OPINION: De Blasio to chase jihadist landlords?
New York City is settling a federal lawsuit that claims that NYPD monitoring of city mosques to detect radical activity is unconstitutional.
A similar case was filed in New Jersey previously. That lawsuit accused New York cops of illegally surveilling Garden State mosques. The Bloomberg administration did not settle the New Jersey case. Rather, it persuaded a judge to dismiss it. In his decision, the judge noted that the activities monitored by the police, such as meetings in mosques, were open to the public. He therefore ruled that no one was harmed by the surveillance.
Mayor Bill de Blasio has taken a different tack than Bloomberg. While the terms of the recent settlement are unknown, given that the ACLU [American Civil Liberties Union] was involved, it’s fair to assume that police monitoring of potential terrorist activity will be curtailed.
Even before settling the New York case, the de Blasio administration dismantled the “Demographics Unit,” which conducted the disputed surveillance. At the time the unit was scrapped, the mayor quipped that he had “promised the people of New York a police force that … is … respectful.” De Blasio claimed that scuttling the squad was “a critical step forward …so that our cops … can … go after the real bad guys.”