The Dearborn Daily Chronicle

News for Arabs in America

LOCAL POLICE BEAT

Two cases of new law in action: offensive acts prosecuted.

by Abdul Rahman

 

Agents from the Religious and Cultural Sensitivities (RCS) Division of the local office of the FBI today arrested six Sisters of the St. Sebastian Convent for distributing Christian bible verses at local Mosques where dozens of victims were offended. A seventh nun, African American, was not arrested. The Religious & Cultural Sensitivity Act (RCSA), recently signed into law by President Al-Jaber, prohibits uttering or publishing statements that offend or oppress minorities.

According to Special Agent Ragib Ahmed, head of the FBI’s new RCS Division in Detroit, "One may have whatever religion one wishes, but Christian passages handed out like this are an attack on all fronts against Muslims. Distributing Bible verses as they did makes this hate speech."

In a separate incident, also pursued under the RCSA, the FBI today arrested three defendants for making middle-finger hand gestures at victims outside a Muslim elementary school. The school's surveillance cameras show three white attackers making the gestures from inside their large SUV, with the driver leaning out an open window and with obvious malice thrusting his arm toward the victims. After images of the attack were published in local news papers, including the Chronicle, citizens came forward and identified Jim Gallahger (48), his wife Beth (44), and the couple's teenage daughter, Cathy, who is older than twelve and therefore was charged under the RCSA as an adult. No guns or illegal knives were found in a thorough search of the family's property.

Both cases were met with approval in the local Arab community, which suffers such outrageous hate crimes on a daily basis, and particularly since the 8/24 nuclear explosion last year that killed barely a million infidels in San Francisco.