Lawyer gathered evidence against Iraqi war criminals.

AuthorBrown, Kathy
PositionAlston and Bird LLP - Interview

Think you've had a bad day at work? Well, your problems--late-paying customers, a crashed network, whatever--pale in comparison with dodging hostile fire and wearing a flak vest to meetings.

That was all in a day's work for Anne Tompkins, now a partner in the Charlotte office of Alston & Bird LLP, during her nine months in Baghdad as an adviser to the Iraqi Special Tribunal. She and three other former federal prosecutors helped gather evidence to be used against accused Iraqi war criminals--including Saddam Hussein.

"Nothing was easy," Tompkins, 43, says. She lived in a trailer on the grounds of the U.S. Embassy, carried a SIG Sauer P228 handgun--she never used it--and traveled everywhere with a military escort. After insurgents killed an interpreter, "we had to stop traveling by roads." Instead, they used helicopters, even for five-mile trips.

She volunteered for legal duty in Iraq after hearing that the Justice Department was recruiting lawyers to assist Iraqi prosecutors. "This was the biggest case I could possibly work on. It was the chance of a lifetime." Upon arrival in Iraq in August 2004, the four lawyers and 20 federal agents worked 14 hours a day, exhuming evidence from mass graves, interviewing witnesses and analyzing documents. During one court hearing, Tompkins came face to face with Saddam Hussein. "There is an aura he puts off that he doesn't seem to have assimilated that he's not the president of Iraq anymore."

A Waynesboro, Va., native...

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