What he did then: Director, Joint Interrogation and Debriefing Center

What he does now: U.S. Army Reserve officer, assigned to Headquarters, U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command

Reported involvement: According to the Fay-Jones report, Jordan was a reserve intelligence officer whose real area of expertise was civil affairs. Investigators commended him for his hard work and initiative but said he should have been replaced because of his lack of relevant competence and experience. In sworn statements to military investigators, other personnel said that Jordan played a key supervisory role at Abu Ghraib, including a Nov. 24, 2003, incident in which military dogs were set upon a detainee in his cell.