people are concerned that they can t trust law enforcement. bill: for his part, ray kelly, police commissioner of new york, defend the program. that was special agent michael ward of the newark, new jersey division. he says without the trust of the muslim community, blind spots then are created. martha: well, it is the number one issue that faces millions of americans. more than 360,000 filed for unemployment claims for the very first time, walked into the office to ask for that over the course of the last week. but that figure doesn t show the real jobless picture in this country. right now, a total of unemployed and so-called underemployed, people who are not in jobs that really match their skills, that number is up to 24 million people. that is a huge number. they re essentially working part-time or not up to their skill set, as i said. so that is up nearly 1.6 million from three years
new york pd, the nypd actually surveilling these mobs and muslim businesses in new jersey. it s very, very unheard of for one police agency to actually call out another. but the fbi in new jersey now says that because the new york police department is spying on the mosques and the muslim businesses, it s causing the fbi s miss i limb sources muslim sources now to dry up. listen. we re starting to see cooperation being pulled back. people are concerned that they re being followed, people are concerned that they can t trust law enforcement. reporter: the fbi goes on to attack new york city police commissioner ray kelly saying that he s going beyond new york city boundaries, sending his police officers where they should not be. kelly has built a thousand-member counterterrorism force that is considered to be the best in the country, and the nypd has aggressively defended the program saying the unit is seeking out those who want to attack new york city, pointing out that terrorist at