Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

ADL offers $5,000 reward for information leading to arrest of Brooklyn attacker

The assailant hits a Chassidic man in Brooklyn, N.Y., with a piece of broken furniture.

An African-American man is wanted for attacking a Chassidic Jew with a piece of broken furniture in Brooklyn, N.Y., on July 5, 2021. Source: Twitter Screenshot.
An African-American man is wanted for attacking a Chassidic Jew with a piece of broken furniture in Brooklyn, N.Y., on July 5, 2021. Source: Twitter Screenshot.

The Anti-Defamation League New York/New Jersey is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of an African-American man who was seen on video last week assaulting a Jewish man in Brooklyn, N.Y.

According to the New York Police Department’s hate-crimes division, on July 5 at around 11:30 a.m., a 25-year-old man “wearing traditional Jewish garb was punched in the chest by a male who made an anti-Jewish statement. The victim was also struck in the back with a thrown broken piece of furniture.”

In the video, the assailant walks down a street, passes an old dresser left out for garbage pickup, throws a drawer on the sidewalk, breaks off a piece and continues to walk. Moments later, he turns around, starts running and strikes at the Chassidic man walking behind him with it.

In announcing the award, ADL regional director Scott Richman said, “We are alarmed and extremely concerned about this alleged anti-Semitic assault. We are sending an unequivocal message that these hate-motivated acts of violence are unacceptable and will not be tolerated.”

According to recent statistics from the NYPD, anti-Semitic incidents have risen some 60 percent over 2020 with more than 110 acts of Jew-hatred to date.

“I’ve never seen a budget bill not pass once it was on the floor,” a spokesman for state senator Sam Sutton told JNS.
“This fight is far from over. More to come this summer,” Mahmoud Khalil said.
The Israeli firm Gambit Security said that the cyber attack had the hallmarks of prior Iranian attacks.
District leaders ought to be “ashamed of themselves for giving such a dangerous group unfettered access to their schools and students,” Casey Ryan, of Defending Education, told JNS.
“No one stands alone in our city, when one community is targeted by hate, all of Chicago feels the impact,” stated Brandon Johnson, the city mayor.
The public university “inexplicably took no serious action whatsoever” as “Jewish and Israeli students risked physical assault” during the 2024 anti-Israel campus protests.