Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Teen charged for shooting Jewish teen multiple times with pellet gun in NJ

“The incident is deeply concerning and continues the pattern of Jews being harassed and targeted simply for being Jewish,” the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey stated.

Police Officer
Police officer. Credit: Blaulicht_Rheinland_NRW_/Pixabay.

A 17-year-old has been arrested and charged after authorities say he targeted a 19-year-old Jewish man with a gel pellet gun in Teaneck, N.J.

Teaneck police responded around 6:10 pm on March 8 to a report that a man had been shot with a gel pellet gun near West Englewood Avenue. The victim, a local resident, told officers that he had been walking when a black sedan approached him, and its occupants asked whether he supported Israel or Palestine.

When the victim did not respond, someone inside the vehicle fired a gel pellet gun, striking him multiple times in the upper torso, per police.

Investigators said the car contained three males. The victim later saw the vehicle nearby, and the suspect allegedly fired additional pellets and shouted at the victim.

Using surveillance footage and license-plate reader technology, detectives identified the vehicle and located it at a residence, where a 17-year-old was taken into custody. Police recovered a gel pellet gun, a water gun and a container of gel pellets from the car.

The suspect faces charges “simple assault, conspiracy, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose and multiple counts of bias intimidation,” according to local outlet News 12.

Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), whose district includes Teaneck, said that “an armed teen targeting Jewish residents in Teaneck isn’t just a bias incident. It’s part of the dangerous rise in antisemitic hate we’re seeing across our country.”

“Jewish families deserve to feel safe in their own communities,” he said. “We must confront antisemitism wherever it appears.”

The Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey thanked the Teaneck Police Department for its “swift response and investigation.”

“The incident is deeply concerning and continues the pattern of Jews being harassed and targeted simply for being Jewish,” the Federation stated.

Authorities have not released the suspect’s name since he is a minor.

CENTCOM stated that the strikes are “in response to Iran’s unwarranted and continued aggression.”
“The graduating student’s display included imagery that many people associate with antisemitism and that caused pain and concern,” a university spokesman told JNS.
“If CAIR does not meet the criteria for designation, it is difficult to understand why specially designated global terrorist sanctions exist,” stated the groups led by the Middle East Forum.
Haji Najibullah, who led Taliban fighters in Afghanistan’s Wardak Province, admitted to helping kidnap a New York Times reporter and supporting attacks that killed three American soldiers.
A unanimous ruling found that kidnapping does not qualify as a “violent felony” under Michigan’s anti-terrorism law, ordering a new trial for Wolverine Watchmen member Joseph Morrison.
“These alleged threats and attempts to terrorize government officials, businesses and the Jewish Federation are anti-American,” the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan stated.