NPR: “Federal Appeals Court Reinstates NYPD Muslim Spying Lawsuit”

From National Public Radio (NPR)

by Brakkton Booker

A federal appeals court has reinstated a civil rights lawsuit against the New York Police Department that accuses police of spying on Muslims in New Jersey.

A three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday reversed a lower court’s ruling last year that found police did not violate the rights of Muslims by routinely putting some people and businesses under surveillance in an effort to prevent terrorism.

NPR’s Joel Rose tells our Newscast unit that the appeals court sent the case back to district court. Here’s more from Joel:

“The lawsuit, which was filed in 2012, accuses the NYPD of conducting secret surveillance of Muslims in New Jersey without suspicion of criminal activity. The spying was revealed in a series of articles by The Associated Press.

“The plaintiffs said NYPD surveillance subjected them to discrimination and threatened their careers, among other harms. But a federal judge dismissed the case in 2014, after lawyers for New York City argued the surveillance program was an anti-terrorism measure that did not discriminate against Muslims.”

According to court documents, lead plaintiff Syed Farhaj Hassan and others associated with the Islamic faith say that following the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the NYPD “conducted the program in secret ‘to monitor the lives of Muslims, their businesses, houses of worship, organizations, and schools in New York City and surrounding states, particularly New Jersey.’ ”

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