The Denver Post

Synagogue got money to boost security – just before attack

- By Julie Watson and Don Thompson

POWAY, CALIF.» A gunman fired his semiautoma­tic rifle at Jewish worshipper­s after walking through a Southern California synagogue’s open front door, a spot that synagogue leaders determined last year needed improved security.

The Chabad of Poway synagogue applied for a federal grant to install gates and moresecure doors to better protect that area. The $150,000 was approved in September but only got awarded in late March.

“Obviously we did not have a chance to start using the funds yet,” Rabbi Simcha Backman told The Associated Press.

Backman, who oversees security grants for the 207 Chabad institutio­ns across California, declined to provide details on the planned security enhancemen­ts or to speculate whether they might have changed the outcome of Saturday’s attack.

The shooter killed a woman and wounded an 8-year-old girl, her uncle and Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, who was leading the service on the last day of Passover, a major Jewish holiday.

Backman said the synagogue north of San Diego is considerin­g asking authoritie­s to allow some of the money be used to hire security guards.

The synagogue doesn’t have guards now. But after a gunman massacred 11 people at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in October, rabbis of California’s Chabad organizati­on, including at the Poway synagogue, began asking members who were trained law enforcemen­t profession­als to carry their weapons at services, Backman said.

The congregati­on also received training from the city of Poway on responding to a gunman, and Goldstein applied for a concealed-carry permit.

On Saturday, an off-duty Border Patrol agent who attends the synagogue fired at the gunman as he fled, hitting his vehicle. The 19-year-old suspect, John T. Earnest, has pleaded not guilty to charges of murder and attempted murder.

The Poway synagogue was built two decades ago with security features such as video surveillan­ce, but it started to beef up its measures in 2010. The synagogue received and spent money from a $75,000 grant that records show was earmarked for a security assessment, 16 cameras, fencing and lighting. The synagogue applied for another grant in May 2018 to upgrade those cameras and add other enhancemen­ts. It was approved in September, but the funds weren’t released until March 22.

Backman said it often takes at least a year to complete the paperwork and necessary approvals.

The security grant program is funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and administer­ed in California by the state Office of Emergency Services.

While the synagogue got approval in September, a workshop on the required documents was not held until the end of October and the synagogue submitted its first documents in early February, Office of Emergency Services spokesman Brad Alexander said. The state then requested additional informatio­n before awarding the money.

“It seems like a long time from the time they granted to the authorizat­ion,” said Republican state Sen. Brian Jones, whose district includes the synagogue.

 ?? Mario Tama, Getty Images ?? Hannah Kaye, daughter of shooting victim Lori Gilbert Kaye, mourns at her mother’s grave during a service Monday in San Diego.
Mario Tama, Getty Images Hannah Kaye, daughter of shooting victim Lori Gilbert Kaye, mourns at her mother’s grave during a service Monday in San Diego.

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