Abu Ghraib Whistleblower Worries
Tells Anderson Cooper He Still Doesn't Feel Safe

(CBS) Like most soldiers serving in Iraq, Joe Darby just wanted to go
home when his time was up. But blowing the whistle on his unit members
for abusing Iraqi prisoners changed all that, and now the former
military police specialist lives in an undisclosed city with his wife,
still worried for their safety.

Darby talks to Anderson Cooper on 60 Minutes, this Sunday at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

"I worry about the one guy who wants to get even with me, and that one
guy could hurt me and my family," says Darby. That one guy could be
from his hometown of Cumberland, Md., where many in his unit lived.

What were his friends and neighbors saying about him after they
learned he gave photos to authorities showing U.S. soldiers, some from
Cumberland, abusing Iraqis at Abu Ghraib prison? "He was a rat. He was
a traitor. He let his unit down and the U.S. military. Basically, he
was no good," Colin Engelbach, commander of the local Veterans of
Foreign Wars chapter, says he heard townspeople say. It was hard on
Darby. "These were people who knew me since I was born….my parents'
friends, my grandparents' friends, that turned against me."

Says Engelbach, "I agree that his actions…were no good and borderline
traitor." He understands Darby was reporting a crime. "But do you put
the enemy above your buddies? I wouldn't."

There was a time when Darby was frightened enough of those buddies to
sleep with a gun. Right after giving military authorities the
pictures, the investigation began and he was worried that some of the
accused might find out he had turned in the pictures and could
retaliate. "[The accused] still had their weapons…unlimited access to
the facility and me the whole time," Darby tells Cooper. "[I] slept
with a pistol under my pillow, loaded, with my hand on it and cocked
it….Every night."

Darby relaxed a bit when the abusers were taken off base, but was
shocked when, after 60 Minutes II broke the story, then-Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld mentioned his name in front of Congress. To
keep him safe, the military flew him out of Iraq. But when he landed
back in the states and asked to go home, officers told him he wouldn't
be safe there, either. "[An officer] said, 'Well, son, that's not an
option.' He said the Army Reserve had done a security assessment of
the area and 'it's not safe for you there. You can't go home.'"

Engelbach concurs with the assessment. "There were a lot of threats, a
lot of phone calls to his wife…because [Darby's actions] really did
put our troops in harm's way, more so than they already were." Instead
of home, they went into the protective custody of the military for
months.

Bernadette, his wife, was extremely frightened and is now frustrated.
"It's not fair that we're being punished for [her husband] doing the
right thing."

Both lived around Cumberland their entire lives and may never be able
to return, but it doesn't change Darby's mind about what he did. "They
broke the law and they had to be punished. I have always had a moral
sense of right and wrong and I knew that…friends or not, [the abuse]
had to stop," he tells Cooper.

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