The Guardian (USA)

New York police boost patrols after suspected antisemiti­c attacks

- Associated Press

New York City is increasing its police presence in some Brooklyn neighborho­ods with large Jewish population­s after possibly antisemiti­c attacks during the Hanukkah holiday, Mayor Bill de Blasio said after the latest episode happened Friday.

Besides making officers more visible in Borough Park, Crown Heights and Williamsbu­rg, police will boost visits to houses of worship and some other places, the mayor tweeted.

“Antisemiti­sm is an attack on the values of our city and we will confront it head-on,” the Democrat wrote. He went later Friday to Crown Heights and met with some representa­tives of the local Jewish community.

Around the city, police have gotten at least six reports this week – and eight since 13 December – of attacks possibly propelled by anti-Jewish bias.

“It’s something that’s very alarming, and we treat it very seriously,” Rodney Harrison, police chief of detectives, said at a news conference Friday.

The latest incident happened around 12.40am Friday, when a woman slapped three other women in the face and head after encounteri­ng them on a Crown Heights corner, police said. The victims, who range in age from 22 to 31, suffered minor pain, police said.

Tiffany Harris, 30, was arrested on a hate-crime harassment charge.

Her arrest came hours after a hate crime assault arrest in Brooklyn’s Gravesend neighborho­od. There, police said, a woman was hit in the face with a bag by an attacker who made antisemiti­c comments Thursday afternoon. The victim, 34, was with a three-yearold boy.

The suspect in Thursday’s attack, Ayana Logan, 42, and Harris were both awaiting arraignmen­t Friday. It wasn’t clear whether they had lawyers who could comment on the charges, and no working telephone numbers for the suspects could immediatel­y be found.

On Monday, a Miami man was charged with hate-crime assault after police said he made an antisemiti­c remark and attacked a man in midtown Manhattan. The 65-year-old victim was punched and kicked, suffering cuts, police said.

He had been wearing a yarmulke, according to the former state assemblyma­n Dov Hikind, who has founded a group dedicated to combating antisemiti­sm.

Steven Jorge, 28, is being held without bail, and a judge ordered a psychiatri­c exam for him, court records show. A message was left Friday for Jorge’s lawyer.

Governor Andrew Cuomo told a state hate crimes task force to help police investigat­e the attack, calling it “a horrific and cowardly act of antisemiti­sm”.

“It’s even more despicable that it occurred over the holidays,” the Democratic governor said in a statement Wednesday. Hanukkah began Sunday.

The New York police department’s hate crime task force is also investigat­ing some other episodes this week as possibly motivated by antisemiti­sm:

Officers were told that two boys, ages six and seven, were accosted by a group of people while getting off an elevator in a Williamsbu­rg apartment building Monday night, and one of the boys was hit, Harrison said. The attackers fled.

A 25-year-old man told police he was walking on a Crown Heights street early Tuesday when a group of people started yelling antisemiti­c slurs at him and one threw a beverage at him. The suspects fled.

Later Tuesday in Crown Heights, a 56-year-old man said that a group of people approached him, and that one of them punched him, while he was walking. No arrests have been made.

 ??  ?? Orthodox Jewish men pass police guarding a Brooklyn synagogue prior to a funeral for a victim of the shooting inside a Jewish grocery, 11 December. Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP
Orthodox Jewish men pass police guarding a Brooklyn synagogue prior to a funeral for a victim of the shooting inside a Jewish grocery, 11 December. Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP

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