After their capture near
Nasiriyah on March 23, 2003, Johnson and several other members of the
507th Maintenance Company were transported north toward Baghdad by Iraqi forces. During the initial capture, the wounded prisoners were beaten, but they were later treated by Iraqi medical personnel after reaching detention facilities. During their captivity, Iraqi authorities recorded video of the captured soldiers, including Johnson, and broadcast the footage internationally on Iraqi state television. The footage, which showed Johnson wounded and being questioned by her captors, was widely rebroadcast by international media outlets. Johnson was moved between several locations while in Iraqi custody, including detention facilities in Baghdad and other temporary sites as Iraqi forces relocated prisoners during the advancing coalition offensive. On April 13, 2003, U.S. Marines from Company D,
3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion,
1st Marine Division, located the building where the prisoners were being held in
Samarra. According to U.S. military accounts, local Iraqi residents informed Marines that American prisoners were being held at the location. Marines secured the building and recovered seven American prisoners, including Johnson and two U.S. Army helicopter pilots who had been shot down earlier in the conflict. Johnson and the other rescued prisoners were transported to coalition medical facilities in Kuwait for treatment. Johnson underwent surgery for injuries sustained during the ambush and captivity. In total, she had been held captive for 22 days before being freed by coalition forces. ==Aftermath and later life==