Montgomery refutes ACLU claims about law enforcement training on Islamic extremism

John Guandolo blog posted on ACLU facebook page
John Guandolo blog posted on ACLU facebook page
John Guandolo blog posted on ACLU facebook page

The American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona is spreading misinformation about an upcoming law enforcement training seminar on Islamic extremism sponsored by the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. A letter distributed to media outlets authored by ACLU Legal Director Dan Pochoda contains numerous false statements and inaccuracies about the nature and content of the training, titled “Understanding the Threat.” In a detailed response to the ACLU letter, County Attorney Bill Montgomery exposes these inaccurate claims and clarifies what the training is and what it is not.

“This training is consistent with education we have provided to our prosecutors and law enforcement partners about the threat posed by a wide variety of ideologies, from White Supremacists to the Sovereign Citizens’ Movement,” Montgomery said. “It is critical to effective policing for law enforcement to be aware of the role extremist ideology can play in order to distinguish individuals who pose a threat from those who happen to share a common racial, ethnic, religious or ideological background,” he added.

According to IPT, in 2010, Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich sent a letter to four members of Congress who asked for details last fall on how CAIR was named an unindicted co-conspirator in the terror-finance trial against the Holy Land Foundation and its former officials. IPT notes that Weich “included trial transcripts and exhibits which demonstrated a relationship among CAIR, individual CAIR founders, and the Palestine Committee. Evidence was also introduced that demonstrated a relationship between the Palestine Committee and HAMAS, which was designated as a terrorist organization in 1995.”

In his written response, Montgomery challenges each of the ACLU’s claims about the training session and its presenters, highlighting the organization’s use of inaccurate citations, quotations taken out of context, and information that is completely irrelevant to content that will be covered in the training. “The mischaracterizations and false information contained in the ACLU’s letter do more to inflame passions than anything this training will ever do,” he said.

Montgomery also rejects the ACLU’s assertion that the training is anti-Islam or disparaging of local Muslims, noting that hundreds of Valley law enforcement officers have been trained by one of the presenters, John Guandolo, with no resulting claims of biased policing against Muslims in Maricopa County. He also points out that members of the County Attorney’s Office attended a session of “Understanding the Threat” earlier this year and verified that the content would meet training objectives and was appropriate. Montgomery underscores that training on the ideology used by extremist organizations, even if sourced out of Islam and the Quran, cannot fairly be said to be anti-Islam or anti-Muslim.

Montgomery concludes his response by stating, “This training will go forward to ensure law enforcement and prosecutors are equipped to recognize evidence of extremist threats and avoid unsupported generalizations of Muslims that would negatively impact the positive relationship law enforcement shares with the local Muslim community.”

On September 27, CAIR will present CODEPINK, a female-initiated grassroots peace and social justice movement, with its “Community Organization of the Year” award during CAIR’s 20th annual banquet at the Crystal Gateway Marriott in Arlington, Va.

In July, the Gateway Pundit reported that in June 2009 “Code Pink made a trip to Hamas-controlled Gaza. According to reports by two participants, Code Pink had such a close relationship with Hamas that the terrorists literally rolled out the red carpet for Code Pink and that a Code Pink leader wore a Hamas hat at a meeting with Hamas.”

According to Code Pink, “In November of 2011, two boats (together known as the Freedom Wave Flotilla) on their way to Gaza were intercepted in international waters by the Israeli navy. One boat, the Tahrir, carried passengers from seven countries (Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Egypt, Palestine, and the United States). Among them was one passenger who was on the U.S. Boat to Gaza–The Audacity of Hope– CODEPINK’s very own Kit Kittredge.”

At the time CODEPINK cofounder Medea Benjamin said the group was “excited” by the to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza.

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