Law enforcement condemns letters threatening Muslims

Los Angeles Police Deputy Chief Michael Downing talks with Sayed Moustafa al-Qazwini, founding Imam of the Islamic Educational Center of Orange County at a news conference at the Islamic Center of Southern California in Los Angeles Monday, Nov. 28, 2016. Government officials have condemned a hate-filled letter received by several California mosques that said Muslims would be exterminated by President-elect Donald Trump. Downing said that Los Angeles police are investigating two letters received by mosques in the city as a hate incident, but not a crime at this point. (AP Photo/Nick Ut) (The Associated Press)

Salam Al-Marayati, president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, speaks as Los Angeles Police Deputy Chief Michael Downing listens, left, during a news conference at the Islamic Center of Southern California in Los Angeles, Monday, Nov. 28, 2016. Government officials have condemned a hate-filled letter received by several California mosques that said Muslims would be exterminated by President-elect Donald Trump. Downing said that Los Angeles police are investigating two letters received by mosques in the city as a hate incident, but not a crime at this point. (AP Photo/Nick Ut) (The Associated Press)

Los Angeles Police Deputy Chief Michael Downing speaks during a news conference at the Islamic Center of Southern California in Los Angeles, Monday, Nov. 28, 2016. Government officials have condemned a hate-filled letter received by several California mosques that said Muslims would be exterminated by President-elect Donald Trump. Downing said that Los Angeles police are investigating two letters received by mosques in the city as a hate incident, but not a crime at this point. (AP Photo/Nick Ut) (The Associated Press)

Law enforcement officials have condemned a hate-filled letter received by several California mosques that said Muslims would be exterminated by President-elect Donald Trump.

Deputy Chief Michael Downing said Monday that Los Angeles police are investigating two letters received by mosques in the city as a hate incident, but not a crime at this point.

Photocopies of a handwritten letter received by four mosques in Southern California and one in San Jose were addressed to "the children of satan." The letter referred to Trump as the "new sheriff in town" and said he would do to Muslims what Hitler did to Jews.

Stephen Woolery of the FBI says the letters are awful, intimidating and harassing. But the FBI is not investigating at this point because they don't pose a specific threat.