

It started out as a crimefighting tool. But over the years, an FBI effort known as "geo-mapping" evolved into something more expansive – a method to track Muslim communities, without any suspicion of a crime being committed.

Last month, Danger Room revealed that the FBI was training its agents that religious Muslims tended to be "violent" and that Islamic charity is merely a "funding mechanism for combat." In response, both the FBI and the Justice Department promised full reviews of their training materials. But the geo-mapping effort indicates that the FBI may have more than just a training problem: The suspicion of ordinary Muslims promoted in those lectures may be spilling over into its counterterrorism tactics.

Last week, the American Civil Liberties Union acquired some of the FBI geo-maps (.pdf), like the one pictured after the jump, through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit. Although many of the maps are heavily redacted, they represent the first public confirmation that the FBI compiles maps of businesses, community centers and religious institutions in ethnic enclaves around the United States.

The ACLU – where, full disclosure, my wife works – blasted the mapping effort, and in an interview with the New York Times, FBI agent turned ACLU attorney Mike German tied the maps to the incendiary anti-Islam trainings first revealed by Danger Room. Agents who received the briefings might be "predisposed to treating everyone from a particular group as suspect," German said.

In response, the FBI issued a nuanced defense of its geo-mapping efforts. While pledging that the FBI "joins the ACLU in opposing racial or ethnic discrimination," an FBI statement said that "[j]ust as putting push pins on a map will allow a local police chief to see clearly where the highest crime areas are, combining data that is lawfully collected into one place allows connections to be identified that might otherwise go unnoticed."

Except FBI geo-mapping isn't just aimed at tracking criminals. Over time, the maps' rationale shifted from representing crime scenes to displaying the patterns of life in minority neighborhoods. In other words, the pushpins on the new FBI geo-maps indicate where people live, work, pray, eat and shop, not necessarily where they commit or plan crimes.

In 2004, a self-professed "visual learner" in the FBI's Philadelphia field office, Special Agent Bill Shute, set out to prove a hypothesis. Shute took arrest reports from local cops and court records and plugged it into some off-the-shelf Microsoft mapping software (probably MapPoint) to create a visual display of where crimes occurred on his turf. His theory: If he pounded the pavement in those areas, he'd find informants who'd help him close cases. Shute called his pet mapping effort Project PinPoint.

If you ask the FBI, PinPoint was a resounding success. "The program led agents to arrests in the separate slayings of a city police officer and a 9-year-old," according to a 2007 bureau account. "In the days after the multiple shootings at the Southwest Philadelphia bar in July, it helped identify potential witnesses and assisted with the recovery of the murder weapon."

It shouldn't be surprising: The effort isn't dissimilar to New York City's vaunted CompStat program, which displayed crime patterns to inform cops what parts of the city required more police work. Within a year, the FBI's counterterrorism branch got in on the PinPoint action.

Deputy counterterrorism chief Willie Hulon told a congressional panel in 2004 that a massive FBI database called the Investigative Data Warehouse would collect and disseminate the maps amongst FBI agents and partner police forces across the country. "These tools allow FBI agents and analysts to look across multiple cases and multiple data sources to identify relationships and other pieces of information that were not readily available using older FBI systems," Hulon testified.

In December 2008, however, the FBI loosened restrictions on just what "other pieces of information" those maps could collect. Its revised master plan for operations, known as the Domestic Investigational Operations Guidelines, subtly shifted the targets of those maps – from displaying criminal data to displaying data on the communities in which suspected criminals might live.

"If, for example, intelligence reporting reveals that members of certain terrorist organizations live and operate primarily within a certain concentrated community of the same ethnicity," the revised guidelines read, "the location of that community is clearly valuable – and properly collectible – data." (.pdf)

Danger Room asked the FBI about those maps a full year ago, before any of them had become public. We received a generic statement that read, in part: "In order to become an intelligence agency, the FBI cannot be content to wait for people to tell us about potential threats. Part of being proactive is making efforts to 'connect dots' to find previously undetected criminal and terrorist threats. Geospatial mapping is not nefarious."

Tell it to Salam al-Marayati. The president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, one of the U.S.' most influential Muslim organizations, Marayati wrote a *Los Angeles Times *op-ed warning that anti-Muslim efforts like the FBI training manual were a nightmare for counterterrorism. Such training will "undermine the relationship between law enforcement and the Muslim American community," wrote Marayati, who referenced Danger Room's stories on the subject. The maps can't be helping.

Last week, at a civil rights conference, Deputy Attorney General James Cole reiterated what Danger Room first reported: that the Justice Department will "re-evaluate their training efforts in a range of areas, from community outreach to national security" to scrub out Islamophobic instructions. Already, anti-Muslim authors formerly taught by the FBI, like Robert Spencer, one of the ringleaders of opposition to the so-called "Ground Zero Mosque," are crying censorship. But Cole didn't indicate whether the relaxed rules on mapping "ethnic communities" will come under review as part of that scrub.

Photo: Flickr/Paul Lowry. Image: FBI, via ACLU

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