Fahad Tirmizi, his wife,
Amina, and their two young children were at the skyscraper's observation
deck last July 2 shortly after 11 p.m., a time when the family's
"religious beliefs require them to recite the evening prayers wherever
they may be at the time," according to a lawsuit filed in Manhattan
District Court on Tuesday.
The couple silently knelt in an isolated area of the observation deck, with little foot traffic, the court document said.
While she managed to pray
without incident, one guard interrupted and "menacingly poked" Fahad
Tirmizi "with his hands and feet several times in various parts of his
body," the court document said.
The guard informed
Tirmizi he was not allowed to pray while at the observatory, and then
"forcibly" escorted his family to the ground floor exit of the building,
according to the court document.
The suit names the
publicly owned Empire State Building management company, the security
firm, and two unnamed security guards as defendants, alleging that they
violated the first and 14 Amendments as well as multiple state and city
civil rights laws.
The family is seeking unspecified monetary damages.
In response, an Empire
State Realty Trust spokeswoman, Brandy Bergman, told CNN Wednesday, "The
claims are totally without merit and we will respond to them in court."
Phillip Hines, a lawyer
for the the family, told CNN, "an unwritten rule or policy was being
enforced by security when they removed these people."
"They weren't bothering
anybody, they were out of the way, and for them to be thrown out of the
building is just an ignorant and shameful exercise in discriminatory
conduct," Hines said.
The couple was "shamed,
humiliated and embarrassed in front of each other, their children, and
the general public," according to the lawsuit.
The family released a brief statement through its attorney.
"We weren't doing anything wrong, we just wanted to enjoy the view like everyone else," the statement said.
The alleged response to the incident drew criticism from other religious groups.
Bill Donahue, president of the Catholic League, released a statement Wednesday, which read in part:
"Muslims who pray in
public, including in public accommodations, are simply exercising their
constitutional rights. In play are two First Amendment rights: freedom
of speech and freedom of religion. We hope that Hines investigates the
extent to which security guards are expected to censor religious speech.
We wish him, and this innocent Muslim couple, well."
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