Concerns Over US Mosques Surveillance Spark
Calls for Congressional Public Hearings
CAIR: Concerns of Surveillance Spark Calls for
Hearings
CAIR, June 5, 2008
A report that mosques in Los Angeles and San
Diego are under federal surveillance has resurrected fears in the
Muslim community about government monitoring and led two civil
rights groups Wednesday to call for congressional hearings.
The request for public hearings followed a
newspaper article last week that cited FBI and Defense Department
files pertaining to surveillance of mosques and Muslims in Southern
California.
Corey Saylor, Washington spokesman for the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, said the article in the San
Diego Union-Tribune "has again raised concerns that our community is
being watched."
"We've heard about this in the past, but this
article appears to be the first confirmation that surveillance is
taking place," Saylor said. "Has faith moved from a personal choice
to probable cause?"
Council chapters in Anaheim and San Diego joined
the American Civil Liberties Union and Islamic Shura Council of
Southern California in asking the U.S. House and Senate judiciary
committees and the House Committee on Oversight and Government
Reform for hearings. In a letter to the committee chairmen and
ranking minority members, the groups said hearings are needed to
determine the extent of the surveillance and whether people are
being monitored because they are Muslim.
Information about the alleged spying surfaced in
a case about classified files concerning terrorism that the
newspaper said were stolen from a secure office used by military and
civilian law enforcement officials at Camp Pendleton.
Ed Buice, Naval Criminal Investigative Service
spokesman in Washington, said an investigation was underway to
determine "whether individuals connected to the military may have
been involved in illegal activities."
"I appreciate that the groups asking for
congressional hearings want to know more about where all the dots
are and how they all connect," Buice said. "But there is still much
work to be done in this case, and we cannot discuss the details of
the ongoing investigation."
An FBI spokesman in San Diego would not confirm
that an investigation was ongoing and said the agency regularly
reaches out to Muslims through town meetings.
The civil rights groups also want the hearings
to determine if the U.S. military has engaged in domestic
surveillance in violation of federal law. The Islamic Center of San
Diego, where two of the 9/11 hijackers worshiped in early 2000, was
the only mosque mentioned in the San Diego Union-Tribune article.
The report did not specify which other mosques in Los Angeles and
San Diego were allegedly under surveillance. But Saylor said it
would not be surprising if mosques in Orange County were also
monitored.
Since the 2001 terrorist attacks, members of the
Islamic Center of Irvine and other local mosques have complained
about FBI agents questioning them about imams' sermons and how often
they attend services. In 2006, J. Stephen Tidwell, then-FBI
assistant director in Los Angeles, met at the Irvine mosque with
about 200 people who questioned him about government monitoring.
The meeting was prompted by media reports that
the FBI was monitoring Muslim students at UC Irvine and USC. Tidwell
denied that monitoring was taking place, telling the audience that
"we still play by the rules."
- CAIR-CA:
Congress Asked to Probe Surveillance of Calif. Muslims -
CAIR, ACLU
Call
for Probe of Marine Records Theft (AP)
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Records
Detail Security Failure in Base File Theft (Union-Tribune)
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