Intelligence/
Trial news
While the jury will likely neither note
nor learn of them, there were details from last week's testimony in the Jeffrey
Sterling trial that resonated with two other notable cases involving the CIA:
the New York Police Department's spying on Muslims and the leak of Valerie
Plame Wilson's identity.
Intelligence, race, and religion in New York City
On Friday, former high ranking CIA officer David Cohen -- who headed up
the New York office while Sterling was there -- described how he removed Sterling from the
Merlin case because he didn't believe Sterling was performing well at his job
(an opinion neither his deputy, Charles Seidel, nor Bob S shared, at least
according to their testimony). "His performance was extremely sub-par,"
Cohen testified. Cohen also seemed to disdain what might be called political
correctness, which if true may have exacerbated Sterling's increasing sense of
being discriminated against for being African American.
That would be consistent with the action for which Cohen has received
more press in recent years: setting up the New York Police Department's
intelligence program that profiles the area's Muslim community. In the wake of
9/11, Cohen moved from the CIA to the NYPD. In 2002, he got a federal court to
relax the Handschu guidelines,
which had been set up in 1985 in response to NYPD's targeting of people for
their political speech. Handschu required specific evidence before using
informants to investigate a group.
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