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Facing Evil with Candice DeLong is an American television documentary series on Investigation Discovery that debuted on November 25, 2010, as a two-part special, which later turned into a full series. [1] [2] Facing Evil is hosted by former FBI Profiler Candice DeLong as she visits different women's prisons and talks with female prisoners. [3]
According to an online article from NBC, [8] Zammar had been detained in late 2001 in Morocco when the CIA found and handed him over to the Syrian government, which was reported by Germany's Der Spiegel. [9] In 2013, Zammar had been released from prison after being sentenced to 12 years in 2007 because the country was experiencing a civil war.
PBS’ “Frontline” has been on top of numerous documentaries about 9/11 and its aftermath; “The Man Who Knew” focuses on a former FBI counterterrorism agent who felt the U.S. should have ...
The prison was part of the US government's "extraordinary rendition" program after the September 11 attacks, and used torture techniques such as waterboarding. According to a former senior CIA official, Haspel arrived as station chief after the interrogation of Abu Zubaydah but was chief during the waterboarding of Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri .
Aafia Siddiqui (also spelled Afiya; [8] Urdu: عافیہ صدیقی; born 2 March 1972) is a Pakistani neuroscientist [9] and educator who gained international attention following her conviction in the United States and is currently serving an 86-year sentence for attempted murder and other felonies at the Federal Medical Center, Carswell, in Fort Worth, Texas.
Tania Head had one of the most harrowing accounts from 9/11 and eventually became the president of a survivor's network, but the Spanish woman was ultimately proved to be a fraud and wasn't even ...
CNN will air "9/11: Fifteen Years Later" twice starting at 8 p.m. on Sept. 11. A limited amount of new material will be available on the CNN Films website, but the archive will take time to build out.
Because Auburn relied on female inmates for its washing and cleaning services, women remained part of the population but the first separate women's institution in New York was not completed until 1893.) [142] A jury convicted the keeper who beat the woman of assault and battery, and fined him $25, but he remained on the job. [143]