Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

NYPD: Nearly 300 percent increase in anti-Semitic crimes in January from 2021

A total of 15 hate crimes targeting Jewish people were reported—a 275 percent increase compared to the four incidents the year before.

An New York City Police Department cruiser. Credit: Marco Curaba/Shutterstock.
An New York City Police Department cruiser. Credit: Marco Curaba/Shutterstock.

Anti-Semitic crimes in New York City were nearly 300 percent higher in January when compared to the same month in previous years, according to NYPD statistics reported by Fox News.

A total of 15 hate crimes targeting Jewish people were reported in January—a 275 percent increase compared to the four incidents in January 2021, stated the report.

The number of incidents continues to rise in February with the swastika vandalism of yeshivah school buses and an attack on a Jewish man, which both took place on Jan. 4 in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn. The NYPD Hate Crime Task Force said it is investigating the separate attacks.

“The Jewish community is on the extreme edge and this violence has got to stop,” said Scott Richman, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League of New York and New Jersey, on Sunday. “It is becoming normalized, and we simply cannot accept that as the state of affairs.”

The ADL is offering a $7,500 reward for any information that leads to an arrest and the conviction of those responsible for the two crimes on Friday. A second assault against a visibly Jewish person reportedly took place also in the same area on Friday but few details are known about the attack, according to the ADL.

In 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic, 116 complaints about hate crimes against Jews were reported, and of the 93 people arrested for hate crimes that year, 25 of them allegedly targeted Jewish people, the NYPD statistics also revealed.

In comparison, 242 complaints involving hate crimes against Jewish people were recorded in 2019. Of the 133 people arrested for hate crimes that year, 47 allegedly committed them against Jews.

“Since the fall of the Assad regime, President Ahmed Al-Sharaa and the new Syrian government have demonstrated continued commitment to counterterrorism operations within Syria,” according to Sens. Jeanne Shaheen and Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Joe Wilson.
“This is the reality of being Jewish under the mayoral control of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani,” said Moshe Spern of United Jewish Teachers. “It’s open city on attacking the Jews.”
Each of the students who attended “had multiple personal anecdotes of why antisemitism is real, why they’re looking for this kind of training to help them on campus,” Richard Priem, the nonprofit’s CEO, told JNS.
The progressive lawmaker joined Sen. Bernie Sanders, Rep. Rashida Tlaib and Rep. Pramila Jayapal in endorsing Abdul El-Sayed, who has accused Israel of “genocide.”
“These cannot become just another set of statistics,” Rick Chavez Zbur, a member of the state Assembly, told JNS. “They must serve as a call to action.”
The move, hailed by Tzohar as a breakthrough for transparency and competition, was put on hold after the Chief Rabbinate Council said it had not approved the decision.