Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Third suspect arrested for violent beating of Jewish man in New York’s Times Square

The group allegedly knocked Joseph Borgen to the ground and then punched, kicked, pepper-sprayed and beat him with crutches while making anti-Semitic remarks.

Joseph Borgen
The antisemitic assault on Joseph Borgen in New York City on May 21, 2021. Source: Screenshot.

A third suspect was arrested on Tuesday for the violent assault of a Jewish man near Times Square in late May, reported the New York Post.

Mahmoud Musa, 23, of Staten Island, N.Y., turned himself in to the 7th Precinct on Manhattan’s Lower East Side for his alleged participation in the beating of Joseph Borgen, 29, on May 20. Police said Musa was charged with gang assault and assault as a hate crime.

Two others were previously arrested for the same attack. Waseem Awawdeh, 23, of the Bay Ridge neighborhood of Brooklyn was charged with assault as a hate crime, gang assault, menacing, aggravated harassment as a hate crime and criminal possession of a weapon. Awawdeh reportedly told prosecutors, “If I could do it again, I would do it again. I have no problem doing it again.”

Faisal Elezzi, 25, also of Staten Island, was charged with assault, menacing and aggravated harassment, all as hate crimes.

The group allegedly knocked Borgen to the ground and then punched, kicked, pepper-sprayed and beat him with crutches while making anti-Semitic remarks. Borgen said he was on his way to a pro-Israel rally but never made it there because of the attack.

“I felt a liquid being poured on my face, and at first, I thought I was getting urinated on, but it turned out I was getting maced and pepper-sprayed,” Borgen told the New York Post. “My face was on fire. That pain was worse than the concussion and all this other stuff that followed.”

“The pro-terror flotilla is a ludicrous attempt to undermine President Trump’s successful progress toward lasting peace in the region,” the U.S. treasury secretary said.
“We have a responsibility to confront antisemitism, defend democratic values and ensure every resident feels safe,” said Steven Meiner, mayor of Miami Beach.
The public university stated that the graduate student violated rules that were sent out prior to graduation and that several participants were removed from various ceremonies for carrying different flags, including U.S. and Ukrainian ones.
Rep. Adam Smith, ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, told JNS that “the far-right and the far-left have decided that threats and intimidation are another way to try to either drive people out or make them so scared that they acquiesce.”
Major New York City Jewish leaders boycotted the event, to which JNS was told there was no room for it to report.
Catherine Connolly, who has defended Hamas and accused Israel of “genocide,” said she was worried about her sister Margaret after Israeli forces intercepted activist vessels heading to Gaza.