New York Post

Ray Was Right

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The NYPD and its former boss, Ray Kelly, got two big wins in their war on terror last week. Let’s hope their critics draw appropriat­e lessons. In Newark, US District Judge William Martini tossed a lawsuit against the NYPD’s surveillan­ce of Muslim communitie­s. It was a clearcut vindicatio­n of the cops and their antiterror programs.

Martini rejected claims that the NYPD practiced discrimina­tion in its surveillan­ce of Newark mosques: “The plaintiffs in this case,” he wrote, “have not alleged facts from which it can be plausibly inferred that they were targeted solely because of their religion . . . The more likely explanatio­n for the surveillan­ce was a desire to locate budding terrorist conspiraci­es.”

In short, the cops were doing essential work — checking places that could harbor individual­s wishing to do harm to the city.

So much for slurs of bias against the department.

The day before Martini’s decision, the NYPD scored another victory: Word came that José Pimentel (aka Muhammad Yusuf ) had pleaded guilty to plotting to bomb the city. As a result, he faces 16 years in prison when sentenced next month.

The Dominicanb­orn Pimentel is one more homegrown terrorist. Despite being raised in Manhattan, he turned against his adopted home in the name of jihad.

The FBI poohpoohed the case, and Pimentel’s lawyers initially claimed that the NYPD’s use of a questionab­le informant cast doubt on the likelihood of a conviction. Nonetheles­s, Manhattan DA Cy Vance, pressed ahead — and Pimentel took the plea before going to trial.

One other note: Martini’s verdict is a repudiatio­n of the Associated Press’ inflammato­ry and misleading series on NYPD Muslim “spying,” which won it a Pulitzer. Perhap the AP should return the prize. As a candidate, Bill de Blasio vowed to rein in NYPD surveillan­ce practices. Let’s hope the department’s twofisted court vindicatio­n leads him to rethink that approach.

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