(Spy-on-your-neighbors, anyone?  How very East German.  -- rick)

Rep. Peter King eyes protecting terror tipsters from lawsuits

BY Joseph Straw 
DAILY NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU

Sunday, July 17th 2011, 4:00 AM

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2011/07/17/2011-07-17_king_eyes_protecting_terror_tipsters_from_lawsuits.html

WASHINGTON - If you see something, say something - and don't worry about 
getting sued.

That's the push Rep. Pete King is making in Congress, hoping to expand 
liability protection for people who report something fishy that could indicate 
a terror plot.

"Good citizens who report suspicious activity should not have to worry about 
being sued," said King, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee.

A 2007 law only covers tips made on passenger transportation - but not by the 
man on the street, like hero Times Square vendors Lance Orton and Duane Jackson.

The transit reform stemmed from a case in which six Muslim clerics were thrown 
off a flight due to passengers' concerns.

The imams sued the passengers, crew members and the airline. They eventually 
dropped the passengers from the suit and reached an out-of-court settlement 
with the others.

King's bill and two similar proposals were spurred by the federal Nationwide 
Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative. The Department of Homeland Security 
has borrowed the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's "See Something, Say 
Something" slogan.

Bill proponents include major law enforcement groups. They point to actions 
like those of T-shirt vendor Orton and handbag salesman Jackson, who alerted 
cops to Faisal Shahzad's SUV parked in a bus lane in Times Square last May.

The truck was packed with explosives that ignited - but did not explode.

Skeptics include Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-Manhattan). At a recent hearing he 
voiced doubt that liability protection is even necessary and questioned some 
supporters' motives.

"The rhetoric can be prettied up ... but the message is the same: that law 
enforcement and the public need to target Muslims in order to keep us safe," 
Nadler said.

The bill limits protections to truthful reports filed "in good faith and based 
on objectively reasonable suspicion."

It also entitles legitimate tipsters to recover legal fees if sued.

Alejandro Beutel of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, which worked with Los 
Angeles police on a suspicious activity reporting program, said the bill needs 
more explicit language to prevent abuse.

DHS's national program features such safeguards. Federal agencies cull race and 
religion data from reports, and protected free speech is off-limits. A DHS 
spokesman declined to comment on the [email protected]
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