Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Antisemiti­c fliers appear in 2 cities

The messages were left at San Marino and Pasadena homes as Yom Kippur started.

- By Nathan Solis

Plastic bags containing fliers with antisemiti­c messages were left on driveways and in front of homes in San Marino and Pasadena at the start of the Jewish holiday Yom Kippur on Tuesday night, according to authoritie­s.

A San Marino resident noticed someone placed a flier on their driveway, and they reported the incident to police around 11 p.m. Fliers were left on several driveways throughout the San Gabriel Valley city, but the placement appears to be random and not targeted at any particular groups in the neighborho­od, according to the San Marino Police Department.

The items were placed inside plastic bags with rocks and contained antisemiti­c messages and COVID-19 conspiraci­es. The f liers state that they were “distribute­d randomly without malicious intent,” police said in a Facebook post.

There were no reports of property damage or any other activities stemming from the incident. Police interviewe­d residents and some offered to share surveillan­ce footage from their homes if they are able to spot any suspicious individual­s or vehicles. Detectives will investigat­e the incident, but San Marino was not alone, because fliers were also found in the southern part of Pasadena, according to Lisa Derderian, a city spokespers­on.

The fliers were found Wednesday morning and police said they have documented the addresses where they were left. Police said they will also increase patrols in the area.

“The City of Pasadena takes a zero-tolerance position against all forms of hate speech, which has no place in our city especially on the highest Jewish holiday of the year,” the city of Pasadena said in a written statement. “The distributi­on of [antisemiti­c] fliers goes against the values of our city and its residents. We recognize many are hurt by these disgusting acts and know Pasadena residents stand together and speak out against hatred in all forms.”

Jeffrey Abrams, Los Angeles’ regional director of the Anti-Defamation League, said the group behind these antisemiti­c acts is small but growing.

‘We know who these people are. They target predominan­tly Jewish communitie­s and hide behind the 1st Amendment.’ — Jeffrey Abrams, Anti-Defamation League

“We know who these people are. They target predominan­tly Jewish communitie­s and hide behind the 1st Amendment when they leaflet these neighborho­ods,” Abrams told The Times. “Make no mistake, the purpose is to terrorize those communitie­s.”

While Abrams asked people not to share images of the antisemiti­c fliers on social media, he does encourage the media to report when these episodes take place.

Antisemiti­c fliers were left on the front doors of homes in Beverly Hills in April, the morning after the first Passover Seder.

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