MANHATTAN — A movie about radical Islam was shown to nearly 1,500 NYPD recruits for up to a year of their training, the New York Times reported Tuesday.
Police chiefs origianlly said the film, called The Third Jihad and promoting an image of American Muslims as radicalized, had been mistakenly screened "a couple of times."
But documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Law show it had been shown "on a continuous loop" for up to a year of training.
The revelation has raised questions about how the police force will repair its already strained relations with New York's large Muslim community.
Among its assertions, The Third Jihad claims that most American Muslims are involved, at least tangentially, in promoting terror, according to Tom Robbins of the Village Voice who initially discovered that recruits were being forced to watch the film in January of 2011.
"After it was over, I was thinking, 'What was that?' " an officer who saw the movie told Robbins for his 2011 article.
"It was so ridiculously one-sided. It just made Muslims look like the enemy. It was straight propaganda."
At that time, police said that the film, which features an interview with Police Comissioner Ray Kelly, had only been screened for a few officers.
But a Freedom of Information request by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University's School of Law revealed that it had been used far more often than initially indicated, the Times reported Tuesday.
The film was financed and produced by the right-wing Clarion Fund. It seems to have landed in the department in September of 2010, coming from either the Department of Homeland Security or a contractor, the Times repored.
In addition to graphic footage of the Beslan school massacre in Russia and other acts of terror, the film repeatedly shows a black Islamic flag flying over the White House.
The revelation comes as the NYPD continues to battle intense scrutiny over its extensive domestic spying program, which targeted Muslims across the city.
It monitored "every aspect of Muslim life and built databases on where innocent Muslims eat, shop, work and pray," according to the Associated Press.
An NYPD spokesman told the Times it no longer uses the film.