Posted on 01/18/2016 6:57:30 PM PST by Mount Athos
The New York Police Department has been directed by a U.S. court to remove from its online records an investigation pertaining to the rise of Islamic extremists in the West and the threats these individuals pose to American safety, according to legal documents.
As part of a settlement agreement reached earlier this month with Muslim community advocates in U.S. District Court, the NYPD will purge from its website an extensive report that experts say has been critical to the department's understanding of radical Islam and its efforts to police the threat.
The court settlement also stipulates that the NYPD make a concerted effort to mitigate the impact of future terror investigations on certain religious and political groups, according to a copy of the court documents published by the American Civil Liberties Union, which has spearheaded the case since June 2013.
Legal experts and critics of the settlement maintain that it could hamper future terrorism investigations and view it as part of a larger campaign by Muslim advocacy organizations in the United States to dismantle surveillance programs encompassing that community.
Critics expressed particular concern about the case in light of a recent surge in attacks on U.S. citizens committed by individuals pledging allegiance to terror groups such as ISIS.
A key portion of the settlement focuses on the NYPD's purported use of a document produced by the department's intelligence division to examine how radicalized individuals make their way to the United States and carry out terror attacks.
The document, âRadicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat," aimed to provide local law enforcement and policy makers with information about domestic terrorists and their operations.
As part of the settlement agreement, the NYPD will be forced to remove the publication from its database and vow not to rely on it in the future.
The NYPD and New York state government agencies included in the case ârepresent that they do not, have not, and will not rely upon the Radicalization in the West report to open or extend investigations," according to the settlement. âDefendants will remove the Radicalization in the West report from the NYPD website."
The settlement further affirms that the NYPD will be âcommitted to mitigating the potential impact" of future investigations on political and religious groups, such as those in the Muslim-American community.
While NYPD officials would not comment Thursday when contacted by the Washington Free Beacon, a spokesperson directed a reporter to a recent press release affirming the department's commitment to upholding the court settlement.
The NYPD and relevant New York state agencies will âprovide additional guidance to police officers as part of a settlement of lawsuits accusing the NYPD of improperly investigating Muslim groups," according to the Jan. 7 press release. "While the City did not admit to engaging in any improper practices, the changes represent an effort to provide more detailed guidance to NYPD personnel within the existing Handschu Guidelines,"" which govern how authorities investigate political activities.
The NYPD confirmed that it would remove from its website the 2007 radicalization report.
The department will additionally incorporate into the guidelines "police policies against religious profiling" and insert an additional "provision for considering the impact investigations have on people who are not targets of investigations," according to the statement.
John Miller, the NYPD's deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism, maintained in a statement that the settlement would not "weaken the [department's] ability to fulfill its steadfast commitment to investigate and prevent terrorist activity in New York City."
However, some experts have cast doubt on this statement, claiming that the decision to delete the anti-terrorism handbook will impact officers' ability to understand how terrorists organize and operate in the United States.
Benjamin Weingarten, a writer and national security analyst who has covered the court case, said that local police departments should be relying more heavily on the now-banned counterterror analysis.
Referring to the recent shooting of a Philadelphia police officer by a radicalized individual who allegedly pledged allegiance to ISIS, Weingarten noted that the assailant followed the "'four stages of radicalization' detailed in the NYPD report."
The information about radical terrorists provided in "the NYPD's analysis may have at the least led Philadelphia authorities to dig deeper and flag him," he said.
The settlement further reflects a larger cultural shift in America that shuns terms such as "war on terror" and "Muslim terrorism," Weingarten said.
"To pursue a see-no-Islam counter-jihadist strategy is not only absurd and contradictory on its face, but its a severe dereliction of dutyâignorance is not an excuse, and it represents a failure to do everything necessary to defend against an ideology that seeks to undermine the Constitution and subvert and destroy Western civilization again, according to Islamic supremacists themselves," he said.
Stephen Coughlin, an attorney and intelligence officer, expressed concern about what he described as a widening attempt by local and federal authorities to redefine the nature of domestic counter-terror efforts.
"I am greatly concerned with the imposition of [the case] which, I believe, exists to replace counter-terror efforts,â Coughlin said. "This is a continuation of a purging of evidentiary based counter-terror analysis first initiated in 2011."
The ACLU and Muslim community advocates initially filed the lawsuit following reports after the 9/11 terror attacks that the NYPD was running a domestic spy operation centered on the American-Muslim community.
The ACLU, which would not comment on record for this report, directed the Free Beacon to a recent editorial published in the Guardian celebrating the court decision.
"Bias-based policing legitimizes religious discrimination, It can pave the way to copy-cat approaches by other agencies and set the stage for hate crimes nationwide," wrote Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU's national security project, and Ramzi Kassem, a law professor at the City University of New York.
"We hope the settlement announced this week pulls our city and its police department out of a downward spiral by reaffirming core values and principles, ones just as necessary to a local police force as they are to a rational debate on civil rights and liberties nationally," they wrote.
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Sharia invasion
Is this verdict going to be appealed?
In other news the same court ruled from this day forward all oranges shall be called apples.
"If I am captured, I will continue to resist by all means available. I will make every effort to escape and aid others to escape. I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy." |
See the word “settlement.”
Bias-based policing legitimizes religious discrimination
wow.. some might call it simple survival..
not the ACLU..
Here is the URL from the Wayback Machine. Download and copy so you can spread it around.
“Is this verdict going to be appealed?”
No. It’s a settlement. It looks to be similar to the green scam, where a group like Greenpeace will sue the EPA to force the EPA to do what it wants to do anyway but could not accomplish by rulemaking. The EPA settles and agrees to a court order requiring the EPA to do what it and Greenpeace want it to do anyway.
No appeal follows from a settlement.
Don’t you think the pattern of the CAIR/NY lawsuit has the same stink?
A quick Google’ing and pow! It’s still there.
I don’t doubt for a second that things get hidden. There was one of those letter boards outside the local islamic center in my city threatening death to Americans. Someone took a picture of it and posted the picture on facebook, and I saw that picture, today. Yet, I can’t find anything about it on my local news, at least not in print.
It seems the authorities are complicit in crimes? Ya think?
Apparently, the report is available for sale in paperback. Amazon has it for $19.99. Is there anything stopping someone from buying the book, setting up a website, uploading the book and making it available to police all over the country?
Maybe Amazon could be persuaded to bypass profit for national security? Or will they be sued to stop selling?
Here is the court document with the report attached as Exhibit A. http://www.nyc.gov/html/nypd/downloads/pdf/pr/declaration_of_david_cohen_with_exhibits_part1.pdf
Thank you for the explanation.
Bump!
Bmp4L8R-want to do some research.
I hope so. This is insanity - or treason.
Will they also erase 9/11 ?
We are being governed by the most abject fools that have ever existed.
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