the dhs often streaming information to local agencies with little guidance or analysis, often vague or alarmist in nature. counterterrorism official with the lapd telling the post, it s like a garage in your house. you keep throwing junk into until you can t park your car in it. some of these law enforcement agencies are hired self-described experts to be better informed on islam and terrorism. but many experts they have used are at best, counterproductive, and at worse, just plain nos noxiously wrong. take, for example, a game named raymond, he s taught classes on terrorism all across the country. he believes most muslims in the u.s. want to impose thsharia la. the islamic flag will fly over the white house. not on my watch. my job is to wake up the public, and first, the first responders. the dhs spokeswoman says they re
counterterrorism official with the lapd telling the post, it s like a garage in your house. you keep throwing junk into until you can t park your car in it. some of these law enforcement agencies are hired self-described experts to be better informed on islam and terrorism. but many experts they have used are at best, counterproductive, and at worse, just plain noshs noxiously wrong. take, for example, a game named raymond, he s taught classes on terrorism all across the country. he believes most muslims in the u.s. want to impose that sharia law. the islamic flag will fly over the white house. not on my watch. my job is to wake up the public, and first, the first responders. the dhs spokeswoman says they re working on guidelines to help local authorities. but even if the experts were experts and information sharing was better in many areas, there just isn t enough work to go around. at one info center in colorado, some investigators were
a dhs spokeswoman says they re working on guidelines to help local authorities. but even if the experts were experts and information sharing was better in many areas, there just isn t enough work to go around. at one info center in colorado, some investigators were following terrorism-related leads. the others, examining legal postings on craigslist, oh, and worlds of warcraft gamers. time to call in mike german. thanks so much for your time tonight. thanks for having me, chris. i guess my question is, this was a real big story in the washington post this morning. i read it a few times. what was your takeaway from it? what was your impression? well, we ve been covering this issue for quite some time, and we have a website, aclu.org/spyfiles that goes into a lot of these cases and talks about a lot of expanded authorities that it s not just the fbi and dhs, but state and local law enforcement are now in the intelligence gathering game. and there aren t a lot of