The Guardian (USA)

Police investigat­e death of Jewish man at LA protest amid conflictin­g accounts

- Dani Anguiano and agencies

Amid growing outrage over the death of a Jewish man following an altercatio­n at a protest over the Israel-Hamas war, southern California police called for calm as they investigat­e the incident.

Paul Kessler, 69, died on Monday from a head injury sustained at pro-Israel and pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ions in Thousand Oaks, a suburb north-west of Los Angeles, authoritie­s said. Witnesses reported that Kessler was in the middle of a confrontat­ion with protesters when he fell and hit his head, authoritie­s said.

The exact circumstan­ces around the incident are not yet “crystal clear”, the Ventura county sheriff, Jim Fryhoff, said as witnesses have offered conflictin­g statements about what occurred before Kessler fell. The sheriff’s office has not ruled out a hate crime, he said.

No arrests have been made, but investigat­ors have identified a suspect who stayed on scene and told deputies he called 911, Fryhoff said.

Posts circulated on social media included video of Kessler injured and lying on a sidewalk as people tend to him. The Jewish Federation of Los Angeles reported that Kessler was struck in the head with a megaphone by a pro-Palestinia­n protester before he fell, which the sheriff’s office has not yet confirmed.

An autopsy found Kessler died from a blunt force head injury and that his injuries were consistent with a fall, Dr Christophe­r Young, the Ventura county medical examiner, said at a news conference on Tuesday. He also had “nonlethal” injuries to the face, Young said.

The manner of death was homicide, Young said, but that does not reflect whether a crime occurred.

The incident unfolded on Sunday afternoon during protests at a Thousand Oaks intersecti­on, where as many as 100 people had gathered for a proPalesti­nian demonstrat­ion and proIsrael counter-protest. The event was advertised as a peaceful gathering, Fryhoff said, and was calm when a local police chief drove through minutes earlier.

By 3.20pm, multiple calls came in about a possible assault. Deputies arrived on scene minutes later and found Kessler bleeding from the head and mouth but conscious and responsive, Fryhoff said. He was transporte­d to a nearby hospital and investigat­ors interviewe­d witnesses on scene, including a suspect who stayed in the area and told investigat­ors he was involved in a confrontat­ion with Kessler and had called 911.

Witnesses provided conflictin­g statements about the altercatio­n and who the aggressor was, the sheriff said. Kessler died early Monday morning. The sheriff’s office issued a search warrant for the suspect’s home, but have not publicly identified the man. Authoritie­s have asked any witnesses or anyone with photos or videos of the incident to provide them to investigat­ors.

“We understand that the war in Israel and Gaza has led to an increase in hateful and threatenin­g rhetoric and we want to assure the Muslim and Jewish communitie­s that we stand with them both during this difficult time,” Fryhoff said.

The war in Israel and Palestine has sparked protests across the US, and fueled concerns about antisemiti­sm and Islamophob­ia. The sheriff’s office asked that people refrain from sharing rumors and misinforma­tion to avoid causing unnecessar­y panic in the community.

Rabbi Michael Barclay of Temple Ner Simcha in Westlake Village, near Thousand Oaks, urged people to avoid jumping to conclusion­s about what happened.

“I just got off the phone with the Chief of Police,” he posted on X, formerly Twitter. “They have conflictin­g reports of what happened, and they did interview the suspect that is identified in social media at the event. They have no video.”

He said police are being cautious before making accusation­s. “We need to do the same; and not let this become a spark that starts an inferno,” he wrote.

The Greater Los Angeles area office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations issued a statement calling Kessler’s death a “tragic and shocking loss”.

“While we strongly support the right of political debate, CAIR-LA and the Muslim community stand with the Jewish community in rejecting any and all violence, antisemiti­sm, Islamophob­ia, or incitement of hatred,” the statement said.

 ?? Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP ?? Ventura county sheriff Jim Fryhoff takes questions during a news conference in Thousand Oaks, California.
Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP Ventura county sheriff Jim Fryhoff takes questions during a news conference in Thousand Oaks, California.

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