Jamie Leigh Jones
Jamie Leigh Jones sounds like the name of an A-List actress. Instead she was a girl with no particular name or fame, until events in Iraq thrust her into the spotlight. She’s a tragic figure whether you believe every word she’s ever said, or almost no word she’s ever said.
Whether you believe that she was horribly exploited, or has horribly exploited the truth and the justice system, her case is central to a critical scandal of our time–the vulnerability of women in foreign deployments, surrounded my male colleagues, to various abuses, including rape.
So her story makes a companion chapter to our posts on LaVena Johnson, and Tina Priest. If you don’t recall Jamie’s case, the thumbnail is this: she alleges gang-rape in Iraq by KBR (a major civilian contractor) employees, confinement in a KBR shipping container after she complained of the abuse, and a pattern of slanderous treatment by KBR ever since. The company, and much of the objective record, paint a different picture, one of exaggeration, at best, by Jamie Leigh.
After many years and much ado she got her day in court, and lost a civil case resoundingly in 2011, ordered to pay $145,000 towards KBR’s legal costs in the trial. Her credibility was largely shot. Mother Jones magazine, normally inclined to be supportive of cases like hers, offered an article that year by Stephanie Mencimer that soberly reviewed the facts. Physical evidence and testimony gave scant support to Jamie Leigh’s version of events. She’d been drinking, just for example, not given date-rape drugs, and probably not held at gunpoint afterward by KBR personnel.
But the article stressed that not all is black and white, a simple checklist of true or false in situations like these.