Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Maryland Jewish groups receive nearly $1 million to support crime victims

Gov. Wes Moore said the funds help in “getting convictions, closing cases and restoring trust between our communities and the forces sworn to protect them.”

Police Crime Scene Yellow Tape
Police tape. Credit: Tex Texin/Creative Commons.

Wes Moore, the governor of Maryland, announced late last week that $60.5 million in both federal and state funds would be given as grants to Jewish organizations in Maryland to increase services for those who have been victimized by crime.

Among those funded, the Levindale Hebrew Geriatric Center and Hospital received $161,870; The Associated (Jewish Federation of Baltimore) received $220,670; and the Greater Washington Jewish Coalition Against Domestic Abuse received $464,761. Combined, the funds totaled $847,301.

“In partnership, we are reaffirming our commitment to supporting victims of crime and ensuring that every Marylander has access to the resources they need to heal and seek justice,” Moore said. “When people feel safe and feel like justice will be served, we have a better chance of getting convictions, closing cases, and restoring trust between our communities and the forces sworn to protect them. Today, we take a step toward each of these goals.”

Dorothy Lennig, executive director of the Office of Crime Prevention and Policy, stated that “this competitive process has allowed new organizations to access funding, including breaking down barriers that may have previously existed for newer or smaller service providers, so we are able to expand our reach and help more Marylanders.”

Explaining plans for the funds, Jeanne Yeager, executive director for the Mid-Shore Council on Family Violence, said: “Victims receive short- and long-term support with housing, legal, mental health, transportation and employment, as well as assistance with food, basic needs and other barriers that they face.”

The Iran-backed terror group’s dominance in Lebanon is a “mutual problem” for Jerusalem and Beirut, the Israeli foreign minister said.
The Qatar-owned news organization “should not be treated as an impartial or authoritative arbiter,” Kurt Schwartz, CEO of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis, told JNS.
Of Monday’s shooting in Montreal, in which a policeman and a Jewish civilian were killed, Amichai Chikli said he had warned Canada’s government it was heading down the same path as Australia.
The debriefing of the airman has propelled a debate over whether Tehran has advanced Chinese and Russian capabilities.
“The unhinged rants, dehumanizing rhetoric and irrational antisemitism I was spreading were poisoning my own life and terrifying innocent people,” Lucas Gage wrote for Canary Mission.
The Jewish state’s “success in overcoming national challenges offers practical solutions” to many of the continent’s needs, Haim Taib tells the JNS Policy Conference.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.