(02/27/12) New York civil rights advocates want a meeting with Gov. Andrew Cuomo following a decision by the attorney general's office not to investigate the New York Police Department over its monitoring of Muslim students following the Sept. 11 attack.
The Associated Press reports that in a letter yesterday, the New York Civil Rights Coalition refuses to accept the decision by Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.
Schneiderman's office said there were legal obstacles that prevented the probe.
The coalition writes that the governor must direct state authorities to investigate the surveillance.
The Associated Press reported last week that the New York Police Department kept close watch on websites and blogs maintained by Muslim student associations across the northeast U.S., including at SUNY Potsdam and Clarkson University.
The surveillance reportedly took place in 2006 and 2007. Mayor Michael Bloomberg has faced a firestorm of criticism. But he continues to defend the police department, saying the city needs to be vigilant against terrorism.
Susan Stebbins is an anthropology professor at SUNY Potsdam. She's also special assistant to the president for diversity. The surveillance reportedly took place in 2006 and 2007. But Stebbins tells Julie Grant the college is just finding out about it now. (NCPR did request an interview with the New York Police Department, but didn't hear back for this story.)
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News stories tagged with "security"
You have to take into account how extreme weather is handled by the community, not only at the government level, but also the citizens.
(12/28/11) Three upstate New York cities rank in the top 20 most secure places to live in America.
Rochester, ranked second. Buffalo ranks as the 6th and the Albany metro area clocked in at 12th. How did three snow-friendly upstate cities landed in the top 20? The challenging weather helped. more
A border crossing in the Thousands Island. Photo: Brian Mann
(12/08/11) Canadian Prime minister Stephen Harper says the border security deal unveiled yesterday in Washington DC is the biggest step forward in trade with the US since the North American Free Trade Agreement was penned in the 1990s.
The deal is designed to streamline border crossings and synchronize the way both nations track people seeking to immigrate to North America. more
(11/11/11) Immigrant rights advocates and the New York Civil Liberties Union are accusing the Border Patrol of abusing its authority by questioning train and bus passengers about their citizenship, and for targeting people in the North Country and in towns miles away from any international crossing. Julie Grant reports. more
US Attorney General Eric Holder. Photo: DOJ
(09/15/11) US Attorney General Eric Holder was in Lake Placid yesterday speaking at the Northern Border Summit. He told the gathering of Federal prosecutors and law enforcement officials that more needs to be done to stop smuggling and other criminal activity on the US-Canada border. Brian Mann has details.
(09/09/11) In the years since the September 11 attacks, life has changed along the U.S. - Canadian border. What used to be an informal crossing, has become militarized, and its changed the lives and expectations of people who live nearby. Julie Grant takes a look back at some of ways life has changed along the border, and whether it's making Americans safer. more
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We’ve been getting a lot of complaints from business... Is there something you can do to expedite commercial traffic to the US from Canada?
(05/18/11) Sen.Chuck Schumer says Homeland Security will begin tapping into Canadian military radar later this year to detect low-flying aircraft used to smuggle drugs from Canada into the United States.
Schumer also says a border security task force of several U.S. and Canadian agencies will be established in Massena by October. At a hearing he chaired in Washington yesterday, New York's senior senator questioned Department of Homeland Security officials about new initiatives to balance commerce with fighting drug trafficking. Ryan Morden has more from Washington. more border ·
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Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)
(03/16/11) The 10th Mountain Division from Fort Drum has spent much of the last decade in Afghanistan, fighting Al Quaeda and the Taliban.
More than five hundred soldiers and reservists from the North Country are currently serving in that country. But New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand says the time has come for President Barack Obama to set a clear time-table for bringing the troops home. Todd Moe has details. more
our partners need to match (our) commitments... We need to give the strategy a chance to work but there should be no rubber stamp
(11/16/10) President Obama is expected to present a four-year plan to wind down the war in Afghanistan at a NATO summit later this week. According to the New York Times, the plan calls for beginning to transfer security duties to Afghan forces over the next two years, with an eye toward ending the U.S. mission in Afghanistan by 2014.
New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand spoke to reporters yesterday about her trip to the region last week. She says there's been progress, but she has concerns about U.S. partners there. Martha Foley has more. more
(11/15/10) Anne Harrington is the new Deputy Administrator for Defense Nuclear Non-Proliferation at the National Nuclear Security Administration. She and her staff at the National Nuclear Security Administration keep an eye on materials, outside the U.S., that could be used to make a nuclear weapon.
Harrington is a native of Long Lake. She spoke with Jonathan Brown recently about her work, her background and the path that brought her from one to the other. Here's more of their conversation.
Blog posts tagged with "security"After Iraq, a war in the grey zone continuesI have a vivid, bleak memory of sitting in a hotel room in Havana, Cuba, watching CNN as Colin Powell addressed the...[more] In Adirondacks, US Attorney General claims success on US-Canada borderJust after noon today, the Attorney General of the United States, Eric Holder, spoke at a gathering in Lake Placid.
He...[more] Do we mind military planes watching us, if it's just for training?Col. Chuck Dorsey, the vice wing commander with New York's Air National Guard 174th Fighter Wing, gave a...[more] Burlington native assumes top border patrol postThe northern border from Ogdensburg east through Vermont and New Hampshire doesn't disappoint for excitement (and...[more] Yes, the Wikileaks documents destroy right-wing claptrap about ObamaIt is tedious to constantly be wrestling with the goofy, conspiratorial narratives that the far-right continues to...[more] Morning Read: Wikileaks show unease over US-Canada tiesThe New York Times is reporting this morning that the Wikileaks dump of diplomatic documents shows American officials...[more] In the Wikileaks scandal, Americans citizens are the suckersThe Obama administration is blustering and bloviating about the on-going leak of hundreds of thousands of classified...[more] Do we really draw the line at body scans?Two above-the-fold stories this morning are really jarring.
The New York Times continues its profile of Fort...[more] Adirondack News Fund Founding Supporters: Paul Smith's College, The College of the Adirondacks · Wildlife Conservation Society · Adirondack Medical Center Foundation · Adirondack Museum · Niagara Mohawk Foundation · Schumann Foundation · John A. Sellon Charitable Trust · several anonymous individual donors |





