Sabrina D. Harman (born January 5, 1978) is an American former soldier who was court-martialed by the United States Army for prisoner abuse after the 2003–04 Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal. Along with other soldiers of her Army Reserve unit, the 372nd Military Police Company, she was accused of allowing and inflicting physical and psychological abuse on Iraqi detainees in Abu Ghraib prison, a notorious prison in Baghdad during the United States' occupation of Iraq.
Harman was convicted of maltreatment of detainees, conspiracy to maltreat detainees, and dereliction of duty. She was sentenced to six months in prison, forfeiture of all her pay and benefits, demoted, and given a bad conduct discharge. She was imprisoned in the Naval Consolidated Brig, Miramar in San Diego, California.
Harman consistently acknowledged a fear that the abuses being committed at Abu Ghraib, both during her time at the facility,
Military career
thumb|Sabrina Harman posing in a photo with [[Charles Graner behind a group of naked detainees stacked in a pyramid in Abu Ghraib.]]
After the September 11, 2001 attacks, Harman joined the Army Reserve and was assigned to the Cresaptown, Maryland-based 372nd Military Police company. Harman worked for a time as an assistant manager at Papa John's in Alexandria, Virginia, before her company was activated for duty in Iraq in February 2003, and was deployed to Fort Lee, Virginia for additional training; however, this was in combat support, not internment and resettlement. Harman, an MP, was stationed at Abu Ghraib as a guard.
Abu Ghraib facility
Harman was the second soldier to be tried for mistreating prisoners at Abu Ghraib. She was depicted in several of the most notorious photos taken at Abu Ghraib in late October and early November 2003, and she is accused of taking other pictures..
Harman explained that her Military Police unit deferred to practices already being conducted by military officers and civilian contractors present at the facility:
<blockquote>[She] said she was assigned to break down prisoners for interrogation. "They would bring in one to several prisoners at a time already hooded and cuffed," Harman said in interviews by e-mail this week from Baghdad. "The job of the MP was to keep them awake, make it hell so they would talk." She said her military police unit took direction from the military intelligence officers in charge of the facility and from civilian contractors there who conducted interrogations.</blockquote>
Sentencing
In 2005, Harman was convicted on six of the seven counts with which she had been initially charged, related to the maltreatment of detainees, conspiracy relating to abuse, and dereliction of duty; she was sentenced to six months in prison the following day, for which she would serve approximately four months due to credit for time already served. who generally saw the prisoners more or less as a proxy for military intelligence – “She has no cruelty in her, even though she is an American woman, she was just like a sister.”</blockquote>
Harman's attorney said he hoped to see the military chain of command put on trial, rather than low-ranking reservists like Harman:
On February 4, 2010, the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces unanimously upheld Harman's convictions.
