(no subject)
Mar. 12th, 2012 06:02 amI have to thank the NYPD for its survey of Muslim restaurants in Newark, or as Gawker calls it, "The NYPD Zagat Guide to Newark’s Best (and Most Threatening) Muslim Restaurants". I'm sure that list will come in handy during my next Newark layover.
Newark isn't the only place outside NYC the NYPD have been carefully watching. They got to New Haven and Philadelphia, too, although they seem to have spent their time monitoring student groups (and even going whitewater rafting) rather than staking out tasty food. What good is that, I ask you?
Then again, the NYPD's been doing this sort of thing for nearly a century.
Maybe I just have to wait until they stake out more restaurants in more places. They certainly did check out a lot of places inside the city.
Newark isn't the only place outside NYC the NYPD have been carefully watching. They got to New Haven and Philadelphia, too, although they seem to have spent their time monitoring student groups (and even going whitewater rafting) rather than staking out tasty food. What good is that, I ask you?
Then again, the NYPD's been doing this sort of thing for nearly a century.
Maybe I just have to wait until they stake out more restaurants in more places. They certainly did check out a lot of places inside the city.
(no subject)
Date: 2012-03-19 03:47 am (UTC)At the moment, my take is that it hinges on the behavior of the investigation. Did the cops do anything that was illegal while investigating? Did their investigation bring harm to the targets about whom nothing illegal was detected?
Optimally, the cops should be sniffing around considerably more people than ultimately turn out to be criminals.