Los Angeles Times

Antisemiti­c hate speech roils another city

- By Gregory Yee Times staff writer Ruben Vives contribute­d to this report.

Manhattan Beach police are asking for the public’s help after stickers with antisemiti­c hate speech were put up throughout the city.

The department received calls reporting the stickers on Thursday, police said. Officers and city public works crews started work to remove the items.

Investigat­ors believe the stickers were placed sometime overnight, police said.

“The Manhattan Beach Police Department is seeking the assistance of the community with this investigat­ion in an attempt to identify the person or persons responsibl­e for this disturbing act,” according to a statement by the department.

Anyone with informatio­n or possible home video recordings of the stickers being put up is asked to contact the department’s tip line at (310) 802-5171.

Meanwhile, Pasadena and Beverly Hills police are still investigat­ing fliers filled with antisemiti­c theories that were recently found in driveways and front lawns of several neighborho­ods.

The Beverly Hills Police Department said it had received reports about the leaflets last week and that they were similar to the ones that had been distribute­d last month before the start of Hanukkah.

The flier “contains propaganda-style hate speech related to the COVID pandemic and the Jewish people,” the department said in a statement. More than 200 fliers had been collected.

Beverly Hills Vice Mayor Lili Bosse took to Twitter to express her outrage.

“Once again, words of Jew hatred were dropped on the sidewalks of our city,” she said. “As we have fought for ‘Never Again,’ I am sickened to see once again this despicable act occur in front of our homes.”

In Pasadena, city and police officials said they collected more than 200 similar fliers after residents began reporting them Sunday.

Lt. Anthony Burgess of the Pasadena Police Department said the fliers were enclosed in a plastic bag with pebbles to weigh them down and had been distribute­d overnight in a fourblock area.

“It appears they were thrown out of a car as they were driving by each house,” he said, adding that the department was investigat­ing.

The Pasadena City Council released a statement saying it would stand united against all forms of hate speech.

“The distributi­on of antisemiti­c fliers in Pasadena and other Southern California communitie­s over the weekend is abhorrent and totally antithetic­al to the values of our city and its residents,” the city said in its news release. “Our thoughts are with our residents and all those hurt by these disgusting acts. We know Pasadena residents — of all faiths — will stand together and speak out against hatred in all forms.”

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