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FBI agents investigating the September 16 episode in which Blackwater security guards shot and killed 17 Iraqi civilians have found that at least 14 of the shootings were unjustified, the New York Times reported last night.
The FBI investigation into the shootings in Baghdad is still under way, but the findings, which indicate that the company's employees violated deadly force rules in effect for security contractors in Iraq, are already under review by the Justice Department, the newspaper said.
It cited unnamed civilian and military officials briefed on the case.
Prosecutors have yet to decide whether to seek indictments, and some officials have expressed pessimism that adequate criminal laws exist to enable them to charge any Blackwater employee with criminal wrongdoing, the paper reported.
North Carolina-based Blackwater protects US diplomats and other State Department officials in Iraq.
The case could be one of the first thorny issues to be decided by Michael Mukasey, who was sworn in as Attorney General last week.
He may be faced with a decision to turn down a prosecution on legal grounds at a time when a furore has erupted in Congress about the Administration's failure to hold security contractors accountable for their misdeeds, the Times said.
Investigators have concluded that as many as five of the guards opened fire during the shootings.
They found no evidence to support assertions by Blackwater employees that they were fired upon by Iraqi civilians. One government official told the Times: "I wouldn't call it a massacre, but to say it was unwarranted is an understatement."
- REUTERS