACI's Motion to Dismiss will be granted in part and denied in part, and plaintiffs' direct liability claims will be dismissed.
*777II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under Rule 12(b)(1), a civil action must be dismissed whenever the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. The plaintiff has the burden of establishing subject matter jurisdiction, Demetres v. E.W. Constr., Inc.,
Under Rule 12(b)(6), a civil action must be dismissed if the complaint does not "contain sufficient facts to state a claim that is 'plausible on its face.' " E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Kolon Indus., Inc.,
III. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
Before addressing the merits of plaintiffs' claims and CACI's various defenses, the Court must first determine whether it has subject matter jurisdiction. CACI argues that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction because "the political question doctrine precludes judicial review," Def. Mem. [Dkt. No. 627] 3-12 (formatting and capitalization altered), and because "plaintiffs' allegations are not cognizable under the" ATS, id. at 12-26 (formatting and capitalization altered). With respect to the application of the political question doctrine, the Fourth Circuit has held that "any acts of the CACI employees that were unlawful when committed ... are subject to judicial review" and, accordingly, that "plaintiffs' claims are justiciable to the extent that the challenged conduct violated settled international law or the criminal law to which the CACI employees were subject at the time." Al Shimari IV,
As the Court previously held, any definition of the prohibition against torture must begin with congressionally authorized statutes and any case law applying those statutes, but international agreements and sources may also be persuasive authority in determining the contours of settled international law. See Al Shimari,
The Court has already adopted the analysis in Al-Quraishi v. Nakhla,
Based simply on the plain meaning of these words, it is clear that the abuse suffered by plaintiffs was intended to inflict severe pain or suffering and rises to the level of torture. Over the course of six weeks, Al-Ejaili was subjected to repeated stress positions, including at least one that made him vomit black liquid; sexually-related humiliation; disruptive sleeping patterns and long periods of being kept naked or without food or water; and multiple instances of being threatened with dogs. The approximately ten to twelve times he was interrogated involved systematic beatings, including to the head, and being doused with hot and cold liquids. Al-Zuba'e was subjected to sexual assault and threats of rape; being left in a cold shower until he was unable to stand; dog bites and repeated beatings, including with sticks and to the genitals; repeated stress positions, including at least one that lasted an entire day and resulted in his urinating and defecating on himself; and threats that his family would be brought to Abu Ghraib. Al Shimari was subjected to systematic beatings, including on his head and genitals, with a baton and rifle, and some where he was hit against the wall; multiple stress positions, including one where he was forced to kneel on sharp stones, causing lasting damage to his legs; being threatened with dogs; a cold shower similar to Al-Zuba'e's, being doused with water, and being kept in a dark cell and with loud music nearby; threats of being shot and having his wife brought to Abu Ghraib; electric shocks; being dragged around the prison by a rope tied around his neck; and having fingers inserted into his rectum.
Beyond the obvious physical pain caused by this abuse, plaintiffs have also submitted evidence explaining how many of the tactics employed by interrogators were specifically designed to mentally and emotionally harm plaintiffs by breaking cultural and religious norms. According to a report authored by Dr. Mohammad Fadel, a law professor and expert on Islamic theology and law, the forced nudity, particularly in front of females, and sexual humiliation described by plaintiffs "represent gross violations of Muslim norms of sexual propriety." Pl. Opp. Ex. I ¶ 24. Islamic teaching, which is "further reflected in ... [c]ultural taboos surrounding nudity and *780sex roles in many Muslim societies," instills "a sense of modesty and bashfulness with respect to the human body (particularly when naked) and human sexuality." Id. ¶¶ 24-25. Because of Islamic teachings on the subject, a "Muslim would ordinarily feel deep shame, if not outright humiliation, at being forced to be naked in front of other members of the same sex, to say nothing of being naked in front of members of the different sex." Id. ¶ 38. Moreover, the interrogators' exploitation of phobias and use of solitary confinement and sleep deprivation are commonly used torture tactics that "are equally destructive as physical torture methods"-indeed, the suffering caused by these tactics "is very often aggravated by the lack of acknowledgment, due to the lack of scars, which leads to [survivors'] accounts very often being brushed away as mere allegations." Report of the Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, UN Doc. A/HRC/13/39/Add.5 ¶ 55 (Feb. 5, 2010).
There is evidence in the record that this mistreatment has caused severe and lasting physical and mental damage to all three plaintiffs. Each has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and major depressive disorder, and each has submitted an expert report detailing how these mental illnesses have caused significant problems in plaintiffs' personal and professional lives up through today. In addition, each plaintiff still suffers from physical symptoms, including pain and scarring, from the mistreatment. Accordingly, based simply on the plain meaning of the words "severe physical or mental pain or suffering," it is clear that plaintiffs' mistreatment rises to the level of torture.
The Court's conclusion that plaintiffs were tortured is also well-supported by case law interpreting and applying the prohibition against torture. For example, in Al-Saher v. INS,
*781In each of these cases, the tortured plaintiffs' experiences were shorter and involved a narrower array of mistreatment than those of plaintiffs here, and, unlike plaintiffs here, there is no indication in these cases that the plaintiffs were diagnosed with severe and lasting mental illness such as post-traumatic stress disorder and major depressive disorder. Moreover, plaintiffs here were, like plaintiffs in each of these cases, severely beaten, including with objects and in sensitive areas such as the head and genitals. Accordingly, there is ample case law applying the prohibition against torture that supports the Court's conclusion that the mistreatment plaintiffs suffered constitutes torture.
Lastly, the Court's conclusion is further reinforced by international law and domestic executive and military sources, which clearly identify the abuse experienced by plaintiffs as torture. See, e.g., Headquarters, Department of the Army, FM 34-52: Intelligence Interrogation § 1-8 (including "[e]lectric shocks"; "[i]nfliction of pain" through "bondage"; "[f]orcing an individual to stand, sit, or kneel in abnormal positions for prolonged periods of time; "[f]ood deprivation"; "[a]ny form of beating"; and "[a]bnormal sleep deprivation" as examples of torture and cautioning that these "illegal acts are not authorized" and "are criminal acts punishable under the" Uniform Code of Military Justice)
Having determined that plaintiffs' allegations sufficiently describe severe physical and mental pain and suffering to constitute torture, it is clear that they have *782also sufficiently alleged CIDT and war crimes. In the War Crimes Act, CIDT is defined as the "act of a person who commits, or conspires or attempts to commit, an act intended to inflict severe or serious physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions), including serious physical abuse, upon another within his custody or control."
Therefore, plaintiffs' allegations-and the evidence they have produced in support of those allegations-describe sufficiently serious misconduct to constitute torture, CIDT, and war crimes, all of which violated settled international law at the time-and still do. Accordingly, plaintiffs have appropriately stated a claim under the ATS and the political question doctrine is inapplicable.
IV. DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM
A. Plaintiffs' Direct Liability Claims (Counts 1, 4, and 7)
CACI argues that plaintiffs' direct liability claims-Counts 1, 4, and 7-should be dismissed because the "TAC does not allege that a CACI PT employee directly injured" plaintiffs. Def. Mem. 26. Plaintiffs respond to this argument in a footnote, conceding that "the gravamen of Plaintiffs' complaint is conspiracy and aiding and abetting" but arguing that "the TAC does include allegations of direct contact between CACI and Plaintiffs." Pl. Opp. 31 n.30 (citing TAC ¶¶ 124, 133, 141-42).
Although plaintiffs' claim that the TAC alleges some direct contact between CACI personnel and plaintiffs is correct, the few connections described in the TAC are insufficient to state a plausible claim for relief. One of the contacts alleged by the TAC is [redacted]. The second contact alleged by the TAC is [redacted] The final direct contact alleged by the TAC is that a naked Al-Ejaili once asked Johnson for some information about his case but Johnson "just smiled and went away" and that Johnson was among the people who ordered "Al-Ejaili to face the wall and then proceed[ed] to talk about 'what to do with' him."
B. Plaintiffs' Conspiracy Claims (Counts 2, 5, and 8)
To state a claim for conspiracy under the ATS, plaintiffs must allege that two or more persons agreed to commit a wrongful act, that defendant joined the conspiracy knowing of the goal of committing a wrongful act and intending to help accomplish it, and that one or more violations of the ATS "was committed by someone who was a member of the conspiracy and acted in furtherance of the conspiracy." Cabello v. Fernandez-Larios,
Plaintiffs' TAC contains substantial factual allegations to support an inference that CACI employees entered into an agreement with other personnel at the Hard Site to subject the detainees at the site, including plaintiffs, to torture, CIDT, and war crimes. The TAC alleges that, in the small and confined universe of the Hard Site, CACI interrogators explicitly instructed MPs to "soften up" detainees to prepare them for interrogation and that CACI interrogators, including some who are identified by name, ordered various military personnel to "set the conditions" for detainees and "actually ordered" the most severe forms of abuse. These instructions evince an agreement among both CACI interrogators and military personnel at the Hard Site to abuse detainees in an attempt to make them more amenable to interrogation.
Moreover, the TAC contains substantial factual allegations that reach beyond CACI's on-site employees and plausibly demonstrate CACI management's participation in the conspiracies. The TAC alleges that CACI refused to act on specific reports of misconduct perpetrated by its employees, instead covering up the misconduct and furthering the conspiracies. Specifically, the TAC alleges multiple instances where CACI employees or military personnel reported to "upper management" that CACI interrogators and military personnel were engaging in detainee abuse and that CACI managers failed to report this abuse to the military-or even ensure that CACI's own employees stopped the abuse. Indeed, the TAC alleges that [redacted] Moreover, CACI's intent to promote these conspiracies is evidenced by CACI's [redacted] even after the military recommended disciplining him for his role in the abuse, as well as CACI's refusal to remove employees from the site despite credible reports of misconduct and, in at least one case, [redacted] Moreover, the TAC alleges that various CACI managers were either stationed at the Hard Site or regularly visited Abu Ghraib and that CACI's executive team regularly reviewed reports from these individuals. As such, the TAC plausibly alleges that CACI's senior management were aware of the ongoing abuse at the Hard Site, and CACI's decisions not to report this abuse and, in fact, to continue employing and even promoting the individuals involved constitute plausible evidence of an intent from the highest levels of the company to enter into the conspiracies that had developed among CACI's employees and military personnel.
The TAC also alleges sufficient facts to overcome CACI's argument that only individuals who are in authority, or who influence those with authority, may validly enter into a conspiracy on behalf of a corporation. In support of this argument, CACI cites to two Fourth Circuit decisions examining employer liability, but neither case is helpful because each is limited to employment discrimination lawsuits. See Def. Mem. 28 (citing Hill v. Lockheed Martin Logistics Mgmt., Inc.,
Moreover, even if an employee without authority to bind CACI may not appropriately enter into a conspiracy on CACI's behalf, CACI may be held liable for its employees' participation in the conspiracies-including for tortious acts committed by its employees' co-conspirators in furtherance of the conspiracies. In arguing otherwise, CACI primarily relies on Oki Semiconductor Co. v. Wells Fargo Bank, National Ass'n,
*786Commercial Bus. Sys., Inc. v. BellSouth Servs., Inc.,
Lastly, even if CACI's legal arguments were correct, there are sufficient factual allegations in the TAC to plausibly infer that high-level management at CACI entered into the conspiracies on the corporation's behalf.
Accordingly, plaintiffs have stated plausible conspiracy claims against CACI, and Counts 2, 5, and 8 will not be dismissed.
C. Plaintiffs' Aiding and Abetting Claims (Counts 3, 6, and 9)
To maintain a claim for aiding and abetting under the ATS, plaintiffs must allege facts that support a plausible inference that CACI "provide[d] substantial assistance with the purpose of facilitating the alleged violation" of international law. Aziz v. Alcolac, Inc.,
For the same reason that CACI's arguments in support of dismissing the conspiracy claims fail, their argument in support of dismissing the aiding and abetting claims fails. Plaintiffs have appropriately alleged, as described above, that CACI personnel substantially aided the military personnel responsible for directly carrying out the abuses, including directing them on how to set the conditions of confinement, ordering them to employ various abusive tactics, and helping them conceal the abuses. Moreover, upper-level management at CACI substantially aided these continued abuses by refusing to inform the military of reports that CACI and military personnel were abusing detainees and by continuing to employ-and even promote-interrogators engaging in the abuses. In addition, plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that CACI's and its employees' actions to aid the abuses were undertaken with the necessary purpose of facilitating the abusive conduct because the goal of the abusive regime was to "soften up" the detainees to convince them to cooperate with CACI's interrogators.
This conclusion is further supported by a closer examination of Aziz, the primary case on which CACI relies. In Aziz, the plaintiffs alleged that the defendant chemical manufacturing company had sold thiodiglycol ("TDG"), a chemical with "many lawful commercial applications," including "dyeing textiles and producing inks," to a shell corporation in Brooklyn, New York and that the TDG shipments it sent to the company in Brooklyn eventually made their way-apparently through a different Swiss company-to Iraq, where Saddam Hussein used the TDG to manufacture mustard gas that he employed in chemical attacks against Kurdish enclaves in northern Iraq. Aziz,
*787Amended Complaint was "untethered to any supporting facts." Id. By contrast, as described above, plaintiffs' TAC in this civil action contains a wealth of factual allegations explaining who committed or directed particular forms of abuse, what the abuse involved, who was aware of the abuse and concealed it, and the motivation for committing the abuses. Accordingly, plaintiffs' TAC alleges exactly the supporting facts for which the Aziz court was searching, and these facts render plausible the ultimate inference that CACI and its employees purposefully aided the violations of international law in order to facilitate the interrogations of plaintiffs. For these reasons, Counts 3, 6, and 9 will not be dismissed.
V. PREEMPTION
Lastly, CACI argues that various doctrines of preemption bar plaintiffs' claims. Specifically, CACI argues that the Constitutional allocation of war powers and the combatant activities exception to the FTCA preempt incorporation of the law of nations through the ATS. CACI also argues that CPA Order 17 limits plaintiffs to an administrative claim and that Congress's enactment of the TVPA displaces the power of federal courts to recognize a cause of action for torture under the ATS.
A. Constitutional Preemption
CACI first argues that the "Constitution's allocation of war powers precludes ATS claims arising out of the United States' conduct of war" because the "Constitution expressly commits this Nation's foreign policy and war powers to the federal government." Def. Mem. 36 (formatting and capitalization altered). Therefore, CACI argues that the "Constitution does not allow international law, or the law of any foreign sovereign, to govern the prosecution of war by the United States ... [n]or does the Constitution contemplate a judicial role in this area." Id. This argument fundamentally misunderstands the nature of an ATS claim. Although norms of international law are incorporated by the ATS-and, of course, the judiciary must often interpret and apply the ATS-the ATS is itself a federal statute. As such, the ATS embodies Congress's considered determination that there should be a cause of action in federal district court for violations of the law of nations. Accordingly, CACI's argument that the Constitution allocates war powers to Congress and the President only serves to illustrate why plaintiffs' claims are not preempted: because applying the ATS in this context represents the constitutional exercise of Congress's inherent powers to regulate the conduct of war. The incorporation of international law into the ATS and the judicial role in interpreting and applying the statute do not change the fundamental nature of the statute as an exercise of congressional power.
In support of its argument, CACI primarily relies on the D.C. Circuit's decision in Saleh,
Therefore, although the Constitution provides the legislative and executive branches with primary authority in the conduct of war, nothing in the Constitution can be read to "preempt" the application of the ATS to plaintiffs' claims. Indeed, the ATS represents Congress's determination, in accordance with its war powers, that victims of violations of international law should have a remedy in federal district courts. Thus, the Constitution does not preempt plaintiffs' claims.
B. FTCA Preemption
CACI also argues that the combatant activities exception to the FTC A preempts plaintiffs' ATS claims.
Even assuming that the reasoning behind the Saleh decision is correct, but see
*790C. CPA Order 17 Preemption
CACI further argues that the ATS claims are preempted by Section 6 of CPA Order 17, which provides:
Third party claims including those for property loss or damage and for personal injury, illness or death or in respect of any other matter arising from or attributed to Coalition personnel or any persons employed by them, whether normally resident in Iraq or not and that do not arise in connection with military combat operations, shall be submitted and dealt with by the Parent State whose Coalition personnel, property, activities or other assets are alleged to have caused the claimed damage, in a manner consistent with the national laws of the Parent State.
CPA Order 17, § 6(1). CACI argues that CPA Order 17 "establishes that if a claimant's injury arises out of noncombat operations,
CACI's argument is not supported by the text of CPA Order 17. According to the Order, assuming plaintiffs' claims are covered, they must be dealt with by the United States "in a manner consistent with the national laws." CPA Order 17, § 6. The ATS is, of course, just as much a "national law" of the United States as is the Foreign Claims Act, and allowing plaintiffs to pursue their claims under the ATS is, based on the plain language of the Order, treating the claims in a manner consistent with American law. Moreover, and even more fundamentally, CPA Order 17 was promulgated to ensure that Coalition forces were not subject to Iraqi law. See
D. Legislative Preemption
Lastly, CACI argues that Congress's enactment of the ATA and the *791TVPA preempt the creation of a cause of action for torture under the ATS. The ATA, a federal criminal statute with extraterritorial application, criminalizes acts of torture, 18 U.S.C. § 2340A, but provides that the statute should not "be construed as creating any substantive or procedural right enforceable by law by any party in any civil proceeding,"
CACI's reliance on AEP is unavailing for two reasons. First, as discussed above, although recognition of causes of action under the ATS requires judicial interpretation of the statute and analysis of international law norms, the ATS is itself a congressional enactment that reflects Congress's decision to provide a cause of action for victims of violations of the law of nations. Accordingly, plaintiffs' ATS claims are grounded in federal statute, not merely in federal common law like the claims in AEP. As such, the claims cannot be so easily displaced by other federal statutes, which are entitled to no more respect than the ATS. Second, the AEP Court relied on the Clean Air Act's containing a means for plaintiffs to seek the same relief that they sought in their federal civil action. In this case, CACI agrees that the ATA and the TVPA do not provide an avenue for plaintiffs to pursue their claims against CACI. As such, allowing plaintiffs' claims to proceed is not an example of the judiciary using federal common law to invent a "parallel track" to a process designed by Congress. Therefore, other legislation does not *792displace the ATS and plaintiffs' claims will not be dismissed.
VI. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, CACI's Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. No. 626] will be granted in part and denied in part and Counts 1, 4, and 7 of the Third Amended Complaint will be dismissed by an appropriate Order to be issued with this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
Former plaintiff Taha Yaseen Arraq Rashid's ("Rashid") claims were dismissed without prejudice on June 9, 2017 because he was unavailable to submit to deposition. [Dkt. No. 607].
The Third Amended Complaint originally contained twenty counts, including eleven common law counts. The common law counts-Counts Ten through Twenty-were voluntarily dismissed with prejudice on January 17, 2017. [Dkt. No. 575].
When reciting the facts in this section, the Court has assumed that the factual allegations in the Complaint are true and has drawn all reasonable inferences in plaintiffs' favor. See Robertson v. Sea Pines Real Estate Cos.,
Frederick was court-martialed for his role in detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib. TAC ¶ 18. He was sentenced to eight years imprisonment and had his rank reduced to Private.
According to plaintiffs, in the absence of proper training and supervision, it was "likely" that "abusive and inhuman treatment of detainees would occur," because experimental research has confirmed that individuals who are "placed in a position of unrestrained authority over prisoners" will "often resort to violence and abuse." TAC ¶ 19.
The investigation also concluded that Stefanowicz lied in the course of the investigation. TAC ¶ 88.
A former CACI employee present in Abu Ghraib at the time has testified that Stefanowicz tried to "present" or "establish" himself as the "senior intelligence person" among the CACI employees, so that personnel with operational questions would go to him first. TAC ¶ 105. He was apparently successful, because Frederick testified that [redacted] Id. ¶ 106.
The investigation also concluded that Stefanowicz made a false statement in the course of the investigation to cover up his role in the detainee abuse. TAC ¶ 87.
Graner was court-martialed for his role in the prisoner abuse. TAC ¶ 100. He was sentenced to ten years imprisonment and had his rank reduced to Private. Id.
Plaintiffs hypothesize that "Steve" was Steven Stefanowicz. TAC ¶ 103.
One famous published photograph of the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib involves a prisoner who Graner forced to stand naked on a box, covered only by a blanket and hood and with electrical wires connected to his fingers, toes, and genitalia. See Scott Higham & Joe Stephens, "New Details of Prison Abuse Emerge," Wash. Post, May 21, 2004, at A01, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A43783-2004May20.html.
In addition to the concerns raised directly by other interrogators and military officials, CACI supervisors and managers had regular access to reports from Abu Ghraib interrogators that raised concerns about prisoner abuse by CACI employees and met regularly with military officials to discuss CACI employees' conduct. TAC ¶¶ 163-67.
For the purposes of defendant's motion under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), which argues that the Court does not have subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiffs' claims because of the political question doctrine, the Court "may consider evidence outside the pleadings without converting the proceeding to one for summary judgment." In re KBR, Inc., Burn Pit Litig.,
Plaintiffs have corroborated this account with a photograph of Al-Ejaili, who appears to be naked, standing over a pool of dark-colored liquid with a bag over his head and an orange jumpsuit tied around his shoulders. Pl. Opp. Ex. F.
Stephen Xenakis, a board-certified psychiatrist and former Army brigadier general, examined each of the plaintiffs and produced reports detailing the physical and mental effects of plaintiffs' mistreatment.
The personnel at Abu Ghraib apparently used the word "fiki-fiki" to mean "f-" See Pl. Opp. Ex. J ("Al Shimari Dep.") 105:13-07:4.
Plaintiffs' brief states that Al-Zuba'e "was awakened by being beaten with a stick all over his body, including on his genitals." Pl. Opp. 9. In his deposition, Al-Zuba'e testified separately that he woke up to the guards hitting him on this occasion and that he was beaten on the genitals with a stick, see Al-Zuba'e Dep. 58:15-:18, 134:8-35:20, 139:17-:19.
There appears to be a slight inconsistency between Al-Zuba'e's deposition, in which he testified that the guard "took everything, all my belongings" out of the cell, see Al-Zuba'e Dep. 92:17-:18; see also
Given the long history of this civil action, the Court has omitted all subsequent history from citations to previous decisions in this civil action.
A variety of pending discovery motions as well as defendants' pending motion to strike certain allegations from the Third Amendment Complaint were denied as moot. [Dkt. No. 460].
Al-Ejaili had already been deposed. [Dkt. No. 571].
Defendant argues that "the unlawfulness inquiry" should not be "focused on the conduct of whoever mistreated Plaintiffs, but on evidence of whether CACI PT personnel engaged in unlawful conduct associated with Plaintiffs' alleged injuries." Def. Mem. 5 (emphasis in original). As discussed more fully below, the TAC contains sufficiently detailed factual allegations to support plaintiffs' claims that CACI interrogators entered into conspiracies with military personnel to abuse plaintiffs and that CACI interrogators aided and abetted the abuse of plaintiffs. In addition, these allegations in the TAC are supported by substantial evidence, including depositions taken of military personnel before the TAC was filed, and the jurisdictional evidence developed since the filing of the TAC has aligned with these allegations. Furthermore, CACI does not dispute that it is unlawful to conspire to commit unlawful activity or to aid and abet the commission of unlawful activity. Accordingly, the Court's focus at this juncture is on whether the allegations of abuse rise to the level of unlawful torture, CIDT, or war crimes, because if so, the allegations support a finding that CACI's activity was illegal.
Although CACI has focused on each alleged type of abuse individually because it "found it analytically useful to evaluate allegations of mistreatment by type," Def. Reply [Dkt. No. 645] 7, both parties agree that the Court "should 'view the facts holistically, with an eye to the full factual context," id. at 6 (quoting Velasquez v. Sessions,
CACI argues that "severe mental pain or suffering" requires "prolonged mental harm" resulting from the infliction of severe physical pain or suffering, the use of mind-altering substances or "other procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the senses or the personality," the "threat of imminent death," or similarly severe threats to other individuals. Def. Reply 7 (quoting
This apparent concession is well-supported by the evidence. Like the interpreters in Al-Quraishi, the CACI interrogators were "alleged to have operated alongside the military, carrying out a military task which likely would have been performed by the military itself under other circumstances." Al-Quraishi,
CACI cites to a variety of cases either where a torture victim experienced arguably worse treatment than did the plaintiffs here or where the court held that a subset of the treatment alleged here did not constitute torture. See Def. Mem. 16-19. These cases are of limited value in determining whether plaintiffs' allegations rise to the level of torture. Of course, that some individuals have been tortured more severely than plaintiffs does not mean that plaintiffs have not been tortured. Furthermore, that individual prisoner abuses-such as a single electric shock, see id. at 17, or a single dog bite, see id. at 17-18-have been held not to constitute torture says little about how these techniques operate in combination to produce the severe physical and mental pain that is the hallmark of torture. Accordingly, the cases cited by CACI cannot overcome the Court's interpretation of the plain meaning of the definition of torture or the various other domestic and international law sources indicating that the mistreatment alleged by the plaintiffs constitutes torture.
Although CACI argues that much of this "alleged conduct involves practices that were expressly permitted by the executive branch," Def. Mem. 14 (citing Def. Mem. Ex. 7, at xxii-xxiv), the memoranda authorizing these techniques were rescinded by the executive branch in December 2003, see Def. Mem. Ex. 7, at xxiv, and have been roundly criticized, see Pl. Opp. 22 & n. 21 (collecting sources). In any event, memoranda written by the executive branch specifically to justify the conduct at issue in this civil action cannot overcome the strong weight of domestic judicial, executive, and military authority discussed here, to say nothing of the corroborating international law sources.
Defendant argues that these provisions do not apply to Abu Ghraib detainees because they only apply to actions undertaken in armed conflicts "not of an international character,"
The parties argue about whether an element of a war crimes claim under the ATS is that plaintiffs were innocent civilians. See Def. Mem. 25-26; Pl. Opp. 23-24; Def. Reply 12-13. The Court need not resolve this disagreement at this juncture, because plaintiffs have provided substantial evidence that they were mistakenly arrested and were not involved in fighting coalition forces.
This goal of the conspiracies also provides a clear motive for both CACI employees and CACI management to enter into the conspiracies. CACI had a contract with the United States government to provide interrogation services and CACI's contract-as well as its individual employees' employment contracts-were dependent on those interrogations yielding high-quality intelligence that CACI could provide to the military. To the extent that CACI or its employees believed that the ATS violations described in the TAC could "soften up" detainees and encourage them to provide additional information in interrogations, it is clear that they would have a plausible motive for entering into the conspiracies.
Given the confined and relatively small nature of the Hard Site, as well as the commonalities among different detainees' description of the abuse that they suffered and the concerted efforts to conceal the mistreatment, the allegations referenced in this paragraph support an inference not merely of individual conspiracies between specific interrogators and specific MPs to torture specific detainees but instead of a broad-ranging conspiracy involving a number of interrogators and military personnel to torture detainees.
CACI also claims it is entitled to derivative immunity from suit as a government contractor that complied with instructions from the government; however, CACI admits that it "has not submitted the record materials showing [its] entitlement to immunity" because it believes that such a question is only appropriate for resolution at the summary judgment, rather than the motion to dismiss, stage. Def. Mem. 45. Accordingly, the Court will not address this argument.
In its reply brief, CACI appears to shift its position slightly to argue that "the Constitution limits Congress's power to legislate," Def. Reply 19, which appears to be an argument not that the Constitution "preempts" application of the ATS to plaintiffs' claims but that, as applied, the ATS represents an unconstitutional exercise of congressional power. Although it is true that such an argument is conceptually coherent, Congress is only prevented from infringing on executive power when "the President's asserted power [is] both 'exclusive' and 'conclusive' on the issue." Zivotofsky ex rel. Zivotofsky v. Kerry, --- U.S. ----,
CACI briefly argues that the "federal interests embodied in the foreign country exception to the FTCA,
As discussed above, all of plaintiffs' state tort and common law claims have been dismissed with prejudice.
The Court recognizes that the Saleh court, after finding that the plaintiffs' allegations did not support an ATS claim, also remarked that the ATS claim "runs athwart of our preemption analysis" because "the application of international law to support a tort action on the battlefield must be equally" as barred as the application of state law. Saleh,
CACI does not explain why it believes both that the FTCA's combatant activities exception-which, by its terms, only applies to a "claim arising out of ... combatant activities,"
