Seyfarth, Lucia H.2017-09-202017-09-202017-09-2018 Or. Rev. Int'l. L. 99 (2017)1543-9860https://hdl.handle.net/1794/2277536 pagesKnown as the “torture report,” the U.S. Senate’s December 2014 report on the CIA’s post-9/11 interrogation program described years of systematic human rights abuses born from an official policy of torture and cruel treatment. The Obama administration ended the program in 2010, marking a transition away from these statesponsored human rights violations. In such a transitional society, it is crucial that the truth be available to the public and to victims to help them move past atrocities; the torture report may be a mechanism for such truth-telling. By considering similar truth-telling reports from other countries as well as the context of the torture report, I assess how this report contributed to transitional justice in four ways: by discovering and acknowledging past abuses, addressing the needs of victims, advancing accountability, and creating institutional reforms and promoting national reconciliation. While not perfect in any respect, the report has affected the way Americans view the CIA program, contributed to legislation banning torture, and created consequences for some of the program’s architects.en-USAll Rights Reserved.Human rightsCentral Intelligence AgencyFacing an Ugly Truth: The Senate’s Report on CIA Torture as Truth-TellingArticle