NEW YORK (AP) - The mayor faced off with the
president of Yale University on Tuesday over an effort by the city's
police department to monitor Muslim student groups for any signs that
their members harbored terrorist sympathies.
The Associated Press
revealed over the weekend that in recent years the New York Police
Department has kept close watch on Muslim student associations across
the Northeast. The effort included daily tracking of student websites
and blogs, monitoring who was speaking to the groups and sending an
undercover officer on a whitewater rafting trip with students from the
City College of New York.
Yale President Richard
Levin was among a number of academics who condemned the effort in a
statement Monday, while Rutgers University and leaders of student Muslim
groups elsewhere called for investigations into the monitoring.
"I am writing to state, in
the strongest possible terms, that police surveillance based on
religion, nationality, or peacefully expressed political opinions is
antithetical to the values of Yale, the academic community, and the
United States," Levin wrote.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, speaking to reporters on Tuesday, dismissed those criticisms as baseless.
"I don't know why keeping the country safe is antithetical to the values of Yale," he said.
He said it was "ridiculous"
to argue that there was anything wrong with officers keeping an eye on
websites that are available to the general public.
"Of course we're going to
look at anything that's publicly available in the public domain," he
said. "We have an obligation to do so, and it is to protect the very
things that let Yale survive."
Asked by a reporter if he
thought it was a "step too far" to send undercover investigators to
accompany students on rafting vacations, Bloomberg said: "No. We have to
keep this country safe."
"It's very cute to go and
blame everybody and say we should stay away from anything that smacks of
intelligence gathering," he said. "The job of our law enforcement is to
make sure that they prevent things. And you only do that by being
proactive."
Bloomberg, an independent, added that he believed that police officers had respected people's privacy and obeyed the law.
The campus monitoring
program was part of a broad effort by the NYPD, initiated after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, to try to spot any burgeoning terror
cells in the U.S. before they had a chance to act. The NYPD monitoring
of college campuses included schools far beyond the city limits.
Police talked with local
authorities about professors 300 miles away in upstate Buffalo. The
undercover agent who attended the City College rafting trip recorded
students' names and noted in police intelligence files how many times
they prayed. Detectives trawled Muslim student websites every day and,
although professors and students had not been accused of any wrongdoing,
their names were recorded in reports prepared for police Commissioner
Raymond Kelly.
Officers kept tabs on
student groups at Yale; Columbia; The University of Pennsylvania;
Syracuse; Rutgers; New York University; Clarkson University; the State
University of New York campuses in Buffalo, Albany, Stony Brook and
Potsdam; Queens College, Baruch College, Brooklyn College and La Guardia
Community College.
Levin said Yale's police department did not participate in any monitoring by the NYPD and was unaware of it.
An NYPD spokesman, Paul
Browne, explained the effort as an attempt to learn more about student
organizations that could be ripe for infiltration by terror recruiters.
He cited 12 people arrested or convicted on terrorism charges in the
United States and abroad who had once been members of Muslim student
associations, or MSAs.
He acknowledged that police
monitored student websites and collected publicly available information
but said law-abiding students have nothing to fear.
"Students who advertised
events or sent emails about regular events should not be worried about a
terrorism file being kept on them," he said. "NYPD only investigated
persons who we had reasonable suspicion to believe might be involved in
unlawful activities."
A Muslim student leader at Yale, Faisal Hamid, challenged the NYPD's justification.
"An MSA is simply a group
of Muslim students; just because a terrorist happened to be member of an
MSA does not mean that MSAs, which nationally represents hundreds of
thousands of Muslim students, have any connection to criminal activity,"
Hamid said. "Law enforcement should pursue actual leads, not imaginary
ones based on Islamophobia."
Syracuse University does
"not approve of, or support, any surveillance or investigation of
student groups based solely on ethnicity, religion or political
viewpoint," said Kevin Quinn, senior vice president for public affairs
at Syracuse.
Columbia University "would
obviously be concerned about anything that could chill our essential
values of academic freedom or intrude on student privacy," spokesman
Robert Hornsby said.
The University of Buffalo
said in a statement that it "does not conduct this kind of surveillance,
and, if asked, UB would not voluntarily cooperate with such a request.
As a public university, UB strongly supports the values of freedom of
speech and assembly, freedom of religion, and a reasonable expectation
of privacy."
The University of
Pennsylvania contacted the NYPD and received assurances that none of its
students is being monitored, a spokesman said.
The Connecticut chapter of
the Council on American-Islamic Relations called for officials to
investigate to determine the extent of the monitoring and how to prevent
it from happening again.
"They're just going out and
casting a wide net around a whole community, so they're criminalizing
in a way a whole community based on their religion," said Mongi
Dhaouadi, director of CAIR in Connecticut.
Rutgers University, based
in New Jersey, called for the NYPD to investigate its own activities.
The Muslim Student Association at Rutgers called the monitoring a
violation of civil rights.
"The Rutgers populace
should openly condemn the clear violations of the NYPD, who conducted
illegitimate profiling outside of their jurisdiction and breached the
constitutional rights of an individual," the Rutgers student group said
in a statement.
The Association of Muslim American Lawyers called for the New York attorney general to investigate.
The Muslim Students
Association of the United States and Canada expressed concerns as well.
Its president, Zahir Latheef, said the NYPD "clearly overstepped its
boundaries when it began spying on average American Muslim college
students who were simply taking whitewater rafting trips or innocently
participating in school activities at their college or university
campus."
The Muslim Students
Association of the University at Buffalo said it felt discriminated
against "by this secret investigation conducted by a police agency 400
miles away."
The student monitoring was
part of a much larger intelligence operation that has put entire Muslim
neighborhoods under scrutiny. The NYPD built databases showing where
Muslims lived, worked, shopped and prayed. Plainclothes officers known
as rakers eavesdropped in cafes, and informants known as mosque crawlers
reported on weekly sermons.
Defenders of those efforts say police investigators need to understand the community to spot potential plots.
Bloomberg has repeatedly
cited the need for vigilance, although he has insisted that the NYPD
only follows leads and denied that it engages in wholesale spying.
Asked whether he was aware
of an NYPD agent being sent on a college rafting trip, Bloomberg said,
"I have no idea. The only whitewater rafting I've done I did with my
daughter. I don't think she had a lot of information that I was
interested in. In terms of her political views."
Since the AP began
reporting on these programs in August, civil liberties groups and nearly
three dozen members of Congress have called for the Justice Department
to investigate.
But calls for an inquiry
have yielded little. The NYPD's intelligence unit operates in secret.
Even the City Council, which funds the department, isn't told about
police intelligence operations. And though the NYPD receives hundreds of
millions of dollars in federal money, the administration of President
Barack Obama has repeatedly sidestepped questions about whether it
endorses the NYPD's tactics.
___
Christoffersen reported
from New Haven, Conn. Associated Press writers Matt Apuzzo in
Washington, Samantha Henry in Newark, N.J., and Rik Stevens in Albany,
N.Y., contributed to this report.
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2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
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