Los Angeles Times

Antisemiti­c fliers left at homes on first day of Hanukkah

Beverly Hills police investigat­ing papers placed in frontyards.

- By Connor Sheets

As the sun rose Sunday, the first day of Hanukkah, a Beverly Hills man awoke to find an antisemiti­c flier in his frontyard.

He was one of several people who found the onepage documents in their frontyards Sunday morning, the Beverly Hills Police Department said in a statement shared on social media.

The department said it is investigat­ing the fliers, which included “propaganda style hate speech related to the COVID pandemic and the Jewish people.”

“Police surveyed the area and discovered that the fliers, enclosed in plastic bags containing rice (for weight), were distribute­d to homes in several blocks in the northeast area of the city,” the statement said.

Police officers and city public works employees canvassed the neighborho­od and collected fliers from people’s yards Sunday morning.

“Police are continuing to investigat­e and attempt to identify the persons responsibl­e for this disturbing act,” the department said in the Sunday statement.

The incident is only the latest antisemiti­c act in the Los Angeles area.

In May, several people attacked diners outside of a Westside sushi restaurant, shouting anti-Israel slogans and flying a Palestinia­n flag before escalating to punching and kicking.

Two separate reports of antisemiti­c graffiti at West Hollywood businesses were made the week of New Year’s Day 2020.

In California, reports of antisemiti­c incidents have risen by 40% over the last five years, Jeffrey Abrams, regional director of the AntiDefama­tion League Los Angeles, said after the May attack.

Brian Levin, executive director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, has said that in 2019, Jewish people were the “top target” of hate crimes in Los Angeles, Chicago and New York.

The Beverly Hills Police Department did not immediatel­y respond to requests for additional comment Sunday afternoon.

The department encouraged anyone who has informatio­n about Sunday’s incident to call police at (310) 550-4951.

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