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Bad Partners: Why Local Law Enforcement Should Leave FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces

FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces collaborate with local law enforcement using methods that ​undermine local controls and evade transparency. How three cities organized to end these partnerships.

Past:
This is a virtual event.
Speakers:
  • Zahra Billoo
  • ,
  • Javeria Jamil
  • ,
  • Brandon Mayfield
  • Mike German
 Why Local Law Enforcement Should Leave FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces

FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces (JTTFs) inflict harm on local communities through racial profiling, harassment, suspicionless surveillance and investigations, and exploitation of immigration enforcement, all of which are authorized under federal guidelines loosened after 9/11. The FBI relies on the labor of state and local law enforcement officers assigned to the JTTFs, who agree to follow federal guidelines even if they conflict with state and local law, policies, and regulations. Civil rights advocates and community groups in Portland, San Francisco, and Oakland organized successful campaigns and lobbying operations to demand that their city legislatures hold local police accountable to local laws and ultimately withdraw from the JTTFs when the FBI refused to allow such public accountability. Advocates from each of these cities will discuss their efforts to organize public resistance to JTTF activities, enlist their elected representatives, craft legislation, and ultimately end local police participation in JTTFs, providing a model for other localities.

SPEAKERS:

The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law provides reasonable accommodations to people with disabilities. Requests for accommodations for events and services should be submitted at least two weeks if possible before the date of the accommodation need. Please email adrienne.yee@nyu.edu or call 646–925–8728 for assistance.