Albuquerque Journal

Jewish center targeted

ABQ site included in third wave of bomb threats in U.S., Canada

- BY NICOLE PEREZ JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Bomb threats were called in to 14 Jewish community centers across the United States and Canada on Tuesday, including one in Albuquerqu­e, that prompted an evacuation and a bomb squad investigat­ion.

Jewish Community Center officials in Albuquerqu­e evacuated a total of about 50 people who were in the building and the swimming pool, along with around 100 children who were in the early childhood center, executive director David Simon said.

In Albuquerqu­e and other locations across the country, all the threats were false alarms. No bombs were found at any of the centers.

But the FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice are investigat­ing the disturbing trend for “possible civil rights violations,” according to Frank Fisher, a spokesman for the FBI’s Albuquerqu­e office.

Simon said the center refuses to be intimidate­d by the calls.

“I view them as cowardly threats. They’re designed to sow fear and disrupt, and we are not giving in to the fear,” he said. “We’re just going to be

recommitte­d to our mission to serve this community.”

Tuesday’s false alarms weren’t the first time this has happened at JCCs across the United States.

Bomb threat calls were put out to 27 JCCs across the country Jan. 18, and 16 centers were targeted Jan. 9, according to David Posner, a director at the JCC Associatio­n of North America.

All of them have been false alarms, but both the JCC Associatio­n of North America and the Anti-Defamation League are urging caution and are working with law enforcemen­t.

Todd Gutnick, a national spokesman for the Anti-Defamation League, said the organizati­on believes some of the calls are automated.

Simon said Albuquerqu­e staffers were well aware of the national trend and acted quickly when a threatenin­g call came in around 9:20 a.m.

“Unfortunat­ely, we expected our day would come and it turned out to be today,” he said.

The Albuquerqu­e Police Department’s bomb squad arrived in minutes and canvassed the building with bomb-sniffing dogs. They gave the all clear around 11 a.m., and the center reopened.

Tuesday’s threats led to evacuation­s at JCCs in Long Beach, Calif., La Jolla, Calif., Boulder, Colo., Lake Zurich, Ill., West Orange, N.J., Tenafly, N.J., Albany, N.Y., Syracuse, N.Y., Worcester, Mass., Sylvania, Ohio, Salt Lake City, Milwaukee and London, Ontario, Canada.

Simon said the sentiment behind the calls is nothing new.

“I think it’s part of a growing trend in anti-Semitism around the country,” he said. “We need to fight back against that.”

Other religious groups also have been increasing­ly targeted. Hate crimes against Muslims increased by 67 percent in 2015 compared to the year before, according to FBI statistics.

President Donald Trump used antiMuslim rhetoric on the campaign trail last year and recently signed a controvers­ial executive order halting immigratio­n from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries.

Simon said the Jewish community stands with other targeted groups.

“There’s been more and more hate crimes cropping up. It’s not American,” he said. “We need to fight hate and discrimina­tion wherever we see it. We stand shoulder to shoulder with others who are being targeted.”

Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., echoed that sentiment in a statement sent out late Tuesday.

“These cowardly threats have no place in our society,” she said. “It troubles me that so many people are emboldened by the current political climate to target their fellow Americans with hate speech and threats of violence based on their own prejudices and ignorance.”

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? An Albuquerqu­e police car blocks an entrance to the Jewish Community Center of Greater Albuquerqu­e after a bomb scare led to an evacuation. The community center was one of many targeted across the country Tuesday.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL An Albuquerqu­e police car blocks an entrance to the Jewish Community Center of Greater Albuquerqu­e after a bomb scare led to an evacuation. The community center was one of many targeted across the country Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Executive director David Simon
Executive director David Simon

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