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British Student Found Guilty Over Violent Neo-Nazi and Terror Ties

An A-level student who was photographed doing Nazi salutes faces prison after being found guilty of downloading and sharing terrorism documents – including instructions on how to make weapons.

Malakai Wheeler, of Swindon, Wiltshire, was convicted by a jury at Winchester Crown Court of six charges, including possessing copies of the Terrorist Handbook, the Anarchist’s Handbook and a document called Homemade Detonators.

He was also convicted of sharing 92 documents and 35 images in a chatroom, as well as two other charges of sharing instructions for the use of items that could be used to perform acts of terrorism, including smoke grenades.

The 18-year-old told the court he had an interest in national socialism as well as anti-Zionism and admitted using a Nazi swastika as part of his profile image on the social media platform Telegram.

He told the court he downloaded the documents because he wanted to create an archive of items he believed would be deleted altogether from Telegram and the internet.

Explaining why he downloaded instructions on how to make weapons, he said they could have been useful in the case of “social disorder”.

He said: “Weapons could be useful if there was a serious emergency. Covid showed things could come out of the blue. It could be an economic problem or a foreign invasion – things can just pop out of nowhere.”

Wheeler also said he accessed a file called 100 Deadly Skills because he felt they could have been useful – with their descriptions of techniques to escape from a hotel or “stop yourself from drowning if you were tied up in the water”.

He said he read one of the documents, Allied Sabotage Devices, because of a “historical interest” in the Second World War and found it “mildly interesting”.

He also admitted downloading a file called Werewolves Of The Third Reich, a reference to a division of the SS in the war.

And he accepted being photographed in a skull mask and doing a Nazi salute.

Describing his links to national socialism, he said: “I have an interest and sympathy with some of it but not all of it.”

He denied being a white supremacist.

Wheeler said he accessed videos from the terrorist group calling itself Islamic State, which showed people being killed, out of “morbid curiosity”, adding: “It’s not something you see in every day life.”

Judge Jane Miller KC adjourned the case for a pre-sentence report to be prepared on the defendant and remanded him in custody until November 3, when he will be sentenced.

She told Wheeler: “I am afraid this will be a custodial sentence although you were 16 when you committed these offences.”

Detective Chief Superintendent James Dunkerley, head of Counter Terrorism Policing North East, said: “Although only 16 at the time of his arrest, Wheeler was deeply entrenched in a Telegram chat group committed to extreme right-wing ideology.

“He was not simply curious, or a passive observer within the group. He clearly shared the same mindset as other members and was very active when it came to promoting racist and antisemitic views and propaganda.

“It is important young people recognise the potential impact of their online activity, before they cross a line into criminality, or engage in harmful or dangerous behaviours.”

University of Pennsylvania Persists with Antisemitic Literary Festival Amidst Public Controversy

The University of Pennsylvania is preparing to host an event that will feature a gamut of anti-Zionist activists who have promoted antisemitic tropes and called for violence against Israel.

Set to take place on Sept. 22-24, the “Palestine Writes Literature Festival” is sponsored by the university’s Wolf Humanities Center — which is described on its social media as “Penn’s gateway to the humanities, where the public and academy celebrate their common stake in thinking the arts” — and Department of Cinema and Media Studies.

On Tuesday, Middle East experts and nonprofit leaders told The Algemeiner that the event is an “Israel hate fest” and noted that City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate Center professor Marc Lamont Hill, a former associate of Louis Farrakhan who has accused Israeli police of training American officers to kill Black people, will be speaking there.

“Hill in particular, is a longtime advocate of violence against Israel and staunch Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions [BDS] supporter who was fired from CNN after a 2018 speech in which he called for the destruction of the Jewish state,” said Asaf Romirowsky, executive director of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa and Scholars for Peace in the Middle East. “Once again, we are seeing how propaganda is masqueraded as ‘scholarship.’ UPenn should take a very careful look at where it draws the lines between free speech and hate speech, especially from individuals who have a track record of racism and antisemitism.”

Other speakers listed on the event’s itinerary have also been described as antisemitic — including Islamic University of Gaza professor Refaat Alareer, who said in 2018, “Are most Jews evil? Of course, they are.” Another listed speaker, Palestinian researcher Salman Abu Sitta, previously said during an interview that “Jews were hated in Europe because they played a role in the destruction of the economy in some of the countries, so they would hate them.”

Roger Waters, the former Pink Floyd frontman, is also a scheduled speaker. In recent years he has made comments about “Jewish power” and compared Israel to Nazi Germany. In May, during a concert held in Berlin, he performed in what looked like a Nazi SS officer uniform. A projection that played during the concert also compared Holocaust victim Anne Frank to Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh — who was accidentally shot and killed last year while covering an Israeli military raid in the West Bank — and the show was deemed as “deeply offensive to Jewish people.”

Additionally, the event’s executive director, Susan Abulhawa, has accused Israel of committing “a dozen kristallnachts [sic],” referring to the infamous pogrom carried out against Jews in Nazi Germany in November 1938. Abulhawa’s viewpoints are so controversial that a sponsor of an Australian festival she was scheduled to participate in pulled its support.

“The Palestine Writes Festival, scheduled to take place at UPenn, purports to be a celebration of Palestinian art and literature but features speakers known for their antisemitic and anti-Israel rhetoric,” Roz Rothstein, co-founder and CEO of the Israel education nonprofit StandWithUs, told The Algemeiner. “To make matters worse, the event is scheduled to begin just hours before Shabbat and end just hours before Yom Kippur, the holiest day in Judaism.”

Rothstein added, “Celebrating one group should never involve promoting hate against another group. The UPenn administration has a responsibility to communicate that and support its Jewish students by distancing itself from the conference and condemning the speaker’s bigoted rhetoric.”

The University of Pennsylvania responded to the criticism on Tuesday, issuing a statement to The Algemeiner signed by school president M. Elizabeth Magill, provost John L. Jackson, and dean of the School of Arts and Sciences Steven J. Fluharty.

“We unequivocally — and emphatically — condemn antisemitism as antithetical to our institutional values,” the statement said. “As a university, we also fiercely support the free exchange of ideas as central to our educational mission. This includes the expression of views that are controversial and even those that are incompatible with our institutional values.”

The high-level administrators added, “This public event is not organized by the university.”

Following the University of Pennsylvania’s statement, StopAntisemitism, a nonprofit organization that tracks antisemitic incidents and hate crimes around the world, accused the officials of countenancing “Jew hatred” and called their response “pathetic.”

“Penn comes out with a statement condemning antisemitism but allowing it to fester on their campus under the guise of ‘academic freedom,'” the group tweeted.

News of the festival comes amid a nationwide surge in antisemitic incidents on college campuses across the US — a problem that has been tracked by several nonprofits. Groups such as the Anti-Defamation League and the AMCHA Initiative have monitored a significant increase in displays of both traditional antisemitism — discrimination against Jews based on religion or race — and anti-Zionism targeting Jewish students over their support for Israel.

The Algemeiner has previously reported on the surge in antisemitism across American college campuses. Just last week, a student and anti-Israel activist at Harvard University interrupted a convocation ceremony held by the school, shouting at Harvard College Dean Rakesh Khurana, “Here’s the real truth — Harvard supports, upholds, and invests in Israeli apartheid, and the oppression of Palestinians!”

Findings of a new survey — conducted by market research firm Ipsos and released on Friday by the World Jewish Congress and Jewish on Campus, a nonprofit organization — reported that 57 percent of Jewish students have witnessed or experienced an act of antisemitism either on campus or in the general public and that a striking 84 percent fear that antisemitism in the US poses a threat to the country.

Miami Jewish School Evacuated Over Bomb Threat

The Scheck Hillel Community School is evacuated due to reports of an “explosive alert,” Miami-Dade Fire Rescue officials tell Local 10 News.

Officials say it’s possible that it was a swatting incident, but they have not yet ruled out other possibilities.

Parents tell 10 News that students were moved to the school field after hearing a bang.

The Ynet news site reports that some children of Israeli consulate workers attend the Jewish school.

Ohio Political Party Promotes Antisemitic Conspiracies During Town Meeting

Jewish groups have denounced a presentation of antisemitic conspiracy theories at the most recent meeting of a Cincinnati-area tea party group.

The West Chester Tea Party hosted Harald Zieger, a Miami Township resident, who claimed without evidence that Jewish people control the economy, media and government, an antisemitic conspiracy theory that dates back to the 19th century and draws upon harmful stereotypes. Zieger gave his presentation to roughly 20 people assembled, according to a video of the speech reviewed by The Enquirer.

It's not clear who the members of the West Chester Tea Party are. The Enquirer called and emailed Charis Peterson, who introduced Zieger at the meeting and distributes the organization's newsletter, on Tuesday but did not receive a response prior to this article's publication.

The tea party group in West Chester, a suburban township of 64,901, formed shortly after the Cincinnati Tea Party in 2009. The group describes itself as a nonpartisan organization of private citizens who value limited government, fiscal responsibility and the free market. The group has held several candidate forums since its founding and received some media attention for a protest it organized in favor of budget cuts in 2011.

More recently the organization has also made numerous antisemitic posts on its Facebook page.

Zieger, without evidence, described a vast conspiracy involving the government, investing firms and social media and pharmaceutical companies. He cited "The International Jew," a series of antisemitic articles written by Henry Ford in the 1920s.

In a newsletter sent after the event, the West Chester Tea Party referred to "fake Jews" participating in human trafficking and child sacrifice, another conspiracy theory.

The meeting was held at St. Gertrude the Great Church in West Chester, which is not a part of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. According to the church's website, it rejects Vatican II and requires female parishioners to wear head coverings and "modest dresses or skirts" rather than pants.

The antisemitic presentation does not appear to be out of place for the organization, whose Facebook page includes posts about antisemitic conspiracy theories along with claims without evidence about climate change, the COVID-19 vaccines and soy in food leading to more transgender people.

One post refers to the Jewish people as the "synagogue of Satan." Another mentions the Rothschild family and implies a global conspiracy. Multiple posts reference a conspiracy theory about "fake Jews."

The West Chester Tea Party also has a Gab account, where they've shared similar content.

State Rep. Sara Carruthers a Hamilton Republican who represents part of Butler County, disavowed the presentation in a statement posted on Wednesday. She said Zieger's words "seek to normalize the dehumanization of our Jewish brothers and sisters, which is unacceptable."

"There is a broad spectrum of acceptable discourse in political debate. Still, we – as Republicans and community leader – condemn those who engage in antisemitism under the guise of legitimate political activity. We disavow these words, and they do not speak for us," she said in the statement.

Ohio Police Arrest Man for Distributing Hate Flyers

The Sandusky Police Department arrested a man Wednesday for passing out flyers that contained anti-Jewish, anti-homosexual and anti-Black messages.

According to an official with the Sandusky Police Department, the department became aware of the flyers after people in the community contacted them saying they or their neighbors might be targets of hate crimes.

The department identified Austin Rogers as a lead suspect. Detectives made contact with Rogers Wednesday and immediately noted flyers in a shoebox that matched the flyers distributed as well as a swastika flag in his apartment and a photo of Adolf Hitler.

Rogers was arrested, booked into the Erie County Jail and charged with ethnic intimidation, aggravated menacing and littering.

Violent Member of the 'Goyim Defense League' (GDL) Arrested for Criminal Mischief in Florida

Jason_Brown_Arrested_Florida_GDL

Jason Brown

UPDATE September 21, 2023: Two more Neo-Nazi demonstrators who are accused of hanging antisemitic banners over I-4 in Orlando were arrested, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement said Wednesday. 

Ronald Murray, 41, and Amanda Rains, 36, were arrested along with two others after the group hung antisemitic hate banners along the Darryl Carter Parkway Bridge in Orlando, the FDLE said. StopAntisemitism shared an image of the duo on Twitter; more here.

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UPDATE September 18, 2023: A second person accused of displaying antisemitic banners off a bridge in Orlando has been arrested, this time in Alachua County.

Alachua County Sheriff’s deputies arrested Anthony Altick, 36, on a warrant from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. He is accused of violating a law signed this year making it illegal to display or project images onto a building, structure, or property without permission; more here.

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Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) agents, with the assistance of the Florida Highway Patrol (FHP), arrested Jason Brown, 48, Cape Canaveral, for hanging swastikas and other antisemitic banners along the Daryl Carter Parkway Bridge in Orlando. There are currently three outstanding arrest warrants for additional demonstrators who live out of state and whose actions were in violation of newly enacted state law. Earlier this year, Governor Ron DeSantis signed House Bill 269, which includes provisions that prohibit individuals from displaying or projecting images onto a building, structure, or property without permission.

StopAntisemitism shared the news of Jason Brown with users on Twitter. Brown is an active member of the antisemitic group, the ‘Goyim Defense League.” He is a serial criminal which landed him a spot on the Jewish advocacy’s group, ‘Antisemite of the Week.”

“We want to thank Governor DeSantis for his support of law enforcement and for the signing of HB 269, giving us the tools to arrest this hate-filled radical,” said FDLE Commissioner Mark Glass. “This activity will not be tolerated in the greatest state in the country, Florida.”

“Florida is a law-and-order state. Today’s arrest demonstrates Florida’s commitment to protecting residents from attention-seeking extremists,” said Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles Executive Director Dave Kerner. “On behalf of Colonel Gary L. Howze, II, and the nearly 2,000 FHP State Troopers who enforce our state law 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, thank you Governor DeSantis, for working to rid this state of intimidation, vitriol and hate directed towards people of faith, and for empowering law enforcement to do the same.”

On June 10, the suspects placed banners along a fence without receiving written permission, which is a violation of state law. The banners included swastika flags and racist messages that hung directly over I-4. The arrested suspect claims to be a member of “Order of the Black Sun” an antisemitic, extremist group. 

The suspect will be charged with Criminal Mischief. 

Maine City Council Zoom Gathering Marred by Antisemitic Disruptions

The Hallowell City Council meeting on Sept. 11, which began with a minute of silence in remembrance of the victims of the 9/11 attacks, was tainted by antisemitic, homophobic and racist comments spouted by individuals who joined in remotely.

At around 6:05 p.m., after the meeting had started, a person in attendance via Zoom requested to speak during the time designated for residents to offer comments about issues not listed on the agenda. He then unleashed a diatribe, spewing conspiracy theories about the 9/11 attacks and antisemitic comments.

Officials muted and removed the person from the meeting immediately only for another person on the call to join in, shouting racist slurs and then hurling expletives at ex-mayor and former state Rep. Charlotte Warren, who was also in attendance.

Both individuals were using fake names while in the meeting. Following the commotion that went on for about a minute, officials shut down the remote meeting and decided to adjourn it indefinitely.

“It was absolutely disgusting,” said City Manager Gary Lamb. “There is no call for it in this country, in this state or in this city.”

The fact that Warren was called out by name suggested that the perpetrators could be Hallowell residents, but nothing concrete is known yet, said Lamb.

Hallowell police Chief Chris Lewis said the incident seemed similar to what other municipalities, including South Portland and Biddeford, have experienced in the recent past.

“My gut feeling is it’s not a targeted incident. It’s just an ugly act with the purpose of disrupting the municipal process by attacking people’s feelings and emotions, unfortunately,” said Lewis, adding that his department will be contacting the other targeted municipalities to compare notes and discuss the incidents.

The police department has sent a notification to Zoom to add the video recording of the meeting as a form of evidence and seek assistance on how to proceed further. Police are also working to track down the IP addresses of the perpetrators.

Other city councils have been dealing with similar incidents of so-called Zoom bombing, where people join remotely under fake names and spew hate speech toward officials. Just last week, during a City Council meeting in Portland, Councilors Andrew Zarro and April Fournier were similarly targeted.

The rise of such incidents is part of a larger trend transpiring in Maine, with hate groups becoming more active and hate speech being dished out under the garb of free speech.

Last month, Augusta witnessed a congregation of neo-Nazis at the steps of the State House and outside the governor’s residence. Earlier this year, in April, two dozen men walked in Portland, clad in uniforms, giving Nazi salutes and shouting racist and homophobic slurs.

Hate crimes, too, have increased. According to FBI data, Maine recorded 83 hate crimes in 2020 and 75 such incidents in 2021; three times more than in 2019.

When asked whether incidents like these will discourage remote meetings, Lamb added that the council is not planning on curbing accessibility for residents because of a few rotten apples.

Instead, there will be changes made to the process of participation, like adding a remote waiting room before joining in on meetings. Residents might also be asked to request meeting invitations via email, giving officials a chance to confirm their identities before allowing them to join.

The investigation into the incident is ongoing.

“If anyone has any knowledge of who interrupted the City Council meeting, they should call the Hallowell Police Department,” urged Lamb.

Promotion of Antisemitic Conspiracy Film Sparks Outrage in Colorado Town

People in several Arapahoe County neighborhoods discovered plastic bags in their driveways Saturday weighted down with rocks and containing flyers for a white supremacist antisemitic film billed as a documentary.

Seven people reported the flyers to the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office, but deputies concluded no crime was committed because the distribution of the flyers is protected by the First Amendment.

The sandwich bags were apparently tossed from a passing vehicle in multiple neighborhoods.

Attorney Jeff Wolf said his wife found a flyer in the driveway at their home. He said that although he understands legally why it’s not considered a hate crime, the aim of those who spread the flyers is “to sow the seeds of antisemitic hate.”

“It's also designed to harass anyone who is Jewish in our communities against living there because this is the hate they're going to see there,” Wolf said.

Wolf said he has experienced antisemitism throughout his life, from someone burning a swastika into his lawn when he was a kid to someone spray-painting the symbol on his parents’ home. He said he sees the flyers in the same vein and that he refuses to cower to the attacks.

“It's supposed to design fear,” he said. “But if you want to design fear in the Jewish community that I'm a part of, maybe don't do it in the middle of the night like a coward.”

New Jersey High Schooler Arrested for Antisemitic Threats Against Principal on Social Media

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ – A 16-year-old male is facing charges in connection with antisemitic threats made toward a school administrator on the New Brunswick Public School System’s Instagram page.

The juvenile has been taken into custody and has been charged with acts of juvenile delinquency for the offenses, which, if committed by an adult, would constitute false public alarm, terroristic threats and bias intimidation, according to a press release from Middlesex County Prosecutor Yolanda Ciccone and Director Anthony Caputo of the New Brunswick Police Department.

According to the press release, the New Brunswick Police Department on Sept. 7 received a report detailing the “violent and antisemitic threats.”

Following an investigation by Officer Jose C. Gomez of the New Brunswick Police Department, it was determined the messages were sent from a residence in New Brunswick. 

As a result of a continuing investigation, the juvenile was identified and taken into custody on Sept. 8, police said.

On Monday, Sept. 11, a Family Court Judge during a hearing in New Brunswick ordered the juvenile to remain in custody at the Juvenile Detention Center.

A spokesperson for the school district did not immediately respond to TAPinto New Brunswick's email seeking comment.

Police said the investigation into the incident is continuing.

The police are asking anyone with information to call Gomez at 732-745-5222.

'Goyim Defense League' (GDL) Flyers Continue to Surface in San Diego

Neighbors in a Del Cerro community awoke again Monday to find antisemitic flyers littering their street. This time? The flyers promoted misinformation about 9/11.

KPBS is not sharing the messages on the flyers. The Del Cerro area and nearby communities have seen a rise in recent months of people dropping off antisemitic flyers near homes or on cars.

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - has attributed the antisemitic flyers to the Goyim Defense League (GDL). The league travels the country distributing these hateful flyers targeted Jewish communities. The group is hounding San Diego residents due to the recent address by Councilmember Raul Campillo.

"We’re disgusted — it’s really gross and on top of that everything that they’re saying is lies," said San Diego City Councilmember Raul Campillo who represents the community.

Campillo represents the area and held a news conference with Jewish faith leaders last week addressing the issue. He said the ‘"cowardly" actions only have him doubling down on a proposal to increase penalties for actions like these and "hold people accountable." People can be cited with littering, but Campillo is proposing a new misdemeanor charge for hate-littering that could see penalties of up to a year in jail and restitution.

"Obviously that isn't going to stop every bad person from doing every bad they can — but this is what we can do in our power," Campillo said. "We already know that a lot of this hate speech does influence people to carry out ... violence in the name of those hateful ideologies. By preventing that, we're going to be promoting public safety, but also just sending the Jewish community and every other community that is the target of hate speech — that the government cares and doesn’t want anyone in our community to have to suffer that."

Rabbi Devorah Marcus, who leads the nearby Temple Emanu-El San Diego, supports the proposal. She called the flyers "a nuisance and waste of time."

"These fliers are meant to push people to bad actions," Marcus said. "I’m very much looking forward to the passing of these laws and holding people accountable for words and deeds that lead to incitement of violence and aggressive actions toward any of our human beings."

Campillo said a draft of the hate-littering ordinance will be completed sometime this month and brought to the council’s Public Safety Committee in October. He said he is confident it will not violate free speech rights.

"We are going to be criminalizing the conduct which is the littering — that has a particular motive behind it," Campillo said. "Which is this hate motive and so the Supreme Court has said harsher penalties can be applied to people who commit crimes when the government also proves beyond doubt what that motive was."

Marcus said her focus now is on Rosh Hashanah.

"My biggest concern is how much time this takes away from the things we’d rather be doing like spending happy times with our neighbors and preparing for our beautiful high holy days which begins this weekend," Marcus said.

A San Diego Police spokesperson said officers responded to the Del Cerro neighborhood Monday and are actively investigating what happened.

'Goyim Defense League' (GDL) Antisemitic Propaganda Distributed on September 11th

PORTLAND, Maine — Antisemitic flyers falsely linking the 9/11 terrorist attacks to a Jewish conspiracy were distributed in the city overnight.

Left on porches, the black-and-white photocopies coincided with the 22nd anniversary of the terrorist attacks in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

The flyers are the latest in a series of hateful handbills distributed in Portland in the past few years targeting LGBTQ and other minority communities. At the same time, neo-Nazi groups have held rallies in Portland and Augusta. One such organization is setting up a training facility near Lincoln.

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - has attributed the antisemitic flyers to the Goyim Defense League (GDL). The league travels the country distributing these hateful flyers targeting Jewish communities.

The flyer, downloaded from a well-known antisemitic website run by the Florida-based Goyim Defense League, claims the 9/11 attacks were part of a Jewish-led scheme.

The same organization also blames gun control, the slave trade, the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, pornography and many other things on various Jewish conspiracies.

Carl Currie found one of the flyers at the corner of Congress and Park streets while walking to the Downtown Lounge a few blocks away, where he’s the manager. Currie said he was angry but not surprised. Finding such flyers has become routine this year.

“It didn’t shock me,” Currie said. “This is the new Congress Street.”

In the past year, Currie has also found anti-trans and anti-gay flyers on the same street. Some were full-sized sheets, while others were the size of fortune cookie fortunes. The smaller versions were stuffed into a glass bottle, which was somehow dropped into the alley behind his bar. When the bottle shattered on the pavement, the tiny slips of paper scattered everywhere.

“They’re still back there, but no one can see them,” Currie said. “But I should clean them up.”

“Our municipal government has a duty to provide concrete action to discourage alt-right recruitment,” Raymond said. “The ideology they espouse is virulent and overtly genocidal.”

Synagogues in California and Florida Evacuated Over Bomb Threats

49_Synagogues_Evacuated_California_Florida_StopAntisemitism_bomb_threat

Congregation Beth Am (Left) of Los Altos Hills, California and Congregation B’nai Israel (Right) of St. Petersburg, Florida were evacuated over the weekend due to bomb threats.

At least two more synagogues in the United States evacuated their congregants over the weekend following bomb threats, the latest in a series of such calls that have put dozens of congregations on high alert heading into the High Holidays.

One of the synagogues was threatened during the pre-Rosh Hashanah Selichot services on Saturday night, in a sign that the perpetrators of the wave of attacks are paying careful attention to when synagogues are holding events before calling in their threats.

Since mid-July, at least 49 synagogues in 13 states have received the threatening calls, none of which have been linked to credible bomb threats.

The synagogues that received bomb threats this weekend were Congregation Beth Am in Los Altos Hills, California, in the Bay Area, and Congregation B’nai Israel in St. Petersburg, Florida. In both cases, the synagogues emptied out as police conducted full safety sweeps of the premises. 

The threat on Beth Am, a Reform congregation, was called in during Friday night services, at a time when the synagogue was hosting U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo and Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of the liberal Israel lobby J Street. Both guests were reported safe by leaders of the Bay Area congregation.

“As a community, we remain resolute and determined in the face of this act of antisemitic harassment,” read a letter Beth Am congregational leaders sent to their community just before midnight on Friday, after the synagogue had been swept and cleared, according to J. The Jewish News of Northern California, which first reported on the incident

B’nai Israel, a Conservative congregation, received the threat as congregants were exiting the Selichot services on Saturday night. The St. Petersburg police department and B’nai Israel’s rabbi, Philip Weintraub, confirmed details of the synagogue’s evacuation with JTA.

“It was not disruptive to our worship,” Weintraub told JTA, adding that the police “took it very seriously.”

A spokesperson for the St. Petersburg Police Department told JTA that the investigation was still ongoing, but that law enforcement would treat the incident as a false bomb threat, which is punishable with prison time. Florida has grappled with a recent rise in antisemitic activity, and a new state law aims to make it easier to prosecute “ethnic intimidation.” But that measure hasn’t yet succeeded in curbing a statewide epidemic of antisemitic fliers, some of which were dropped outside the West Palm Beach area over Labor Day.

The Santa Clara County sheriff’s office, which oversees law enforcement in Los Altos Hills, did not return JTA requests for comment on its own bomb threat investigation.

In mid-August, two other synagogues in California also evacuated their livestreamed Shabbat services over a single weekend due to bomb threats.

Weintraub is determined to not be rattled by the experience. Instead, he takes comfort in knowing the congregation already heeds security precautions recommended by police. Heading into Rosh Hashanah, he said, he isn’t scared.

“My understanding is their goal is to shake us, and I’m not going to be shaken,” he said.

Members of the 'Goyim Defense League' (GDL) Target Baseball Fans in Iowa with Antisemitic Flyers

Some fans who attended the Quad Cities River Bandits baseball game on Sept. 3 found antisemitic flyers on their vehicles after the game, members of One Human Family QCA said in a news release.

On one of the flyers is written, “Every single aspect of the media is Jewish,” and lists the names of the CEOs of Sony Pictures Entertainment, Paramount Global, Fox Entertainment, Comcast Corp., Discovery Inc., and The Walt Disney Co.

Images of the CEOs are on the flyers, and in the center of their foreheads, a Star of David has been superimposed in the images.

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - has attributed the antisemitic flyers to the Goyim Defense League (GDL). The league travels the country distributing these hateful flyers targeting Jewish communities.

On another flyer is written, “Every single aspect of the COVID agenda is Jewish,” and lists the names of scientists, medical officers, business executives with pharmaceutical companies, as well investment companies Blackrock and Vanguard, and Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Rochelle Walensky.

At the bottom of each flyer is a statement, “These flyers were distributed randomly without malicious intent.” 

There were no threats of violence on the flyers. 

The flyers are distributed by the Goyim Defense League, which operates Goyim TV, or GTV, a platform for antisemitic content.

In a news release, One Human Family QCA leaders Rabbi Henry Karp and Rev. Rich Hendricks said the flyers have their roots tracing to the “notorious antisemitic document 'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.'"

The fabricated text falsely claims to be the minutes of an international meeting of Jewish leaders plotting world domination.

“One Human Family QCA calls upon all Quad Citians to reject and denounce such messages of hate as being contrary to the spirit of our community, which welcomes and embraces the wondrous diversity of our friends and neighbors,” Karp and Hendricks said.

In that same news release, Quad Cities River Bandits owner Dave Heller said, “The River Bandits forcefully condemn all hate speech of any kind. The Quad-Cities is a wonderful, caring, and welcoming community. The language of hate is antithetical to who we are as a people.”

Antisemitic Vandals Deface a Vermont State Park with Swastikas

Vermont State Police investigators are looking for the public’s help in identifying vandals who targeted the Old Stone House & Museum Observation Tower with hate speech.

Police say that the Brownington Cultural Center was attacked sometime between 5 p.m. on Saturday and 9:45 Sunday morning. Swastikas and antisemitic comments were painted on the tower in orange spray paint, police report. The violation was designated a “hate crime” in the state police press release.

Members of the public having information that may assist in this investigation are encouraged to contact the VSP Derby Barracks at (802) 334-8881 or online at https://vsp.vermont.gov/tipsubmit.

North Carolina Police Arrest 'Goyim Defense League' Members for Antisemitic Threats

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UPDATE September 11, 2023: StopAntisemitism identified two of the men arrested for distributing antisemitic ‘Goyim Defense League’ (GDL) propaganda. Richard Young and Joseph Chiddo were cited after distributing antisemitic flyers Sunday in Wake Forest and Rolesville; more here.

Joseph Chiddo (Left) and Richard Young (Right)

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Multiple people are in custody after distributing antisemitic flyers Sunday in Wake Forest and Rolesville.

A resident in Elizabeth Springs said they found a Ziploc bag filled with the flyers in their driveway Sunday afternoon between 2:30 p.m. and 3 p.m.

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - has attributed the antisemitic flyers to the Goyim Defense League (GDL). The league travels the country distributing these hateful flyers targeting Jewish communities.

Neighbors in the community said the neighborhood is home to several Jewish families.

One woman, who wished to remain anonymous, said while she respects people's freedom of speech, she did not appreciate the flyers being left on her property.

"They have a right to their opinions, just don't force it on anybody else," the woman said. "Putting something like that on my lawn is forcing it on me."

This is not the first time antisemitic flyers were distributed in Wake County this year. In August, antisemitic flyers appeared in five Raleigh neighborhoods overnight on August 6.

"It is happening more frequently," said Eric Solomon, A rabbi with Beth Myere Synagogue. "We are not deterred of course, and I'm grateful to law enforcement, but it appears that it's happening more and more. That's why we're grateful that people in our community spoke up."

"The fact that the police and neighbors notified, stood up, and did not stand idly by, it means the world and it means a lot to the Jewish community," Solomon said. "We are incredibly grateful."

The man who reported the flyers said Rolesville police contacted him around 4:15 p.m. and said the people responsible are in custody.

It is not clear how the police found those responsible or if they will face charges or citations.

Paris Mayor Revokes Palestinian President's Recognition Medal after Antisemitic Rant

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo has revoked the prestigious Medal of the City of Paris awarded to Mahmoud Abbas in 2015, according to an open letter she wrote to the Palestinian Authority president.

In the letter, obtained by Israeli and French media, Hidalgo wrote that she is revoking Abbas’s medal, known in French as La médaille Grand Vermeil de Paris, due to his recent comments in which he expressed a “clear desire to deny the genocide to which the Jewish populations of Europe were victims at the hands of the Nazi regime.”

Abbas claimed that Ashkenazi Jews stem from Europe, not the Middle East, and were murdered during the Holocaust due to hatred against them for their historic role as money lenders.

The Jewish advocacy group StopAntisemitism posted the video to social media, pointing out Mahmoud Abbas was responsible for financing the murder of Jews during the Munich 1972 Olympics.

According to Hidalgo, Abbas’s comments “are contrary to our universal values and the historical truth of the Holocaust, so you can no longer claim... the highest distinction of Paris.”

“I condemn your comments in the strongest possible terms; no cause can justify revisionism and negationism. As you know, the Holocaust is part of the history of Paris,” she wrote to Abbas on Thursday.

“In our city, during World War II, tens of thousands of children, women and men of the Jewish faith were rounded up, deported and then exterminated in death camps.”

Hidalgo did stress, however, that Paris remains a “partner” of Bethlehem, Jericho, and Jenin, and that cooperation between the French capital and Palestinian cities, which “contributes to the peace process in the Middle East” will continue.

Abbas received the medal, which also made him an honorary citizen of the city in 2015 in “recognition of his actions towards finding peace between the Palestinians and the Israelis,” the city of Paris said at the time.

'Goyim Defense League' (GDL) Member Extradited Over Defacement of Anne Frank House

A neo-Nazi who once lived in San Diego County has been extradited to the Netherlands to face hate speech charges in connection with an antisemitic incident that took place at the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam earlier this year.

Forty-one-year-old Robert Wilson, a former Chula Vista resident, is accused of projecting an antisemitic message on the exterior of the Anne Frank House on Feb. 6 and publishing a video of the incident on social media.

StopAntisemitism named Robert Wilson their “Antisemite of the Week” on May 22, 2022.

On Aug. 28, the Netherlands Public Prosecution Service issued a press release explaining the suspect had been surrendered to the country for prosecution and will face his first court date in early October. The statement doesn’t explicitly name Wilson, but the description of the suspect matches Wilson’s background and follows his arrest in Poland, which he recorded and posted online.

The text displayed on the Anne Frank House claimed that the Holocaust victim was the “inventor of the ballpoint.” The message refers to an antisemitic conspiracy theory suggesting Anne Frank’s diary is a hoax and could not have been written by her, because it was crafted with a ballpoint pen, which was not used widely until after World War II. This claim has been disproven, as researchers and scholars have shown the diary was not written in ballpoint pen.

A still from a video showing part of a laser projection of an antisemitic message on the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam on Feb. 6, 2023. The video garnered widespread condemnation and was referenced in high-profile news articles in several countries.

Mary, a Netherlands resident who has been tracking right-wing extremism through her group Capitol Terrorist Exposers, said the incident had a big impact across the country.

“It caused a shocking effect, not only in Dutch Jewish society but the entire society,” she said. inewsource has agreed to only use Mary’s first name to protect her safety.

The statement from the Netherlands prosecution service says the suspect has Polish and Canadian nationalities and returned to his home in Poland after propagating the message.

inewsource has previously written about the accusations against Wilson, a Canadian native, in San Diego — a few years after moving to the area, he was arrested for assaulting his next-door neighbor while yelling homophobic slurs and charged with a hate crime. He fled the country to Poland while awaiting trial.

Mary said Wilson’s arrest in Europe will hopefully prevent other antisemitic incidents in the future.

A screenshot of footage showing Robert Wilson speaking to CBS 8 reporter, David Gotfredson, outside a San Diego courthouse on Dec. 27, 2021.

“These well-known Nazis think they can flee prosecution in the United States and think that they can do whatever they want to do here, but it’s not gonna happen,” Mary said.

Wilson is a high-profile member of the Goyim Defense League, an antisemitic hate group that originated in California.

The Goyim Defense League was responsible for hundreds of antisemitic incidents across the U.S. last year. Its members are known for distributing flyers with hate-based messages and yelling slurs at people, which they record and post to their online platforms.

Willem Wagenaar, a right-wing extremism researcher for the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, said the incident in February was the first of its kind for the museum, which operates out of the building where Anne Frank penned her diary.

He said antisemitic actors have been emboldened over the past decade as experiences from the Holocaust become less salient due to the dwindling number of living survivors.

“That’s worrisome,” Wagenaar said.

The Netherlands Prosecution Service issued a European arrest warrant for the suspect earlier this year after he fled the country, according to the press release. The warrant listed four offenses: coercion, deliberately insulting a religious group, incitement of hatred, violence or discrimination and disclosure of a discriminatory statement.

The suspect was then arrested on April 25 by Polish authorities, who searched his car and home in Poland in the presence of two Amsterdam detectives.

Wilson posted a video online in late April showing police officers walking through his house in Poland and collecting evidence.

Though the suspect was told not to leave Poland as police continued investigating, the press release says he was arrested again on July 8 while trying to leave for Canada and was temporarily held in Germany. He was transferred to Amsterdam on Aug. 25 and, a few days later, ordered by a judge to stay in detention for two weeks, which could be extended.

His next court date is Oct. 5, when he will be brought before the three-judge section of the District Court of Amsterdam.

“It will be a very interesting case,” Wagenaar said. “A test case. Is this a punishable offense in the Netherlands, or is this freedom of speech? It’s in the gray area in between. So we will find out.”

Wagenaar said the maximum penalty for the offenses is several years in prison, but it’s unlikely someone found guilty would face significant jail time.

“If he will be punished, it will be probably a punishment that for Americans, they will laugh about. A fine, maybe he has to do some work in the park, something like that, or a very light prison sentence.

“But that’s not what’s at stake. More what is at stake is: Is this punishable or not? Do we tolerate this or not in our society?”

News: Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

Jill Castellano is an investigative data coordinator for inewsource. When she's not deep in a spreadsheet or holed up reporting and writing her next story, she's probably hiking, running or rock climbing. She also loves playing board games and discussing the latest chapters with her book club. Jill... More by Jill Castellano

Missouri Man Arrested Over Antisemitic Assault of Police Officer

A man has been charged with threatening police and resisting arrest after police went to his house on a wellness check Monday.

Omar Carrera, 42, has been charged with fourth-degree assault on a special victim and resisting arrest; Both charges are class A misdemeanors. Carrera’s bond is set at $75,000 cash only, no 10 percent authorized.

According to an investigation by the Creve Coeur Police Department, on September 4, police responded to Carrera’s address for a wellness check on a man lying in the street, swinging a baseball bat and shouting obscenities. When arriving at the scene, police observed Carrera in the front yard lying under a tree with a baseball near him. Carrera proceeded to run around the house and enter and exit the house multiple times. Carrera also yelled obscenities, made antisemitic remarks, and threatened to shoot the officers causing officers to take cover behind their patrol cars. Officers tried telling Carrera commands, which he ignored and proceeded to rush at them. During one of Carrera’s retreats back to his house, he tripped, and officers tased and arrested him; he resisted being handcuffed.

“Fortunately, this defendant’s violent and antisemitic threats led to no serious violence. We are always vigilant for even the threat of hate crimes in St. Louis County,” said St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell.

The sentencing for a class A misdemeanor is up to a year in jail and a possible fine of up to $2,000.