Informant: NY police paid me to `bait` Muslims

A paid informant for the New York Police Department`s intelligence unit was under orders to "bait" fellow Muslims into saying inflammatory things.

New York: A paid informant for the New York Police Department`s intelligence unit was under orders to "bait" fellow Muslims into saying inflammatory things as he lived a double life, snapping pictures inside mosques and collecting the names of innocent people attending study groups on Islam.
Shamiur Rahman, a 19-year-old US citizen of Bengali descent who has now denounced his work as an informant, said police told him to embrace a strategy called "create and capture."

He said it involved creating a conversation about jihad or terrorism, then capturing the response to send to the NYPD. For his work, he earned as much as USD 1,000 a month and goodwill from the police after a string of minor marijuana arrests.

"We need you to pretend to be one of them," Rahman recalled the police telling him. "It`s street theater." Rahman said he now believes his work as an informant against Muslims in New York was "detrimental to the Constitution."

After he disclosed to friends details about his work for the police and after he told the police that he had been interviewed by the AP he stopped receiving text messages from his NYPD handler, "Steve," and his handler`s NYPD phone number was disconnected.

Rahman`s account shows how the NYPD unleashed informants on Muslim neighborhoods, often without specific targets or criminal leads. Much of what Rahman said represents a tactic the NYPD has denied using.

The AP corroborated Rahman`s account through arrest records and weeks of text messages between Rahman and his police handler. The AP also reviewed the photos Rahman sent to police.

Friends confirmed Rahman was at certain events when he said he was there, and former NYPD officials, while not personally familiar with Rahman, said the tactics he described were used by informants.

Informants like Rahman are a central component of the NYPD`s wide-ranging programs to monitor life in Muslim neighborhoods since the 2001 terrorist attacks. Police officers have eavesdropped inside Muslim businesses, trained video cameras on mosques and collected license plates of worshippers.

Informants who trawl the mosques known informally as "mosque crawlers" tell police what the imam says at sermons and provide police lists of attendees, even when there`s no evidence they committed a crime.

The programs were built with unprecedented help from the CIA.

Police recruited Rahman in late January, after his third arrest on misdemeanor drug charges, which Rahman believed would lead to serious legal consequences.

An NYPD plainclothes officer approached him in jail and asked whether he wanted to turn his life around.

PTI

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