[10] Iacopino published a paper entitled "Neglect of Medical Evidence of Torture in Guantánamo Bay: A Case Series" in April 2011.
Iacopino was asked on how to conduct a no-harm medical examination on Nashiri who was subject of what is described as a mock execution and who was waterboarded by the CIA twice.
The Defense, in turn, argued that panel should take advice from Iacopino, on how to interview Al Nashiri without causing additional damage.
[13] On March 28, 2016, Spencer Ackerman, writing in The Guardian, broke an account of how, although the CIA had illegally destroyed its extensive library of video tapes documenting the torture of the men and boys it had apprehended through its covert "snatch teams", it still retained humiliating naked photos of bruised and beaten captives that observers described as "gruesome".
[17][18][19][20][21][22][23] According to Camila Vargax of Latercera, Iacopino called for an investigation, from international authorities, to determine whether the photos were a war crime.