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No. 10620002
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Husayn v. Mitchell
No. 10620002 · Decided June 30, 2025
No. 10620002·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
June 30, 2025
Citation
No. 10620002
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
ZAYN AL-ABIDIN MUHAMMAD No. 24-1468
HUSAYN, also known as Abu
D.C. No.
Zubaydah,
2:23-cv-00270-
TOR
Plaintiff - Appellant,
v.
OPINION
JAMES MITCHELL; JOHN
JESSEN, also known as Bruce
Jessen,
Defendants - Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Washington
Thomas O. Rice, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 11, 2025
San Francisco, California
Filed June 30, 2025
Before: John B. Owens, Lawrence VanDyke, and Anthony
D. Johnstone, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Johnstone
2 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
SUMMARY *
Military Commissions Act
Affirming the district court’s dismissal of an action
brought under the Alien Tort Statute by Zayn Al-Abidin
Muhammad Husayn, known as Abu Zubaydah, the panel
held that the Military Commissions Act, 28 U.S.C.
§ 2241(e)(2), deprived the district court of jurisdiction.
Zubaydah, whom the United States mistakenly believed
was an Al Qaeda leader, sought damages under the Alien
Tort Statute for injuries he suffered during his detention and
interrogations at a secret prison or “black site” run by the
Central Intelligence Agency.
The Military Commissions Act denies federal courts
jurisdiction over certain actions relating to the detention and
treatment of enemy combatants by the United States and its
agents. It was undisputed that Zubaydah’s claims related to
his detention and treatment by defendants and that he had
been designated an enemy combatant. The panel held that
Zubaydah’s complaint also established that the defendant
contractors were agents of the United States for his claims
because the United States authorized, controlled, and ratified
defendants’ treatment of Zubaydah. Therefore, the Military
Commissions Act denied the district court jurisdiction over
this case.
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 3
COUNSEL
Solomon B. Shinerock (argued), Lewis Baach Kaufmann
Middlemiss PLLC, New York, New York; Alexander
Bedrosyan, Eric L. Lewis, and David A. Short, Lewis Baach
Kaufmann Middlemiss PLLC, Washington, D.C.; Jeffry K.
Finer, Finer Winn, Spokane, Washington; for Plaintiff-
Appellant.
Brian S. Paszamant (argued), Jeffrey N. Rosenthal, James T.
Smith, and Ann E. Querns, Blank Rome LLP, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania; Arash Beral, Blank Rome LLP, Los Angeles,
California; James B. King, Evans Craven & Lackie PS,
Spokane, Washington; for Defendants-Appellees.
Luke P. Ihnen and Molly Kincaid, Assistant Federal Public
Defenders, Federal Defender Services of Eastern Tennessee
Inc., Capital Habeas Unit, Knoxville, Tennessee, for Amicus
Curiae Abu Faraj Al-Libi.
4 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
OPINION
JOHNSTONE, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff Zayn Al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn, known as
Abu Zubaydah, was captured in Pakistan in March 2002. At
the time, United States intelligence officials suspected
Zubaydah was a leader of Al Qaeda, the terrorist network
that killed nearly 3,000 people in the attacks of September
11, 2001. Zubaydah was transferred to a secret prison or
“black site” run by the Central Intelligence Agency (“CIA”)
where, he alleges, he endured an experimental program of
so-called “enhanced interrogation techniques” that
amounted to torture. Defendants James Mitchell and John
Jessen, United States citizens and psychologists, contracted
with the CIA to design that program. They subjected
Zubaydah to these enhanced interrogation techniques over
seventeen days. Later, Zubaydah was transferred to the U.S.
detention facility at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, where in
2007 he was designated as an enemy combatant. He is still
detained there today.
Zubaydah sued Defendants under the Alien Tort Statute
seeking damages for the injuries he suffered during his
detention and interrogations. 28 U.S.C. § 1350. He alleges
that Defendants committed torture and other violations of
customary international law and various international
agreements and declarations. The district court granted
Defendants’ motion to dismiss for several reasons, including
that the court lacked jurisdiction under the Military
Commissions Act (“MCA”) of 2006. 28 U.S.C.
§ 2241(e)(2).
Congress, through the MCA, denied federal courts
jurisdiction over certain actions relating to the detention and
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 5
treatment of enemy combatants by the United States and its
agents. It is undisputed that Zubaydah’s claims relate to his
detention and treatment by Defendants and that he has been
designated an enemy combatant. We hold that the complaint
also establishes that Defendants were agents of the United
States for Zubaydah’s claims. Therefore, the MCA denied
the district court jurisdiction over this case. We affirm the
district court’s dismissal.
I. Zubaydah’s allegations of inhumane treatment by
Defendants.
Congress, the President, and the Supreme Court have
already addressed Zubaydah’s treatment and Defendants’
development and use of enhanced interrogation techniques.
See, e.g., Report of the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence Committee Study of the Central Intelligence
Agency’s Detention and Interrogation Program, S. Rep. No.
113-288, 40 (Dec. 9, 2014); Press Conference by the
President, Office of the Press Secretary (Aug. 1, 2014)
https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-
office/2014/08/01/press-conference-president
[https://perma.cc/3DLX-PR9A]; United States v. Zubaydah,
595 U.S. 195, 200 (2022). Whether Defendants tortured
Zubaydah is not at issue. The only question we must answer
is whether Congress put Zubaydah’s action against
Defendants beyond the jurisdiction of the district court
because they acted as agents of the United States.
We review de novo whether Zubaydah’s complaint
invokes federal jurisdiction. See DaVinci Aircraft, Inc. v.
United States, 926 F.3d 1117, 1122 (9th Cir. 2019)
(reviewing a dismissal under Rule 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6)).
We deny Zubaydah’s motion for judicial notice of
documents publicly filed in Salim v. Mitchell, No. CV-15-
6 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
0286 (E.D. Wash.). Because Defendants bring a
jurisdictional challenge solely on the basis of Zubaydah’s
complaint, we do not look beyond the complaint to
determine the district court’s jurisdiction. We take as true the
facts Zubaydah alleges in his complaint and construe them
in the light most favorable to him. See DaVinci Aircraft, 926
F.3d at 1122.
Defendants trained service members in the military’s
Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (“SERE”)
program. At SERE, Mitchell “developed and supervised a
course involving mock torture in a pretend prisoner-of-war
camp.” Jessen worked as the chief psychologist for the
department that oversaw the SERE training programs.
Through “simulated scenarios in a controlled and
constructive manner,” service members learned to “build
resistance to the extreme stresses of capture.” SERE mock
interrogations presented serious psychological and physical
risks. So the program implemented safeguards including
strict time limits and careful psychological monitoring to
prevent students from developing “learned helplessness,” a
state of total submission.
After the attacks of September 11, 2001, intelligence
officials across the Government scrambled to investigate
who was responsible and how to prevent feared imminent
attacks. To those ends, the CIA reconsidered whether torture
was necessary “to prevent imminent, significant, physical
harm . . ., where there is no other available means.” The
agency contracted with Defendants to prepare a report that
drew on their work at SERE and “proposed countermeasures
to defeat” resistance by captured “Al Qaeda operatives.”
Then, in March 2002, a joint United States-Pakastani
force captured Zubaydah, whom the United States
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 7
mistakenly believed was an Al Qaeda leader. United States
intelligence officials transferred Zubaydah to Thailand. For
the first two weeks of his detention, Federal Bureau of
Investigation (“FBI”) agents interrogated Zubaydah.
Meanwhile, the CIA began assembling its own team to
interrogate Zubaydah. It asked Mitchell to “provide real-
time recommendations to overcome Abu Zubaydah’s
resistance to interrogation.” Mitchell accepted the request
and negotiated an “independent contract with the CIA to
provide psychological consultation . . . in debriefing and
interrogation operations.”
Mitchell left for Thailand. On arrival, he recommended
the transfer of Zubaydah from a medical facility to a CIA-
operated black site. Zubaydah alleges that, at Mitchell’s
direction, the interrogation team held him naked, in “an all-
white room that was lit 24 hours a day,” and kept him awake
shackled to a chair. At one point, after Mitchell allegedly
deprived Zubaydah of sleep for seventy-six hours, CIA
medical staff intervened to allow Zubaydah to sleep.
Otherwise, the CIA team treated Zubaydah as Mitchell
directed.
A month of interrogations under these conditions elicited
the same information that Zubaydah had provided the FBI.
But Mitchell wanted to use even more aggressive techniques
to try to preempt an attack on the United States. So he
returned to the United States and enlisted Jessen, who signed
an independent contract with the CIA. Defendants
approached the CIA with a new program of “enhanced
interrogation techniques” to overcome Zubaydah’s
purported resistance. As they detailed in a memorandum to
the CIA, Defendants proposed the following techniques:
(1) attention grasp; (2) walling; (3) facial hold; (4) facial or
insult slap; (5) cramped confinement; (6) wall standing;
8 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
(7) stress positions; (8) sleep deprivation;
(9) waterboarding; (10) diapers; (11) insects; and (12) mock
burial. Although Defendants likened these techniques to
those used in SERE training, they intended to accomplish
what SERE tried to prevent: a state of “learned helplessness”
wherein Zubaydah would become unable to resist an
interrogator’s requests. Defendants signed new contracts
with the CIA to engage in “applied research” domestically
and abroad. In July 2002, Mitchell returned to the black site
in Thailand with Jessen.
Still, the CIA raised concerns that these enhanced
interrogation techniques could cross the line into torture—a
federal crime, then and now. 18 U.S.C. § 2340A. Federal law
defines torture as “an act committed by a person acting under
the color of law specifically intended to inflict severe
physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or
suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person
within his custody or physical control.” 18 U.S.C. § 2340(1);
see also id. at § 2340(2) (defining “mental pain or suffering”
as “prolonged mental harm”). Given these concerns, the CIA
sent a memo to the Department of Justice (“DOJ”)
requesting “legal clearance.”
The DOJ issued two memos on Defendants’ proposed
enhanced interrogation techniques. In the first, the DOJ
opined that, under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2340-2340A, to be federally
prosecuted for torture, “an interrogator must cause ‘longer-
term mental harm’ or ‘intense pain or suffering of the kind
that is equivalent to the pain that would be associated with
serious physical injury so severe that death, organ failure, or
permanent damage resulting in a loss of significant body
functions will likely result.’” In the second, the DOJ opined,
based on Defendants’ assurances about the proposed
techniques, that the following techniques would not meet its
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 9
interpretation of torture: “(1) attention grasp; (2) walling;
(3) facial hold; (4) facial or insult slap; (5) cramped
confinement; (6) insects; (7) wall standing; (8) stress
positions; (9) sleep deprivation; and (10) waterboarding.”
Thus, according to the memos, use of the ten techniques
would not give rise to criminal liability under 18 U.S.C.
§ 2340A. The DOJ did not address two of Defendants’
proposed techniques: forced diapering and mock burials.
After the DOJ issued its memos, Defendants began their
interrogations of Zubaydah.
For seventeen days, from August 4 to August 20, 2002,
Defendants used their enhanced interrogation techniques on
Zubaydah. But, he alleges, the intensity and repetition of
Defendants’ techniques went beyond anything resembling
the SERE training or the descriptions in the DOJ memos.
According to Zubaydah, Defendants “slammed [him]
against a concrete wall.” They waterboarded Zubaydah 83
times, once until he stopped breathing and had to be
resuscitated. They also threatened Zubaydah, telling him that
unless he gave them information, “he would leave the
facility in [a] coffin-like box.” And they confined him in
such a box for hours at a time, totaling 266 hours over the
seventeen-day period, which Zubaydah alleges “amounted
to mock execution and mock burial.” Although Defendants
proposed “mock burial” to the CIA, the DOJ memo did not
address the potential criminal liability of either mock burials
or mock executions.
After their interrogations, Defendants updated the CIA
on their treatment of Zubaydah. Defendants would “sen[d]
CIA Headquarters a clinical, sterilized summary of the day’s
interrogation, and maintained data and records concerning
the techniques used.” CIA personnel also observed at least
some of the interrogations and expressed concerns about
10 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
Defendants’ treatment of Zubaydah. Still, following
Defendants’ interrogations of Zubaydah, the CIA extended
their contracts. All told, from 2002 to 2009, the CIA paid
Defendants more than $80 million for work that followed
from their interrogations of Zubaydah.
Defendants left Zubaydah permanently scarred,
physically and mentally, according to the complaint.
Zubaydah was then transferred between various black sites
for four more years. In September 2006, he arrived at
Guantanamo Bay, where he remains. And though he does
not plead it, Zubaydah does not dispute that in 2007 the
United States determined that he was detained as an enemy
combatant.
Zubaydah sued Defendants in federal district court.
Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under Rules
12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). The district court granted Defendants’
motion to dismiss for several reasons, including that the
court lacked jurisdiction under the MCA. 28 U.S.C.
§ 2241(e)(2).
II. In the MCA, Congress limited courts’ jurisdiction
to hear claims brought by enemy combatants.
The MCA denies jurisdiction over cases “relating to any
aspect of the detention, transfer, treatment, trial, or
conditions of confinement” by or for an enemy combatant
“against the United States or its agents.” 28 U.S.C.
§ 2241(e)(2). The MCA was not the first statute denying
jurisdiction over claims brought by noncitizens detained
following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The
matter of jurisdiction, or lack thereof, emerges from an
extended legal dialogue between Congress, the President,
and the Supreme Court. This dialogue shapes our
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 11
understanding of the law that we apply to Zubaydah’s
claims.
Days after September 11, Congress authorized the
President to use “all necessary and appropriate force against
those . . . persons he determines planned, authorized,
committed, or aided the terrorist attacks.” Authorization for
Use of Military Force, Pub. L. No. 107–40, 115 Stat. 224
(2001). Under that law, the President asserted the authority
to detain and try by military commission individuals
suspected to be members of Al Qaeda or otherwise
participating in acts of international terrorism. Detention,
Treatment, and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in the War
Against Terrorism, 66 Fed. Reg. 57833, 57834 (Nov. 13,
2001). The Supreme Court confirmed this power. Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 507, 518 (2004) (plurality opinion); id.
at 589 (Thomas, J., dissenting). The President also ordered
that individuals so detained be “treated humanely.”
Detention, Treatment, and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in
the War Against Terrorism, 66 Fed. Reg. at 57834. And the
Court held that those individuals retained the right to
challenge their detention at Guantanamo Bay under the
general habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2241. Rasul v.
Bush, 542 U.S. 466, 484 (2004); see Pub. L. No. 89-590, 80
Stat. 811 (1966) (current version at 28 U.S.C. § 2241).
Congress responded with the Detainee Treatment Act of
2005 (“DTA”). Pub. L. No. 109–148, §§ 1001–06, 119 Stat.
2680, 2739–44 (2005). The DTA amended § 2241 to deny
jurisdiction over actions by or for noncitizens detained at
Guantanamo Bay (1) applying for a writ of habeas corpus,
or (2) bringing “any other action against the United States or
its agents” relating to their detention. § 1005(e)(2), 119 Stat.
at 2742 (current version at 42 U.S.C. § 2241(e)(2)). The
DTA also provided that “[n]o individual in the custody or
12 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
under the physical control of the United States Government,
regardless of nationality or physical location, shall be subject
to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment.”
§ 1003(a), 119 Stat. at 2739 (current version at 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000dd(a)). But it contained a good-faith defense,
allowing “an officer, employee, member of the Armed
Forces, or other agent of the United States Government” to
avoid civil or criminal liability for the “detention and
interrogation of aliens” if the defendant “did not know,” and
“a person of ordinary sense and understanding would not
know,” that “the practices were unlawful.” § 1004(a), 119
Stat. at 2740 (current version at 42 U.S.C. § 2000dd-1(a)).
The Supreme Court held that the DTA did not apply to
pending cases, so the DTA did not deny a court jurisdiction
to hear those detainee-brought cases pending before it.
Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 548 U.S. 557, 576–78 (2006).
Congress amended § 2241 again, enacting the MCA to
clarify that the denial of jurisdiction applied to pending
cases. See Pub. L. No. 109-366, §§ 1–10, 120 Stat. 2600,
2600–37 (2006). The MCA provides for limited review of
enemy-combatant status determinations by the Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. 28 U.S.C. § 2241(e)(1), (2).
Otherwise, like the DTA, it denies jurisdiction over two
categories of lawsuits brought by or for a noncitizen “who
has been determined by the United States to have been
properly detained as an enemy combatant or is awaiting such
determination.” Id. First, the MCA denies jurisdiction to
review habeas corpus applications. Id. § 2241(e)(1). Second,
the MCA provides, with exceptions not applicable here:
[N]o court, justice, or judge shall have
jurisdiction to hear or consider any other
action against the United States or its agents
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 13
relating to any aspect of the detention,
transfer, treatment, trial, or conditions of
confinement of an alien who is or was
detained by the United States and has been
determined by the United States to have been
properly detained as an enemy combatant or
is awaiting such determination.
Id. § 2241(e)(2) (emphasis added). The Supreme Court held,
in Boumediene v. Bush, that the denial of habeas corpus
jurisdiction by § 2241(e)(1) violated the Suspension Clause
of Article I. 553 U.S. 723, 792 (2008); U.S. Const. art. I, § 9,
cl. 2 (“The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not
be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion
the public Safety may require it.”). Distinguishing
Boumediene, we held that § 2241(e)(2) remains
constitutional as applied to damages claims under the Alien
Tort Statute arising from a plaintiff’s detention at
Guantanamo Bay as an enemy combatant. Hamad v. Gates,
732 F.3d 990, 1003–06 (9th Cir. 2013).
In this appeal, we consider whether the MCA deprived
the district court of jurisdiction to hear this case. It is
uncontested that Zubaydah’s suit “relat[es] to any aspect of
[his] detention . . . treatment . . . or conditions of
confinement” by the United States, 28 U.S.C. § 2241(e)(2),
and that Zubaydah has been determined to be an enemy
combatant. So if Defendants were “agents” of the United
States, the district court lacked jurisdiction over this case.
See id. To answer that question, we first examine the MCA’s
text and the context of its enactment. Because the undefined
term “agent” is best read to incorporate the common law of
agency, we then consider whether the CIA’s course of
14 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
dealing with Defendants gave rise to an agency relationship.
We conclude that it did.
A. The MCA incorporates the common-law meaning
of “agents.”
We begin with the text. The MCA does not define
“agents,” but it is undisputed that “agents” under the MCA
includes at least officers and employees of the United States.
We and other circuit courts of appeals have concluded as
much. See Hamad, 732 F.3d at 993 (former Secretary of
Defense, United States military officials, and civilian
officials); Al-Nashiri v. MacDonald, 741 F.3d 1002, 1008
(9th Cir. 2013) (U.S. military official); Ameur v. Gates, 759
F.3d 317, 320 (4th Cir. 2014) (former Secretary of Defense
and federal employees); Al-Zahrani v. Rodriguez, 669 F.3d
315, 317 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (current and former federal
officials and employees).
Here, however, Defendants’ contracts with the CIA
specify that they were “independent contractors,” not
officers or employees. And “[u]nlike employees,
independent contractors are not ordinarily agents.” United
States v. Bonds, 608 F.3d 495, 505 (9th Cir. 2010). Zubaydah
argues that if Congress had intended for the MCA to extend
to independent contractors, “it would have done so by
including those terms, as it has done in other statutes.” True,
Congress distinguished agents from contractors in statutes
other than the MCA. See, e.g., 28 U.S.C. § 1494 (granting
jurisdiction over accounts of “any officer or agent of, or
contractor with, the United States”); 31 U.S.C. § 3729(b)(2)
(False Claims Act applies to claims “presented to an officer,
employee, or agent of the United States” or “a contractor,
grantee, or other recipient”); 30 U.S.C. § 1716 (defining
covered “person” as “any agent or employee of the United
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 15
States and any independent contractor”). In a different case,
a district court drew a similar distinction in concluding that
these Defendants, as contractors, were not agents under the
MCA. See Salim v. Mitchell, No. CV-15-0286, 2017 WL
390270, at *3 (E.D. Wash. Jan. 27, 2017). Yet the MCA and
its preceding enactments contain several contextual clues
that “agent” means more than an officer or employee of the
United States government.
As discussed above, the MCA amended the DTA. And
the DTA, like the MCA, denied jurisdiction over cases
brought by enemy combatants “against the United States or
its agents.” § 1005, 119 Stat. at 2742. The MCA also
incorporates the DTA’s good-faith defense and clarifies that
the defense applies to war-crime prosecutions arising since
September 11, 2001. See § 8(b), 120 Stat. at 2636. Recall that
this good faith provision applies to “an officer, employee,
member of the Armed Forces, or other agent of the United
States Government.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000dd-1(a). The MCA
itself also separately denies jurisdiction over actions
invoking the Geneva Conventions “to which the United
States, or a current or former officer, employee, member of
the Armed Forces, or other agent of the United States is a
party.” § 5, 120 Stat. at 2631.
We presume that Congress used terms consistently in the
MCA, so “agent” must mean something beyond just officers
and employees of the United States. See Cir. City Stores, Inc.
v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105, 113 (2001) (“Our cases express a
deep reluctance to interpret a statutory provision so as to
render superfluous other provisions in the same enactment.”
(quoting Pa. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare v. Davenport, 495 U.S.
552, 562 (1990))); see also Antonin Scalia & Bryan A.
Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 170
(2012) (“A word or phrase is presumed to bear the same
16 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
meaning throughout a text . . . .”). Zubaydah points to
nothing in the MCA’s text that rebuts this presumption, so
we take the term “agent” to include contractors as well as
officers and employees.
Even if the MCA applies to contractors generally,
however, Zubaydah argues that Defendants are “non-agent
contractors.” Because the MCA’s text does not distinguish
between contractors who are agents of the United States and
those who are not, we turn to the “age-old principle . . . that
words undefined in a statute are to be interpreted and applied
according to the common-law meanings” to discern the
MCA’s meaning of “agent.” See Scalia & Garner, supra at
320. This is because “[w]here Congress uses terms that have
accumulated settled meaning under either equity or the
common law, a court must infer, unless the statute otherwise
dictates, that Congress means to incorporate the established
meaning of these terms.” NLRB v. Amax Coal Co., 453 U.S.
322, 329 (1981). Thus, we infer that Congress incorporated
the settled common-law meaning of “agents” into the MCA.
B. Defendants were “agents” of the United States.
At common law, “[w]hether an agency relationship
exists is for a court to decide based on an assessment of the
facts of the relationship” and how the parties define their
relationship “is not dispositive.” Henderson v. United
Student Aid Funds, Inc., 918 F.3d 1068, 1073 (9th Cir. 2019),
as amended on denial of reh’g and reh’g en banc (May 6,
2019). While “independent contractors are not ordinarily
agents,” Bonds, 608 F.3d at 505, courts still may find an
agency relationship, see United States v. Milovanovic, 678
F.3d 713, 725 (9th Cir. 2012).
To determine whether an agency relationship exists for
purposes of defining federal law, we look to the Restatement
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 17
(Third) of Agency, which restated the common law of
agency the year that Congress enacted the MCA and remains
the most current articulation of the common law of agency.
See, e.g., Smith v. Wade, 461 U.S. 30, 34, 39–45 (1983)
(applying the common law from the year of a statute’s
enactment); id. at 56–57, 65–68 (Rehnquist, J., dissenting)
(same); Mavrix Photographs, LLC v. LiveJournal, Inc., 873
F.3d 1045, 1053–54 (9th Cir. 2017) (applying the most
current articulation of the common law). An agency
relationship arises when a principal agrees with an agent
“that the agent shall act [1] on the principal’s behalf and [2]
subject to the principal’s control.” Restatement (Third) of
Agency § 1.01 (A.L.I. 2006); Mavrix Photographs, 873 F.3d
at 1054. Alternatively, even when a principal and alleged
agent do not reach such an agreement before the alleged
agent acts, a principal can ratify an agency relationship by
“affirm[ing] a prior act done by another.” Restatement
(Third) of Agency § 4.01 (1) (A.L.I. 2006). We look to both
parties’ contracts and their conduct to find an agency
relationship. See id. § 1.02; Henderson, 918 F.3d at 1073–
74.
Here, because of the alleged contracts between the CIA
and Defendants, and their conduct in the course of
performing those contracts, Defendants acted as agents of
the United States. First, the CIA and Defendants agreed that
Defendants would interrogate Zubaydah on the CIA’s behalf.
Second, the CIA and Defendants agreed that their
interrogations were subject to the CIA’s control. And third,
to the extent any part of Defendants’ interrogations exceeded
the agreed scope of the agency relationship, Defendants
purported to act on behalf of the CIA, and the CIA ratified
those acts through its conduct.
18 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
1. The CIA authorized Defendants to act on its
behalf and Defendants agreed to do so.
First, an agent must hold authority to act on the
principal’s behalf. Restatement (Third) of Agency § 1.01
(A.L.I. 2006).
The complaint alleges several contracts and other
communications between the CIA and Defendants that
establish the CIA’s authorization for Defendants to
interrogate Zubaydah. Right after Zubaydah’s capture, the
CIA “contacted Mitchell with a request that he ‘provide real-
time recommendations to overcome Abu Zubaydah’s
resistance to interrogation.’” Two days later, Mitchell
negotiated and signed an independent contract with the CIA
for “applied research” and “psychological
consultation . . . in debriefing and interrogation operations.”
Around this time, when Mitchell sought Jessen’s
consultation on the interrogation work, Jessen also signed a
contract with the CIA for “applied research.” And after
Defendants proposed the enhanced interrogation techniques
to be used on Zubaydah, the CIA signed them to “new,
lucrative contracts” that specified their roles in
interrogations abroad as “specified, time-limited research
projects.”
The CIA then sought “legal clearance” from the DOJ for
Defendants’ “proposed techniques.” Consistent with
Defendants’ roles as agents of the CIA for the interrogations,
the DOJ responded to the CIA’s request by identifying the
two Defendants as the “new interrogation specialist” and
“the [SERE] training psychologist.” And as the
interrogations proceeded, Defendants “would point
to . . . [that] DOJ memo, claiming . . . it authorized” their
use of the enhanced interrogation techniques. See Penthouse
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 19
Int’l, Ltd. v. Barnes, 792 F.2d 943, 947–48 (9th Cir. 1986)
(finding authority based on representations in internal
memoranda).
Taken together, these allegations show that the CIA
authorized Defendants to interrogate Zubaydah. See Mavrix
Photographs, 873 F.3d at 1054 (examining a principal’s
communications with the alleged agent to determine whether
the alleged agent had authority); Jones v. Royal Admin.
Servs., Inc., 887 F.3d 443, 449 (9th Cir. 2018) (examining a
contract to determine whether the alleged agent had
authority). They also show that Defendants agreed to
interrogate Zubaydah on the CIA’s behalf, then did so.
Restatement (Third) of Agency § 2.01 cmt. c. (A.L.I. 2006)
(“An agent’s actions establish the agent’s consent to act on
the principal’s behalf, as does any separate manifestation of
assent by the agent.”).
2. The CIA could control Defendants and
Defendants agreed to the CIA’s control.
Second, a principal must have the “right to control the
agent’s actions.” Id. § 1.01 cmt. f.; see Bonds, 608 F.3d at
505. The control need not be total. Agency may arise even
when “the principal lacks the right to control the full range
of the agent’s activities.” Restatement (Third) of Agency
§ 1.01 cmt. c (A.L.I. 2006).
The complaint alleges that the CIA could control
Defendants and Defendants agreed to the CIA’s control. The
CIA controlled Zubaydah’s detention. It operated the black
site where Defendants interrogated Zubaydah. And
Defendants agreed to that control. For example, before
beginning their interrogations, they requested that the CIA
provide “reasonable assurances” that Zubaydah “remain in
isolation and incommunicado for the remainder of his life”
20 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
“in light of the planned psychological pressure techniques to
be implemented.” The CIA knew of Defendants’ treatment
of Zubaydah, expressed concerns about it, and once
intervened to stop Mitchell’s interrogation. So even when
the CIA did not always exert control over Defendants’
interrogations of Zubaydah, the allegations establish that the
CIA and Defendants mutually agreed that the CIA could do
so. See Restatement (Third) of Agency § 1.01 cmt. c. (A.L.I.
2006) (“A principal’s failure to exercise the right of control
does not eliminate it . . . .”).
3. Where, if at all, Defendants lacked authority, the
CIA ratified their actions.
For the reasons discussed in Parts II.A.1 and II.A.2
above, the complaint makes clear that Defendants generally
acted as agents of the CIA in their interrogations of
Zubaydah, and that is all the MCA requires to deny
jurisdiction over an “action against the United States or its
agents relating to any aspect of” Zubaydah’s detention and
treatment. 28 U.S.C. § 2241(e)(2). But to the extent
Zubaydah argues that Defendants’ particular acts at issue
were unauthorized or uncontrolled by the CIA, the complaint
also shows that the CIA ratified those acts.
“Ratification is the affirmance of a prior act done by
another, whereby the act is given effect as if done by an agent
acting with . . . authority.” Restatement (Third) of Agency
§ 4.01 (1) (A.L.I. 2006). For ratification to result in
authority, an alleged agent must first “act[] or purport[] to
act on behalf” of the principal. Id. § 4.01 cmt. b. Then, the
principal can ratify the alleged agent’s acts by “knowing
acceptance of the benefit” of the actions. Id. § 4.01 cmt. d.
To knowingly accept the benefit, the principal must have
“actual knowledge” of the alleged agent’s actions. Id. § 4.06.
HUSAYN V. MITCHELL 21
Ratification, if established, “may create an agency
relationship [even] when none existed before.” Henderson,
918 F.3d at 1074; see also Restatement (Third) of Agency
§ 4.01 cmt. b (A.L.I. 2006).
The complaint alleges facts supporting ratification too.
Throughout the interrogations, Defendants “pretended and
demonstrably assumed to act” on behalf of the CIA,
Henderson, 918 F.3d at 1074, by working alongside
government personnel in Zubaydah’s presence, and
“demand[ing] additional information on terrorist operations
planned against the United States.” The CIA benefited from
Defendants’ interrogations of Zubaydah and had actual
knowledge of Defendants’ acts. See id. at 1073 (citing
Restatement (Third) of Agency § 4.01 cmt. d (A.L.I. 2006)).
The CIA obtained some intelligence—a benefit—from
Defendants’ interrogations of Zubaydah, even if it was
intelligence that, Zubaydah alleges, the Government already
possessed. CIA also had actual knowledge of Defendants’
treatment of Zubaydah. See id. at 1073 (citing Restatement
(Third) of Agency § 4.06 (A.L.I. 2006)). The CIA operated
the black site in Thailand where Defendants interrogated
Zubaydah, Defendants sent the CIA daily summaries, and,
at times, CIA personnel observed Defendants’ interrogations
of Zubaydah. Thus, the allegations establish that
Defendants’ acted as if they were the CIA’s agents in their
treatment of Zubaydah, and the CIA knew of and accepted
any benefits from that treatment. Beyond this, the CIA
affirmed its relationship with Defendants by extending their
contracts.
Therefore, even if Defendants did not have prior
authorization to undertake all the alleged acts—including
those that went beyond the practices used in SERE training
and the DOJ’s memos addressing criminal liability for
22 HUSAYN V. MITCHELL
torture—the CIA ratified those acts, thereby creating an
agency relationship where none may have existed before.
The complaint’s allegations show that Defendants acted as
agents of the CIA in their interrogations of Zubaydah
because the CIA authorized them to do it and controlled
them while doing it. And when the Defendants may have
exceeded that authority, the CIA ratified what they did.
III. The district court lacked jurisdiction over
Zubaydah’s claims.
In agency law, the doctrine of respondeat superior holds
the principal legally accountable for its agents’ acts.
Congress inverted this rule in the Detainee Treatment Act
and Military Commissions Act. By denying jurisdiction over
enemy combatant claims, the Military Commissions Act
leaves government agents—including independent
contractors—unaccountable in court for their acts done on
behalf of the United States. That happened here: the United
States authorized, controlled, and ratified the Defendants’
treatment of Zubaydah. The district court correctly held that
it lacked jurisdiction to hear his claims.
AFFIRMED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ZAYN AL-ABIDIN MUHAMMAD No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ZAYN AL-ABIDIN MUHAMMAD No.
02OPINION JAMES MITCHELL; JOHN JESSEN, also known as Bruce Jessen, Defendants - Appellees.
03Rice, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted February 11, 2025 San Francisco, California Filed June 30, 2025 Before: John B.
04MITCHELL SUMMARY * Military Commissions Act Affirming the district court’s dismissal of an action brought under the Alien Tort Statute by Zayn Al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn, known as Abu Zubaydah, the panel held that the Military Commissions Ac
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ZAYN AL-ABIDIN MUHAMMAD No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Husayn v. Mitchell in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on June 30, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10620002 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.