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NYPD Defends Tactics Over Mosque Spying; Records Reveal New Details On Muslim Surveillance

Posted: 02/24/12 09:43 AM ET  |  Updated: 02/25/12 06:45 AM ET

Nypd Muslim Spying
NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 27: Members of the New York Police Department (NYPD) take part in a promotion ceremony attended by New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly at Police Headquarters on January 27, 2012 in New York City. Kelly appeared in the film "The Third Jihad" Muslim groups are asking him to step down, saying that the film they depicts Islam and its followers in a bad light. The film was shown to hundreds and maybe thousands of NYPD officers for training purposes. Commissioner Kel

By ADAM GOLDMAN and MATT APUZZO, Associated Press

NEW YORK -- The New York Police Department targeted Muslim mosques with tactics normally reserved for criminal organizations, according to newly obtained police documents that showed police collecting the license plates of worshippers, monitoring them on surveillance cameras and cataloging sermons through a network of informants.

The documents, obtained by The Associated Press, have come to light as the NYPD fends off criticism of its monitoring of Muslim student groups and its cataloging of mosques and Muslim businesses in nearby Newark, N.J.

The NYPD's spokesman, Paul Browne, forcefully defended the legality of those efforts Thursday, telling reporters that its officers may go wherever the public goes and collect intelligence, even outside city limits.

The new documents, prepared for Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, show how the NYPD's roster of paid informants monitored conversations and sermons inside mosques. The records offer the first glimpse of what those informants, known informally as "mosque crawlers," gleaned from inside the houses of worship.

For instance, when a Danish newspaper published inflammatory cartoons of Prophet Muhammad in September 2005, Muslim communities around the world erupted in outrage. Violent mobs took to the streets in the Middle East. A Somali man even broke into the cartoonist's house in Denmark with an ax.

In New York, thousands of miles away, it was a different story. Muslim leaders preached peace and urged people to protest lawfully. Write letters to politicians, they said. Some advocated boycotting Danish products, burning flags and holding rallies.

All of that was permissible under law and protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution. All was reported to the NYPD by its mosque crawlers and made its way into police files for Kelly.

"Imam Shamsi Ali brought up the topic of the cartoon, condemning them. He announced a rally that was to take place on Sunday (02/05/06) near the United Nations. He asked that everyone to attend if possible and reminded everyone to keep their poise if they can make it," one report read.

At the Muslim Center of New York in Queens, the report said, "Mohammad Tariq Sherwani led the prayer service and urged those in attendance to participate in a demonstration at the United Nations on Sunday."

When one Muslim leader suggested planning a demonstration, one of the people involved in the discussion about how to get a permit was, in fact, working for the NYPD.

"It seems horrible to me that the NYPD is treating an entire religious community as potential terrorists," said civil rights lawyer Jethro Eisenstein, who reviewed some of the documents and is involved in a decades-old class-action lawsuit against the police department for spying on protesters and political dissidents.

The lawsuit is known as the Handschu case, and a court order in that case governs how the NYPD may collect intelligence.

Eisenstein said the documents prove the NYPD has violated those rules.

"This is a flat-out violation," Eisenstein said. "This is a smoking gun."

Browne, the NYPD spokesman, did not discuss specific investigations Thursday but told reporters that, because of the Handschu case, the NYPD operates under stricter rules than any other department in the country. He said police do not violate those rules.

His statements were intended to calm a controversy over a 2007 operation in which the NYPD mapped and photographed all of Newark's mosques and eavesdropped on Muslim businesses. Newark Mayor Cory Booker said he was never told about the surveillance, which he said offended him.

Booker and his police director accused the NYPD of misleading them by not revealing exactly what they were doing. Had they known, they said it never would have been permitted. But Browne said Newark police were told before and after the operation and knew exactly what it entailed.

Kelly, the police commissioner, and Mayor Michael Bloomberg have been emphatic that police only follow legitimate leads of criminal activity and do not conduct preventive surveillance in ethnic communities.

Former and current law enforcement officials either involved in or with direct knowledge of these programs say they did not follow leads. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the secret programs. But the documents support their claims.

The effort highlights one of the most difficult aspects of policing in the age of terrorism. Solving crimes isn't enough; police are expected to identify would-be terrorists and move in before they can attack.

There are no universally agreed upon warning signs for terrorism. Terrorists have used Internet cafes, stayed in hostels, worked out at gyms, visited travel agencies, attended student groups and prayed at mosques. So the NYPD monitored those areas. In doing so, they monitored many innocent people as they went about their daily lives.

Using plainclothes officers from the squad known as the Demographics Unit, police swept Muslim neighborhoods and catalogued the location of mosques. The ethnic makeup of each congregation was logged as police fanned out across the city and outside their jurisdiction, into suburban Long Island and areas of New Jersey.

"African American, Arab, Pakistani," police wrote beneath the photo of one mosque in Newark.

Investigators looked at mosques as the center of Muslim life. All their connections had to be known.

David Cohen, the NYPD's top intelligence officer, wanted a source inside every mosque within a 250-mile radius of New York, current and former officials said. Though the officials said they never managed to reach that goal, documents show the NYPD successfully placed informants or undercovers - sometimes both - into mosques from Westchester County, N.Y., to New Jersey.

The NYPD used these sources to get a sense of the sentiment of worshippers whenever an event generated headlines. The goal, former officials said, was to alert police to potential problems before they bubbled up.

Even when it was clear there were no links to terrorism, the mosque informants gave the NYPD the ability to "take the pulse" of the community, as Cohen and other managers put it.

When New York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle and his flight instructor were killed on Oct. 11, 2006, when their small plane crashed into a Manhattan high-rise apartment, fighter planes were scrambled. Within hours the FBI and Homeland Security Department said it was an accident. Terrorism was ruled out.

Yet for days after the event, the NYPD's mosque crawlers reported to police about what they heard at sermons and among worshippers.

(View the PDF documents on Danish cartoons, mosque targeting and summaries of plane crash.)

At the Brooklyn Islamic Center, a confidential informant "noted chatter among the regulars expressing relief and thanks to God that the crash was only an accident and not an act of terrorism," one report reads.

"The worshippers made remarks to the effect that `it better be an accident; we don't need any more heat,'" an undercover officer reported from the Al-Tawheed Islamic Center in Jersey City, N.J.

In some instances, the NYPD put cameras on light poles and trained them on mosques, documents show. Because the cameras were in public space, police didn't need a warrant to conduct the surveillance.

Police also wrote down the license plates of cars in mosque parking lots, documents show. In some instances, police in unmarked cars outfitted with electronic license plate readers would drive down the street and record the plates of everyone parked near the mosque, former officials recalled.

"They're viewing Muslims like they're crazy. They're terrorists. They all must be fanatics," said Abdul Akbar Mohammed, the imam for the past eight years at the Masjid Imam Ali K. Muslim in Newark. "That's not right."

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Associated Press writers Chris Hawley and Eileen Sullivan contributed to this report.

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Online:

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Contact the Washington investigative team at DCinvestigations (at) ap.org

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By ADAM GOLDMAN and MATT APUZZO, Associated Press NEW YORK -- The New York Police Department targeted Muslim mosques with tactics normally reserved for criminal organizations, according to newly ob...
By ADAM GOLDMAN and MATT APUZZO, Associated Press NEW YORK -- The New York Police Department targeted Muslim mosques with tactics normally reserved for criminal organizations, according to newly ob...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:00 PM on 02/27/2012
I will tell you this, if you are friends with someone who is Muslim they probably tapped your phone as well!
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Curmudgeon H
Belief is the death of intelligence
12:23 PM on 02/27/2012
1. The NYPD does not have jurisdiction in NJ. They completely overstepped their bounds.

2. For all these comments I see about radical Muslims on here, what proof did they have that any of these AMERICANS were radical? How much surveillance do you think there is in Atlanta were the Jewish Community leader called for Obama's assassination? Why isn't there surveillance in Catholic churches? How about at the anti-Semitic hate group at the Westboro Baptist Church?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lacey Epperson
Stating The Uncompromised Truth
11:41 PM on 02/25/2012
With Obama making it more difficult to defend ourselves against the enemy on our own turf, I don't blame the NYPD for doing what they do. Every city in every state needs to be doing the same thing. Survelliance of criminal organizations have been going on for years and Islam is a criminal political religion that is chock full of people who mean to do the citizens of America harm.

During WWII we put Germans living here in America under survelliance and even detained a lot just for being German. We did the same thing with the Japanese. We are at war with Islam. Actually, Islam is at war with us so why does it seem so unreasonable to keep an eye on those involved with Islam? I think it's prudent to do so even if it offends them.

I don't believe every Muslim is out to get us but with what Islam teaches about the necessity of decieving the enemy, I have no choice but to distrust every single Muslim living here in America.

It's harsh and I hate feeling this way but Islam has shown itself to be evil through it's followers so I have no choice.
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05:33 PM on 02/26/2012
If you're suggesting internment for Muslim Americans, then you could expect more attempted homeland attacks.
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Lacey Epperson
Stating The Uncompromised Truth
09:24 PM on 02/26/2012
Actually, I didn't even think of internment for Muslims at all but after re-reading my post I can see where you would think that.

Now that you've mentioned it, though, I do think that if any Muslim is under serious suspicion for a probable terroist act, then lock them up for sure. Just like anyone who's intent is to harm the people of this country, Muslim or no.
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Fatema Saber
07:06 PM on 02/25/2012
I can see where the NYPD is coming from, and I can see where Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and all the middle east countries are coming from. Each country has a group that have been demonized and according to them proven to be 'terrorists' therefore in need of surveillance. What I am having trouble understanding is the hypocrisy. If it's okay with NYPD why is it not okay with the rest of the world?
08:16 AM on 02/25/2012
if you ever happen to see hundreds of yellow taxis parked in the street take notice go home and hide in basement we can never win any wars over there cause the enemy is hear going up 1st ave and going down 5th, 7th, broadway, and 9th ave
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JoePenn
Shuhada?
07:57 PM on 02/25/2012
Reynold's Wrap is my guess.
08:05 AM on 02/25/2012
McCarthyism is still alive and well, I see.
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03:04 AM on 02/25/2012
for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction
01:56 AM on 02/25/2012
While I agree with a good chunk of their anger, it doesn't help that they still have members or their religion going the violent or terrorist way in different places or acting singularly. I never like the idea of 'Big Brother' monitoring all my moves. But I like even less the thought of another Ford Hood or, powers forbid, another September 11th somewhere else. If something like that did happen how quick would these same people decrying them spin and say "Where were you on this?" You can't have your cake and eat it to in situations like this. You, very sadly, have take the lesser of two evils. Ideally they an we wouldn't ever have had to worry about such a thing, but people seem to like to hurt others when they disagree about the smallest of things these days... or maybe its always been like that.
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Freenation
08:13 PM on 02/24/2012
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/carnegie/nypd-defends-tactics-over_n_1298997_136991668.html

read this response to a comment which I posted earlier...all the folks are so much 'into' NYPD doing the right thing, bad muslims etc and when another reality is presented I soon get labeled for my 'bad behavior'...there are many similar commentators here who when showed the other angle to the same debate get all defensive: how dare you, racist etc and just flip the coin and the discussion turns back into 'yeah freedom of speech'....very predictable...
07:42 PM on 02/24/2012
If I was involved with any group and a few went against our beliefs and gave the group a bad name .... I would do what it takes to weed those few out for the overall benefit of that group... I think that most people are afraid of the Muslims because what it says about infidels.... I wish there was news reports on that so more people could either understand or have reason to fear.... It seems we are to suppose to turn or heads with no explanation. Maybe if the Muslims spoke out and explained more on this issue things would change.
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Jenna Bean
Sock Monkeys!
08:26 PM on 02/24/2012
wouldnt that be so nice? if Muslims would just speak out and explain this issue more, and the MSM would broadcast it to you?

There lies your problem...you see and read what is approved and news worthy, there are billions of Muslims worldwide and trust me, they do not want to hurt you lol they just want to live a happy normal life and be left alone--
09:03 PM on 02/24/2012
Seems they are the ones with the problem not I. I guess all of America should go by what Jenna Bean says.... most people do believe what they see and read that is why I feel this issue should be more in the news for their benefit and Americas benefit.....
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Cindbird
08:42 PM on 02/24/2012
How many more times do they have to "explain"? How many times do they have to denounce terrorism before you believe it? From the day of 9/11 onward, Muslims in this country have denounced the attacks, denounced ALL terrorism and denounced acts that have taken place abroad. How many more times do you want to hear it? Google "muslims denounce 9/11" You get 3,950,000 results.

One little point, the word "infidel" has many meaning, one of which is "Someone who is not grateful for what he has been given". That describes ALL of us at some point in our lives. Christians have used the word Infidel against Muslims for centuries, beginning with the Crusades and continuing up to today. Things will change when people stop the fearmongering and LISTEN to each other. It will change when people stop hearing the word "Muslim" and thinking "Terrorist".
09:09 PM on 02/24/2012
Well now that you "spoke up" I can goggle it and hear it for the first time... Just wish the media did more reporting on this issue, thats all.... Thanks for the info.
04:52 AM on 02/25/2012
3,950,000 denouncing terrorism small percentage of the billions of muslims
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JrobGW
Fresh
07:07 PM on 02/24/2012
I think the NYPD has used up their "hero" status they received after 9/11. You've sadly gone from police officers people idolized to thugs hiding behind riot gear who could care less about human rights or privacy. Oh, and did I mention you've become a pretty good example of a racist organization?

If you want to get into the public's good graces again, look at the San Fransisco PD as an example. They seem to have their stuff together and remember what the words "protect and SERVE" mean.
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Cindbird
08:42 PM on 02/24/2012
F&F
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see-ellen2001
06:24 PM on 02/24/2012
Well that is pretty heady stuff! Holding a civil, permitted rally at the UN. What will these animals do next!? Bake sales?
06:01 PM on 02/24/2012
Way to go all Communist Russia, NYPD. Paranoia will destroy ya.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Stephen Stafford
Be the answer to somebody's prayer!
04:32 PM on 02/24/2012
The New York City police should not be spying on people. They definitely should not be spying on people in other cities. They have been out of hand for a good while.

Those who are all for it should consider this. If you would not like being spied on in your neighborhood and place of worship, you should be against the spying noted in this article.

There should not be any crime unsolved in New York. They have cameras everywhere that are monitored 24/7. When a street crime occurs, it should be resolved immediately. Yet, that does not happen. They are not even using the information at their fingertips, yet still run about playing I Spy.
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06:16 PM on 02/24/2012
Although terrorist attempts have been thwarted (and many, no doubt, haven't been publicized), the people in NYC have been safe "for a good while." That trumps hurt feelings and any other emotional discomfort. NYPD activity should only bother those engaged in wrongdoing.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Stephen Stafford
Be the answer to somebody's prayer!
09:46 PM on 02/24/2012
NYPD police activity should take place in New York, and not violate geographic boundaries. Additionally, people should not be under police surveillance when they exercise their freedom to practice the religion of their choice.
06:27 PM on 02/24/2012
You apparently know more about law enforcement matters than anyone else
who actually WORKS in law enforcement, including Ray Kelly.

How is it that you are not police commissioner of NYC, deciding these things for everyone?

Nice little slogan you've got there.

You could perhaps be the answer to NYC's prayer, if you actually knew
what you were talking about in a practical and realistic way and could
offer informed, intelligent and experienced-based ways to improve
what you are criticizing and realize the goal of resolving all street crime
immediately, the goal of having no crime unsolved in the largest city
in this country, a city of over 8 million people.

When a street crime occurs it should be resolved immediately? There should not
be any crime unsolved in New York? Very easy to say, very hard to accomplish.

Yes, that would be great, but get real. What are you even suggesting, that the police
could resolve every street crime in the five boroughs of NYC (and it's only Manhattan that has cameras everywhere) yet they for some reason choose not to, even though
they are obsessed with stats?

Please do enlighten us all with your wisdom - no do doubt based in both book learning
AND real-life experience, Commissioner Stafford.

No doubt the city of New York would be happy to have you solve every crime immediately -
Sherlock, Commissioner Stafford.
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Cindbird
08:46 PM on 02/24/2012
Great attempt to divert the subject by attacking the poster as ignorant. The fact remains that the NYPD has gone completely off the rails when it comes to the Muslim Community.
gotribe12
I'm not trying to win a grammar contest
04:08 PM on 02/24/2012
Way to go NYPD