Abu Hatim al-Razi: Truthful, and he was the imam of the Shia mosque and their judge
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: Trustworthy, but he leans towards Shi'ism
Ahmad ibn Shuayb al-Nasa'i: Trustworthy
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Jili: Trustworthy and reliable
Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub al-Jawzajani: Deviating from the right path
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Trustworthy, accused of Shi'ism, and once: The group argued with his narrations, and nothing he narrated in Sahih supports his innovation
al-Daraqutni: In the questions of Abu Abd al-Rahman al-Salami, he said: Trustworthy, except that he was an extremist Rafidi
al-Dhahabi: Trustworthy, but he was a Shiite narrator and the imam of their mosque in Kufa
Shuba ibn al-Hajjaj: He was a Rafidi
Yahya ibn Ma'in: An excessive Shiite