the intelligence community employs an advisory group, the intelligence advisory board, and in 2006 it put together a report on interrogation and coercion. it found none of the interrogation techniques used by u.s. personnel have been subjected to scientific or systematic inquiry or evaluation. and argues that threatening to use the bucket to induce the sensation of drowning through the rag or doing it to someone has no proven ability to get truthful information out of someone. whether it's justified if it's effective - let's put it aside. here is what we know - u.s. personnel knew how harmful torture could be on victims and is it it anyway. and ignored what science nose. there's no proven ability for torture to get useful information out of anyone whatsoever. >> jake ward reporting. an author, essayist and journalist and reported on big events in the last 50 years. i talked about the new senate report and asked why it took years for the information to be revealed. he blamed a generation of post 9/11 journalists, and the u.s. government that kept them from following the story. >> becau