Talib Abdur
Rashid and Samir Hashmi say police denied them access to their own
files, claiming the documents are exempt from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information law.
In separate actions filed in Manhattan
Supreme Court, the men said the department’s denial was illegal because
it did not provide a detailed, specific justification for the refusal.
Samir Hashmi of Paramus, who was a member of the Muslim Student
Association at Rutgers University, is one of the Muslim leaders who are
seeking the NYPD's surveillance files on them.
Two Muslim leaders have taken the NYPD to court to get files on the department’s surveillance of them and their organizations.
Talib Abdur Rashid, imam of the Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood in
Harlem, and Samir Hashmi.
A former student leader of a Rutgers
University Muslim group, said police denied them access to their own
files, claiming the documents are exempt from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Law.
Imam
Talib Abdur Rashid, left, of the Islamic Leadership Council is the other
Muslim leader who's filed court documents to get surveillance files
from the NYPD.
In separate actions, both filed Nov. 26 in Manhattan Supreme Court, the
men said the NYPD’s denial was illegal because it did not provide a
more detailed, specific justification for the refusal.
They asked the court to order the department to release the records.
Citing a recent Associated Press series of reports on the NYPD’s Muslim
surveillance activity after 9/11,
The men said the police have steadily
monitored mosques, including Rashid’s in Harlem, and student
organizations like the Muslim Student Association at Rutgers, of which
Hashmi was treasurer for four years.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.