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Fears of an anti-Muslim backlash were sparked on Long Island over the weekend after three teenagers allegedly attacked a Pakistani woman and her 15-year-old son. As punches were thrown, the teens yelled, "Are you terrorists?" "You blew up the twin towers!" and "Are you connected to Osama Bin Laden?" police said. Authorities are hoping the incident is isolated and not an indication there will be a spike in anti-Muslim bias crimes as the anniversary of Sept. 11 approaches. There was a spate of hate-crime incidents on Long Island - including a December robbery and arson at a Lindenhurst deli - in the three months following the terrorist attacks, but nothing particularly alarming, authorities said. Police said they caught two of the three attackers - nabbed after they returned to the scene of the crime, outside the family's Indian restaurant in Selden. Mehmooda Malik, 37, and her son Gibbran had closed up the Tandoori Cottage Restaurant and were leaving for the evening about 11:45 p.m. Saturday when the trio of teenagers approached and started yelling slurs. Gibbran turned to his mother and said, "Let's get out of here," and the teens attacked him, punching him several times, said Suffolk Police Detective Allen Van Wickler. Another group of teens in the parking lot egged the first group on, police said. "When the actual fists were flying, some in the second group were yelling 'Kill the effing Muslims' and so forth," Van Wickler said.Malik was able to pull one of the teens off her son and yelled to her husband, Tariq, who was inside the restaurant, to call the police. Both groups of teens fled. Police said it's not clear if they knew each other. A short while later, three teens came back to look for a pair of glasses, and the Maliks identified two of themasassailants. Richard Bossi, 19, of Centereach, and Matthew Martin, 18, of Selden, were charged with second-degree aggravated harassment and released on $100 bail. The crime is a misdemeanor.Martin's father, Kevin, declined to comment yesterday, saying only, "Matthew's got to speak to an attorney." Bossi's family could not be reached for comment.
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Thirty-one members of the New York City Police Department have resigned to join the Nassau County police forceaccepting a temporary pay cut for the chance to make almost $20,000 a year more within five years. The 30 officers and one detective will see their annual salaries drop to $21,000 for their first six months, seven weeks of which are spent in training at the Nassau Police Academy in East Meadow. But the pay jumps to $30,000 after six months, $35,000 after 18 months and tops out after five years at $66,000. That's compared with top pay for New York City officers after five years of $47,000. Patrolmen's Benevolent Association President Lou Matarazzo bemoaned the loss of the veteran cops, but said it all comes down to dollars. "I'm saddened because their leaving has nothing to do with whether they like the job or not, they strictly leave because of the economics," he said. "We're losing people who are the cream of the crop." He added that Nassau County cops work fewer days than their NYPD counterparts: 156 days working 12-hour tours versus city cops who work 243 days of 81/2-hour tours. Lt. Kevin Caslin, a Nassau County Police Department spokesman, said the latest class actually has a smaller contingent of NYPD cops than previous groups, some of which were stocked with 50% NYPD veterans. One bonus for the transferring officers is that they can count their NYPD years toward their pension. The PBA has been waging a long battle to earn parity with officers in Nassau and Suffolk. The union has been pinning its hopes on passage of a controversial police arbitration bill approved by the state Legislature last week. If signed by Gov. Pataki, the bill would permit police and fire unions locked in contract disputes to go directly to a state arbitration panel, bypassing the city's Office of Collective Bargaining. The state panel is considered likely to push police salaries closer to levels offered in the affluent suburbs. Pataki vetoed a previous version of the bill but is coming under intense pressure from the PBA to sign the new version. Mayor Giuliani urged Pataki to veto what he called a "billion-dollar unfunded mandate" and said the city would consider filing a lawsuit to block itas it did two years ago after the Legislature overrode a Pataki veto of a similar bill. The bill could cost the city an extra $200 million in annual labor costs, by some estimates.
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WASHINGTON - The Al Qaeda terror network has regrouped and shifted tactics, putting smaller, less secure civilian targets at the top of its hit list, key lawmakers said yesterday. Since Sept. 11, 2001, the terror network has moved away from large-scale targets, with the four major strikes linked to it since then aimed at so-called soft targets. They include last week's coordinated bombings at housing complexes in Saudi Arabia and at tourist and Jewish targets in Morocco, Saudi and U.S. officials said. Osama Bin Laden's operatives are also linked to bombings last year that killed hundreds of tourists at a Bali nightclub and in Kenya, where terrorists simultaneously attacked a hotel and tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner. "We're doing a much better job of protecting the hard targets," Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) told NBC. "You're now seeing these soft targets - which is primarily people, housing projects, not military installations - being attacked." 'More casualties' The focus on smaller-scale attacks on civilians proves Al Qaeda is being disrupted, but it also means "we're likely to see more casualties," Chambliss said. Despite high-level arrests, Al Qaeda is still capable of carrying out its strikes with "third- and fourth-level terrorists," Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, told CBS' "Face the Nation." He warned that terrorists may find it a "very easy task" to carry out similar attacks in the U.S. Al Qaeda operatives "seeking relevancy" inevitably will "create some mayhem," Rep. Porter Goss (R-Fla.), a former CIA agent who is chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, told ABC's "This Week."Presidential hopeful Sen. John Kerry said the latest attacks demonstrate that the Bush administration has not fought the war on terrorism as hard as it could have. "Al Qaeda never went out of business," Kerry (D-Mass.) told CBS. "We broke the beehive but we didn't kill the bees, and we certainly haven't killed the queen bee."
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