Philip DeCamp

Last modified : 08/08/2024

Country of commission
Country of prosecution
Nationality of the suspect
United States of America
Gender of the suspect
Male
Status of the suspect
Free
Status of the procedure
Case closed
Alleged crimes / charges
War crimes
Verdict / decision
Case dismissed
Individual / company
Individual
Jurisdictional basis
Passive personality jurisdiction
Complaint filed in
2003
Year of the verdict (First instance) / decision
2015
Year of the verdict (Second instance)
2015
Year of the verdict (Third instance)
2016
Length of the procedure (in years)
12
Specific topics
Journalists


Facts

Philip DeCamp, born in 1963 in Georgia, joined the US army in 1983. He obtained a Bachelor’s degree in physics in 1984, and a Ph.D. in industrial engineering. He was lieutenant colonel of the 3rd Infantry Division of the US army in Iraq when the alleged facts occurred. He retired from the Army in July 2005 and became adjunct mathematics professor in Virginia.

On the morning of 8 April 2003, Sergeant Shawn Gibson, the commander of a 3rd Infantry Division M-1 Abrams tank positioned on the Al-Jumhuriya Bridge in Baghdad fired on the Palestine Hotel, a base from where numerous foreign journalists covered the Iraq war. José Couso, a cameraman for the Spanish network Telecinco, and Taras Protsyuk, a Ukrainian cameraman for Reuters, were killed after the tank fired the high-explosive shell at the Palestine Hotel. DeCamp headed the regiment in charge of the tank which attacked the building.

A U.S. military investigation in August 2003 cleared DeCamp and the other two soldiers, Sergeant Shawn Gibson and Captain Philip Wolford, of wrongdoing, saying they acted properly because they believed they were firing on enemy troops.

Yet, another investigation from the Committee to Protect Journalists underlined that no evidence was found of enemy shot coming from the Palestine Hotel. However, this investigation concluded to the non-intentionality of the crimes.

Procedure

In late 2003, the Spanish National Court (Audiencia Nacional, Sala de lo penal), acting on a request from Couso’s family, opened an investigation against Lieutenant Colonel DeCamp, Sergeant Gibson and Captain Wolford, and on 19 October 2005, three international arrest warrants were issued. The US Department of Justice denied a Spanish request to question the three American soldiers on American territory.

The case was closed a first time on March 2006. In December 2006, the Spanish National Court granted an appeal by the killed journalist’s family against the closure of proceedings. DeCamp, Gibson and Wolford were indicted on 27 April 2007 on charges of homicide and war crimes. Yet, on 14 July 2009, the Spanish National Court decided to close the case due to lack of evidence.

On 13 July 2010, the Spanish Supreme Court ordered to reopen the investigation and on 4 October 2011 Judge Pedraz indicted once again DeCamp, Gibson and Wolford and on charges of war crimes. The Judge ordered each of them to post a bail of 1 million Euros as a guarantee for the reparation proceedings. In the same decision the Judge ordered to open an investigation for command responsibility against General Buford Blount and Colonel David Perkins, hierarchic superiors of Lieutenant Colonel DeCamp.

On 5 June 2014 the Criminal Chamber of the Spanish National Court ruled that the investigation could be pursued, despite the new legislation on universal jurisdiction of 2014. Yet, on 9 June 2015, this decision was annulled and the case closed. The decision to close the case was confirmed by the Criminal Chamber of the National Court on 25 November 2015, then, on appeal, by the Supreme Court on 25 October 2016, both stating that the case could be reopened if the new procedural requirements were met (if the suspects came to Spanish territory, for example).

In the end of October 2016, the family of José Couso has announced its intention to bring the matter before the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

On 25 July 2024, the European Court of Human Rights rejected the appeal of the family of José Couso. The Court has unanimously ruled that the dismissal of the case in Spain following the national reform of universal jurisdiction does not constitute a violation of the right of access to a court within the meaning of article 6, paragraph 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Last modified : 08/08/2024

Country of commission
Country of prosecution
Nationality of the suspect
United States of America
Gender of the suspect
Male
Status of the suspect
Free
Status of the procedure
Case closed
Alleged crimes / charges
War crimes
Verdict / decision
Case dismissed
Individual / company
Individual
Jurisdictional basis
Passive personality jurisdiction
Complaint filed in
2003
Year of the verdict (First instance) / decision
2015
Year of the verdict (Second instance)
2015
Year of the verdict (Third instance)
2016
Length of the procedure (in years)
12
Specific topics
Journalists