Mayor Stalling 'Mosque' Suit, Which Wants to Stop Art Opening
By Matt Chaban
January 12, 2011 | 9:13 a.m.
Despite the occasional hiccup, it looks like the controversial Park51 Islamic community center downtown has weathered the furor that consumed it last year and will get built some day if the ambitious project can find $100 million.That has not stopped a firefighter and a conservative legal group from continuing to fight Park51 with a lawsuit, The Times reports. The real problem, the group charges, is not the developer, Sharif El-Gamal, or the imam, Faisal Abdul Rauf, but the Bloomberg administration.
"There is a disturbing pattern of stonewalling by the city and mayor's office in providing information about what's clearly been a politically tainted process from day one," said Brett Joshpe, a lawyer for the American Center for Law and Justice, a conservative group in Washington that is representing Mr. Brown.The attorneys are seeking an injunction barring any work at the site, but a Park51 spokesperson said construction is still a while away—with the exception of "a multicultural art exhibit later in the spring."
He added: "With developers moving forward with their plans and the continued lack of response by the city, we're seeking an injunction from the court to halt the destruction of any of the buildings at issue in the case."
What? No art within five blocks of Ground Zero? We knew the World Trade Center cultural center was still struggling, but this is a new low.
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Legal Group Seeks Injunction to Halt Mosque Near Ground Zero
By Lawrence D. Jones|Christian Post ReporterNEW YORK – A conservative legal group asked the New York Supreme Court on Tuesday to halt construction of the Islamic cultural center near ground zero.
The American Center for Law and Justice, which represents 9/11 first responder firefighter Tim Brown in a lawsuit against the Park51 project, is seeking an injunction in any demolition and construction at the downtown Manhattan site.The group alleges that Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his office overstepped their legal boundaries in assisting the developers of the $100 million project.
Court filings revealed several emails between Bloomberg's office and the Park51 developers.
In one email, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, who is spearheading the project, wrote to a commissioner of the Community Affairs Unit in the mayor's office thanking her for drafting a letter to the Lower Manhattan Community Board 1 advocating for the project.
ACLJ counsel Brett Joshpe also asked the court to grant discovery in the case, noting that the mayor's office has not fully responded to the group's Freedom of Information Law request for communications between Bloomberg, the New York City’s Landmarks Preservation Commission, and the Islamic center's developers.
"There is a disturbing pattern of stonewalling by the City and Mayor's Office in providing information about what's clearly been a politically tainted process from day one," said Josphe in a statement.
"The limited release of documents by the Mayor's Office underscores our concerns."
Filed last August, Brown's lawsuit alleges that the LPC abused its discretion and acted arbitrarily in its deliberations last summer about whether to give landmark status to the building at 45-47 Park Place, which would have made it difficult for Rauf to develop the Islamic center and mosque there. The LPC denied landmark status to the building, located just two blocks from the site of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
The lawsuit names the LPC, the New York City Department of Buildings, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and the project's developers.
In its request for injunctive relief, ACLJ said it believes destruction of the building is imminent, citing two complaints of unauthorized work without proper permits at the site.
The group also pointed to the developers' application for $5 million in public funding through the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation as an indication that the project is moving forward.
The proposed center is expected to include a mosque, a daycare, gym, an interfaith prayer space, and a 9/11 Memorial cultural center, among other things.
Opponents of the mosque have vocally demanded that the center be moved elsewhere.
Activist Pamela Geller is expected to lead another protest against the mosque next month.
2 comments:
OT - Chicago looks to emulate UK's street urchins defiling uncovered meat?
http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/news/local/chibrknews-prosecutors-gang-rape-recorded-01122011,0,1827979.story
Cops: Gang rape of girl, 14, recorded on cell phone
Three Stickney teenagers gang-raped a 14-year-old girl and recorded the attacks on a cell phone, police said this morning.
A fourth suspect was being questioned, sources said.
Alex Picallo, 16, Majeed Khalifeh, 18, and Jonathan Leanos, 19, were charged with two counts each of aggravated criminal sexual assault in the incident at Leanos’ Stickney home Saturday, police confirmed. Picallo was charged as an adult.
Picallo was ordered held on $500,000 bail Tuesday. Khalifeh and Leanos appeared in court in Bridgeview on Wednesday and were ordered held in lieu of $600,000 and $750,000 bail,
I see what you mean, but you gotta admit, it is not very Muslim of the guy to go on a rape Jihad with two Infidels.
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