CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

80F Hi 79F
Lo 68F

Recent Blog Posts

Detective Tells Of Informant In Mosque

By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | May 11, 2006

A New York City police detective yesterday described his experience running a confidential informant in Brooklyn and Staten Island mosques, and the limits he occasionally set on the scope of that surveillance.

This glimpse into the anti-terrorism efforts of the NYPD came during the third week of the trial of a Pakistani immigrant, Shahawar Matin Siraj, who is charged with a 2004 conspiracy to blow up the Herald Square subway station on 34th Street.

During testimony in federal court in Brooklyn, Detective Stephen Andrews spent more than three hours under cross-examination describing how he ran surveillance of the al-Noor mosque on Staten Island, and of the Islamic Society of Bay Ridge in Brooklyn in late 2003 and early 2004, more than half a year before Mr. Siraj, 23, was arrested for the abortive bomb plot.

Referring to his informant, a 50-year-old Egyptian-born American citizen, Osama Eldawoody, Mr. Andrews said: "He was supposed to be on the lookout for whatever was going on. His eyes and ears were to be open." Mr. Eldawoody attended about 575 services as a police informant over a 13-month period.

Although he would eventually monitor the defendant, Mr. Eldawoody initially cast his net wide, befriending imams and, on one occasion, returning with the license plate numbers of several worshippers. Mr. Andrews testified that he later instructed Mr. Eldawoody to cease jotting down license plate numbers, but said he nonetheless ran the tags in a database. Mr.Andrews testified that some of the information Mr. Eldawoody gathered, including the number of worshippers present in the mosques, was needed more for bureaucratic reasons than police work.

"It was just something he needed to pass along to me to let me know he attended services," Mr. Andrews said.

One of Mr. Siraj's attorneys, Martin Stolar, has suggested that the police department breached rules governing its surveillance efforts when it sent Mr. Eldawoody into the mosques to take down the information of people in prayer.


Powered by Inform

RELATED SUN TOPICS ›

Berkshire Lifestyle
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK ›

Spitzer Staff May Have Broken Law in Bruno Probe

Council Members Push Pedal To Add Taxi Fuel Surcharge

Paterson's Tax Cap Plan May End Up Costing City

Shooter of Two in East Village Surrenders to Police

Port Authority Nears Deal With Church at Ground Zero

MTA Board Members Asking Albany for Help

NATIONAL ›

Obama Calls for Joint Approach to Terror at Berlin

Judge Withdraws Threat as Reporter Pleads the 5th In Spy Leak Probe

House GOP Blocks Effort To Open U.S. Fuel Reserve

Hurricane Dolly Weakens, Spares Levees

Weather Forces McCain to Cancel Event on Oil Rig Off Gulf Coast

Test Offers Hope in Combatting Cholesterol Drug Side Effects

ARTS+ ›

Before, During & After the Fall: Dürer at MOBIA

Chaos and Danger in Architectural Design

Nameless, Homeless, Borderline Soulless: Ralph Fiennes Does Beckett

Up for Bid at Scope Hamptons: Collector Mentorship

A Victorian Neighborhood Remade

Dream Weavers Captured in Print