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Can the FBI spy on Muslims and not say why?

Can the FBI spy on Muslims and not say why?

In 2011, Muslims in Orange County sued the FBI. The U.S. Supreme Court just heard their case.

Headlines From The Times · Gustavo Arellano, Shani Hilton, Melissa Kaplan, Lauren Raab, Denise Guerra, Suhauna Hussain, Shannon Lin

November 12, 202118m 13s

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Show Notes

In 2011, a group of Muslims in Orange County sued the federal government, alleging that the FBI violated the constitutional rights of Muslims by spying on them solely because of their religion. The feds denied the allegations, but they also said they couldn't disclose why they had spied on this community. To do so, according to the government, would reveal state secrets. Now the lawsuit is before the U.S. Supreme Court, and the feds want it dismissed. Today, we hear from L.A. Times reporter Suhauna Hussain, who is covering the case. We'll hear from some of the plaintiffs and Muslim activists. And we'll also hear from Craig Monteilh, the self-admitted FBI informant in the center of all this.

 

More reading: 

Supreme Court skeptical of FBI’s claim in monitoring of Orange County Muslims

Column: In Orange County case, the U.S. is hiding behind claims of ‘state secrets’

From the archives: Man says he was FBI informant

Topics

american muslimsfbiscotusmuslim surveillancecraig monteilhsupreme court