A
Black Eye for Democracy
Huffington Post
Posted: 03/11/2013 2:13 pm
NYPD , NYPD Spying
Muslims , Nypd Muslim
Surveillance , NYPD
Scandals , Nypd Spying On
Mosques , Ray Kelly ,
New York News
Call
it a cri de coeur, a collective cry of the heart, from voices rarely
heard -- the city's Muslim community, pushing back for the first time against
the NYPD's secret spying on them for the past decade.
Based
on interviews with 57 people, their 54-page report, written with the support of the CUNY
School of Law, Muslim Student Associations and grass-roots Muslim
organizations, describes the spying's chilling effect on Muslim New Yorkers,
who have come to distrust their friends, classmates, religious leaders and the
NYPD.
"Conversations
relating to foreign policy, civil rights and activism area all deemed
off-limits as interviewees fear such conversations would draw greater NYPD
scrutiny," the report says.
"Parents
discourage their children from being active in Muslim student groups, protests
or other activism, believing that these activities would threaten to expose
them to government scrutiny."
"Interviewees
unanimously observed that everyone scrutinizes everyone, noting particular
hesitation with regards to new faces in the community or converts to
Islam."
"I
don't want any new friends," says Faisal Hashmi, who the report describes
as an activist from Queens. "If I don't know you and your
family or know that you have a family that I can check you back to, I don't
want to know you. "
Nearly
all interviewees thought they knew someone who was an informant or an
undercover officer.
"Everyone
is being asked to spy," the report quotes Grace, 23, identified as Queens resident. "They must have been
threatened or bribed to spy... I know this because they tried to bribe
me."
The
report cites the case of Shamiur Rahman, who spied on members of the Muslim
Students Association at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, then
apologetically outed himself on his Facebook page.
Ali
Naquvi, described in the report as a community organizer, says:
"Surveillance has also deterred mobilization related to law enforcement
accountability and reform because people fear that speaking out against
surveillance would only lead to greater surveillance."
Ahsan
Samad, 26, of Brooklyn says: "Free speech isn't a
privilege that Muslims have."
The
report also cites the "self-censorship" on college campuses because
of the police's infiltrating Muslim Student Associations.
"Police
monitoring of Muslims' political opinions has devastating effects on classroom
dynamics," the report says, citing fears that professors might
misinterpret their views.
The
report quotes Brooklyn College Professor Jeanne Theoharis, saying: "I
think Muslim students are getting an inferior education because of this."
The
report also cites a "deep mistrust of the NYPD... Individuals did not view
it as a protective force or a resource for those in need of assistance --
rather, the police are increasingly regarded as threatening and
untrustworthy."
This
attitude, the report says, "has trickled into day-to-day interactions with
beat-police officers, whether it is hesitation about filing stolen phone
complaints, asking an officer for directions or reporting hate crimes."
The
report also cites the half-truths, misstatements and lies of Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly and his NYPD underlings.
The
report mentions the documentary, "The Third Jihad," which was used as
a training tool and whose narrator suggests that Muslims want to
"infiltrate and dominate" America.
After
stating that the film had never been shown to officers and that Kelly had
played no role in it, Kelly's spokesman, Paul Browne, admitted it had been
shown to cops "on a continuous loop" and that the filmmakers had
interviewed Kelly for 90 minutes.
When
two reporters from the Associated Press -- whose reporting on the NYPD spying
earned them a Pulitzer Prize -- asked Browne about the NYPD's Demographics
Unit, which mapped Muslim communities by religion and ethnicity, Browne denied
the unit had ever existed.
The
report notes that the department changed its stance on the supposedly numerous
terrorism plots it says it prevented against the city.
For
years, Kelly and Browne maintained that the NYPD had single-handedly prevented
14 plots. More recently, they have taken this back, acknowledging that the FBI
had foiled most of them, with the NYPD playing a supporting role.
None of
these terrorist plots gained more mileage than that of the Brooklyn Bridge.
In
2002, after Iyman Faris, an Ohio trucker, abandoned his plan to destroy
the bridge, Kelly maintained that Faris did so after spotting NYPD patrol cars
at the bridge's entry ramps. As proof, Kelly cited a coded message Faris sent
to his Al Qaeda superiors: "The weather is too hot."
The
police presence, it turned out, had nothing to do with deterring Faris.
According to a Justice Department press release at Faris's sentencing on Oct.
28, 2003, Faris
said he aborted the plot because he lacked "gas cutters" -- equipment
necessary to sever the bridge's suspension cables.
Despite
Kelly's claims that round-the clock police presence has protected the bridge
from future attacks, he has yet to explain how last summer a graffiti artist
named Lewy BTM managed to climb atop the bridge and tag his name in three
places. [See NYPD Confidential July
9, 2012.]
Polls show
that the most New Yorkers support the NYPD spying. The city's political
establishment, starting with Mayor Michael Bloomberg and continuing with the
current mayoral candidates, have fallen over themselves to praise Kelly.
The
leadership of the city's academic community has remained silent. After NYPD
Confidential reported the NYPD's infiltration of Muslim Student Associations on
six city college campuses, CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein issued this
response:
The university believes that its academic
communities have every right to express their concerns. In this matter, since
the colleges were not consulted and have indicated no knowledge on the subject,
it would be inappropriate to make speculative comments.
Last
year, after the AP revealed that Rahman had spied on the Muslim Student
Association at the John Jay, its president, Jeremy Travis, pronounced himself
"deeply troubled" and announced he would discuss the matter with the
NYPD.
Apparently,
the extent of Travis' discussion was a letter to Browne. Travis has refused to
say what Browne replied, or if he even responded.
Many
New Yorkers are aware that before the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the radical Muslim clergymen,
Sheik Abdul Rahman -- the so-called "blind sheik" and "spiritual
adviser" for that attack -- had preached hatred of America in various mosques in New Jersey and in Brooklyn. Rahman was subsequently convicted of
conspiring with nine others to blow up city landmarks and is currently serving
a life-sentence in federal prison.
Asked
why such preaching shouldn't justify the police infiltration of mosques, Diala
Shamas, a Liman fellow at the CUNY School of Law and one of the report's two
authors, said:
The onus should not be on the Muslim
community to prove that the department is wrong in indiscriminately
surveilling, recording sermons and spying on tens of thousands of people but on
the police department to show that they are effective.
OK, so
has the NYPD's spying been effective?
Late
last year, Chief Thomas Galati, the commanding officer of the Intelligence
Division, which conducts most of the spying, testified that the Demographics
Unit had provided not a single lead in exposing terrorism.
Earlier
this year, Kelly publicly acknowledged at a seminar at the YMHA that his
vaunted oversees spying service, which has stationed detectives in 11 cities
around the world, had produced not a single tip about potential attacks against
the city. [See NYPD Confidential,
Jan. 14th, 2013.]
Kelly
has also maintained that the NYPD's spying on Muslims "only follows
leads." He has yet to explain why officers from the Intelligence Division
spied on Buffalo's Somali community in 2007 and 2008 when its local law
enforcement liaison reported that there was no evidence of terrorism
criminality in that community. [See NYPD Confidential Feb.
27, 2012.]
One of
the philosophical pillars on which The NYPD has based its spying is
"homegrown" or "lone wolf" terrorist threats.
Those
threats have been articulated by Dr. Marc Sageman, a former CIA official with a doctorate and medical
degree and the author of two books on terrorism, who in 2008 became the NYPD's
first and only "scholar in residence."
In
what appears to be an unprecedented financial arrangement for a municipal
agency, Sageman was paid $180,000 through a non-profit organization called the
NYPD Counter-Terrorism Foundation, which was set up by the department and
raised $300,000 from secret donors.
Its
president was Stephen Hammerman, the department's former deputy commissioner
for Legal Affairs; its secretary, Joseph Wuencsh, Kelly's chief of staff.
Who
the donors are remains a mystery.
The
focus on lone-wolf threats has led the NYPD to pursue mentally unstable young
men, at least two of whom have histories of psychiatric treatment.
It has
also led them to operate as a lone-wolf law enforcement agency, apart from its
terrorism-fighting law enforcement partner, the FBI.
Its
first such success was the conviction of Matin Siraj, arrested on the eve of
the 2004 Republican National Convention for conspiring to blow up the Herald
Square subway station. The NYPD did not alert the FBI to its investigation until
shortly before Siraj's indictment.
Testimony
at Siraj's trial revealed that the NYPD had paid an informant $100,000 to egg
on Siraj and his co-defendant, James El Shafay.
Testimony
also revealed Siraj had an I.Q. considered borderline-retarded and that El
Shafay, was depressive and schizophrenic, and recently released from a mental
institution.
Once
arrested, El Shafay pleaded guilty and testified against Siraj, who was
convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison.
This
week, a second supposed lone wolf, Ahmed Ferhani, is to be sentenced after
pleading guilty in Manhattan State Supreme Court under a state terrorism law,
which was used because the FBI declined to pursue Ferhani's prosecution.
Law
enforcement sources said that FBI agents from its Joint Terrorist Task Force,
which is charged with investigating all terrorism plots, distrusted the NYPD's
undercover officer who produced the evidence against Ferhani and his
co-defendant, Mohamed Mamdouh. This distrust was furthered when the NYPD
refused to allow the JTTF to interview the undercover. [See NYPD Confidential, May
23, 2011.]
At a
City Hall news conference, announcing the arrest with great fanfare, Mayor
Michael Bloomberg and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance accused Ferhani
and Mamdouh of plotting to blow up the largest synagogue in Manhattan and to kill as many Jews as possible.
A
grand jury, however, failed to indict them on the top terrorism charge. Instead
they were indicted on lesser state terror and hate crime counts.
Ferhani's
lawyer has claimed Ferhani has had 30 involuntary commitments to psychiatric
wards since age 17.
The
third case involves Jose Pimentel, a Dominican immigrant who the NYPD says was
an Al Qaeda adherent, preparing to make bombs in his mother's Washington Heights apartment. He too was described as
having mental problems.
The
FBI again refused to pursue the case, saying it distrusted the NYPD informant
who developed the evidence against him and who supplied him with bomb-making
equipment, then helped him make the bomb.
If
anyone thinks he is safer from terrorism because of any of these arrests, he
should think again.
With
editing from Donald Forst.
--
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