Darby leaves the Army but can't go home
Wire Services
In his farewell address at the Pentagon, Donald Rumsfeld said that the worst day of his nearly six years as secretary of defense was the disclosure to the world of the photographs of the abuses at Abu Ghraib. Those pictures might never have been known were it not for Joseph Darby, then a specialist with the Army's 372nd Military Police Company at Guantanamo Bay. Because his moral code told him "it had to stop," Darby may never be able to return home to Maryland ...
While still at Guantanamo, Darby, in fear of retaliation, slept with a gun under his pillow. The Army decided to bring him back to the United States, ahead of his unit. Back home in Cumberland, Md., the whistleblower was a pariah. The commander of the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post, Colin Engelbach, told "60 Minutes" Darby "was a rat. He was a traitor. He let his unit down, he let his fellow soldiers down" ...
Darby, who left the Army recently, misses his home, as does his wife. Their current residence is secret. "It's not fair," Bernadette Darby told the New York Daily News (Dec. 8). "We're being punished for (him) doing the right thing" ...
In a series of memos - a story first broken by Jess Bravin on the front page of the June 7, 2003, Wall Street Journal - he disclosed: "Bush administration lawyers contended last year that the president wasn't bounded by laws prohibiting torture and that government agents who might torture prisoners at his direction couldn't be prosecuted by the Justice Department" ...
http://www.saukvalley.com/articles/2006/12/31/opinion/columnists/23127583201503.txt