The Jerusalem Post

De Blasio orders increased police in NY Jewish neighborho­ods

- • Jerusalem Post Staff and JTA

In response to a week full of antisemiti­c attacks, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Friday that an increased police presence would be deployed in the Borough Park, Crown Heights and Williamsbu­rg neighborho­ods of Brooklyn.

There will also be an increase in police visits to synagogues and “other critical areas in the community,” tweeted de Blasio.

“Hate doesn’t have a home in our city,” he wrote. “Anyone who terrorizes our Jewish community WILL face justice.”

In the latest incident, police arrested a woman Friday morning who said she slapped three other women between the ages of 22 to 31 because she thought the women were Jewish, NYPD Chief of Detectives Rodney Harrison told reporters on Friday. The incident happened just past midnight in Crown Heights.

On Thursday, a 34-year-old Jewish woman was slapped in the face with a shopping bag by a 42-year-old woman in the Gravesend neighborho­od of Brooklyn. The 42-year-old used explicit language that targeted the Jewish woman, Harrison said Friday. The victim was with her 3-year-old child when the attack happened. The alleged perpetrato­r was also charged with committing a hate crime, according to the detective chief.

“That Jews cannot walk the streets of New York City without the fear of being attacked is outrageous,” the American Jewish Committee tweeted on Friday. “We need to wake the world up to rising antisemiti­sm.”

Harrison added that police are investigat­ing several possible antisemiti­c attacks that have occurred throughout New York City since December 13.

A Jewish man wearing a kippah was physically and

verbally assaulted in Manhattan in one of three assaults against Jews in New York in just over a 24-hour period last week.

A Miami man was arrested and charged with assault as a hate crime for an attack late Monday morning about two blocks from Grand Central Terminal, New York Police Sgt. Lee Jones told CNN.

The alleged assailant, 28-yearold Steven Jorge, reportedly punched the 65-year-old victim in the face, knocking him to the ground, and then kicked him repeatedly. He also allegedly yelled “F*** you, Jew” at the victim, who was looking at his cellphone when the attack began, CBS New York reported.

The attack was one of three assaults against Jews in New York in 24 hours, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

On Tuesday afternoon, a Jewish man was assaulted by a group of teenagers in the Brooklyn neighborho­od of Crown Heights. The teens followed the victim down the street, with one hitting him in the head and knocking him to the ground.

A police report was filed over the incident and the case was referred to the Hate Crimes Task Force, according to the local news website Crownheigh­ts. info. Surveillan­ce cameras captured the incident, according to the site.

On Saturday night, The Jewish Agency released a statement, saying that “the rapid-fire pace of antisemiti­c incidents in New York is most certainly alarming. The Jewish Agency is closely monitoring the situation and commends Mayor de Blasio for his swift action in tackling this scourge of hatred. Chairman [Isaac] Herzog will be conducting special consultati­ons in this regard with various bodies, including JFNA [the Jewish Federation­s of North America] and UJA-Federation of New York.”

Following the three attacks

on Monday and Tuesday, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that the State Police hate crimes task force would help the NYPD in its investigat­ions.

“I’ve said it before and I will say it again: We have absolutely zero tolerance for bigotry and hate, and we will continue to call it out whenever and wherever it rears its ugly head,” Cuomo said in a statement.

New York Councilman Chaim Deutsch tweeted: “It’s only the fifth night of Chanukah, but we’ve just had our sixth hate crime of the holiday.”

The uptick in antisemiti­c crimes came less than two weeks after the targeted attack and shootout at a kosher deli in Jersey City that left several dead, including a police officer. •

 ?? (Gretchen Ertl/Reuters) ?? BILL DE BLASIO
(Gretchen Ertl/Reuters) BILL DE BLASIO

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