ReportWire

Tag: Hate Crime

  • Sacramento man convicted of four freeway shootings and sentenced to 90 years to be released early

    Sacramento man convicted of four freeway shootings and sentenced to 90 years to be released early

    (FOX40.COM) — A man who was convicted of four freeway shootings and sentenced to 90 years in prison was approved to be released back into Sacramento County after only serving 14 years.

    Kyle Douglas Frank was convicted by a jury for firing several gunshots at cars on four separate occasions in August and September of 2009. His victims were all Black or Hispanic and officials believe his crimes were racially charged.

    “He unloaded his gun and put about six bullets in my passenger door, shattered my side view mirror, and all because I looked inside of his car,” said Paul Adcock, a survivor of one of the freeway shootings on I-80 in 2009. “Calling me the N-word and everything else and giving me the finger.” 

    On April 10, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation’s Board of Parole Hearings granted parole to Frank.

    “I thought justice was done, when they said 90-plus years. It hasn’t even been half of that. So why he’s getting out so soon, is beyond me,” Adcock said.

    Sacramento County Assistant Chief Deputy District Attorney Rochelle Beardsley voiced concerns about the possibility of Frank being released from prison.

    “It’s our position that he is not eligible or amenable to parole,” Beardsley said. “Public safety is the mandate of the District Attorney’s Office.”

    Sacramento County District Attorney Thien Ho’s office warned the public of Frank’s release.

    “Each victim was either Hispanic or African American,” the DA’s office said. “He attempted to murder eight innocent people simply because of their skin color.”

    The DA’s office said they asked Governor Gavin Newsom to intervene with the boards decision, but if he doesn’t, Frank will be released back into the Sacramento community.

    Veronica Catlin

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  • Dallas man learns sentence for federal hate crimes in 2015 shooting targeting Muslims

    Dallas man learns sentence for federal hate crimes in 2015 shooting targeting Muslims

    A Dallas man who shot and killed one victim during a mass shooting targeting Muslims in 2015 has been sentenced to 37 years in federal prison.

    A Dallas man who shot and killed one victim during a mass shooting targeting Muslims in 2015 has been sentenced to 37 years in federal prison.

    Fresno Bee Staff Photo

    A Dallas man who shot and killed one victim during a mass shooting targeting Muslims in 2015 has been sentenced to 37 years in federal prison after he pleaded guilty to hate crimes related to the murder, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Texas.

    Anthony Paz Torres, 39, pleaded guilty to five federal hate crime counts on Sept. 14, 2023, for killing one person and trying to kill four others at Omar’s Wheels and Tires in Dallas in December 2015. He also pleaded guilty to one count of using a firearm to commit the murder.

    Torres admitted that in the days before the shooting he went to the car repair and tire shop, made anti-Muslim statements and said he would be coming back, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office. When he returned on Dec. 14, 2015, he asked customers if they were Muslim before being escorted back to his car by an employee.

    Torres pulled a gun and fired multiple times at customers and employees, the release states. He told investigators he did it because he believed the victims were Muslim.

    A bystander who was sitting in a car at the business, 25-year-old Enrique Garcia-Mendoza, was killed in the shooting.

    “As this sentence makes clear, hate crimes fueled by Islamophobia, or by bias of any kind, will be met with the full force of the Justice Department,” Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said in the news release. “No person in this country should have to live in fear because of who they are, what they look like, or how they pray.”

    FBI Director Christopher Wray said the case was “an abhorrent example of how deadly Islamophobia can be in our country” and that the bureau makes civil rights-related investigations one of its highest priorities.

    Torres will receive credit for time served in state custody.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    James Hartley is a breaking news reporter with awards including features, breaking news and deadline writing. A North Texas native, he joined the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in 2019. He has a passion for true stories, understated movies, good tea and scotch that’s out of his budget.

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  • Neo-Nazi charged in killing of gay Phoenix man wants bond reduced

    Neo-Nazi charged in killing of gay Phoenix man wants bond reduced

    Neo-Nazi skinhead Cory Young is asking a Maricopa County judge to lower his bond from $100,000 to $25,000 for his involvement in the savage beating death of a gay Phoenix Man.

    Young, 44, claims he and Jake Kelly were actually “good friends” and “like family.”

    That is one of several questionable claims in a Feb. 22 motion asking Superior Court Judge Daniel Martin to modify Young’s release conditions. The motion downplays Young’s violent past and portrays his actions regarding Kelly’s killing in a favorable light.

    Young; his wife, Shannon, 38; and their friend Angel Mullooly, 34, were arrested in November in connection with the slaying of Kelly, who was 49. The Youngs are each charged with one felony count of interfering with a police investigation, and Mullooly is charged with second-degree murder.

    Shannon Young recently had her bond reduced from $50,000 to $5,000 and was released on bail. Mullooly is being held on a $1 million bond.

    Cory and Shannon Young shared a house in North Phoenix with Kelly. The Youngs told Phoenix police that on the night of Aug. 27, they heard a loud noise outside their home, went to investigate and found Kelly in the driveway, beaten to a pulp. The pair told police they took Kelly inside, gave him a bath to try to revive him and then dressed him in dry clothes and placed him on a sofa.

    Cory Young “did not witness Jake’s injuries,” the motion claims, but the trauma was “consistent with a person or persons injuring Jake.”

    Why didn’t Young dial 911 immediately? The motion offers the following rationale: “Given Cory’s experience is (sic) witnessing people sustaining physical injuries from fighting and witnessing injuries resolve therein, Cory reasonably believed (having no medical training and/or direct medical knowledge) that Jake’s injuries would resolve.”

    Instead of calling 911, the motion says, Young ran cold water over Kelly in a bathtub, then “placed him on the living room sofa so he could monitor Jake throughout the night.”

    Approximately 16 hours later, Cory Young finally decided that Kelly was not improving and “elected to transport Jake to the emergency room.”

    The motion claims that Young “had no direct knowledge of how Jake sustained his injuries,” and it downplays a photo obtained by police that shows Young holding up the head of Kelly as he lies seriously injured outside their house, with Shannon standing nearby.

    According to court records, Mullooly texted the photo to an ex-girlfriend, prefaced by the comment, “I’ve fucked up Jake 2Xs, babe.”

    click to enlarge

    Jake Kelly was beaten and left in the driveway of his north Phoenix home on Aug. 27. He died from his injuries on Sept. 8.

    Courtesy Jan Kelly

    A photo worth a thousand words

    A witness informed police that Shannon Young had told her that Cory Young and Mullooly got into a fight with Kelly, the motion says. Young and Mullooly “fucked him up,” Shannon allegedly told the witness in a phone conversation.

    Cory Young’s motion claims that the witness “beefed up” the statement to police in a second interview.

    The motion makes no mention of a photo described in court documents as “Jake in the bathtub bleeding from his injuries,” which Phoenix police said Shannon texted to the witness.

    The motion does, however, include a horrifying photo of Kelly taken by Cory Young several hours after Kelly was brought inside the house. In the photo, a limp Kelly sits on the floor, propped up against what looks like a TV stand, his head down, his eyes closed and his arms at his side. His body is covered in bruises, cuts and red abrasions. A small white dog can be seen licking at his wounds.

    Thin and pale, wearing striped shorts, Kelly looks like what he was: badly injured.

    The motion states that Cory Young texted the photo of Kelly to Young’s mom.

    The victim’s mother, Jan Kelly, told Phoenix New Times that she was incensed by the motion and the photo.

    “Why did he send it to his mother?” Jan Kelly asked. “Bragging rights?”

    Jan Kelly likened it to the photo allegedly taken by Mullooly following Jake’s beatdown and wondered if both were “trophy photos.”

    “I don’t understand why they’re showing that picture in the motion,” she said. “They’re trying to say that they thought he was going to be OK, but you can’t look at that picture and think he was going to be OK.”

    She said her son suffered multiple fractures of his skull, face, sternum and ribs. He also received numerous internal injuries, underwent several surgeries and was placed on life support. He died on Sept. 8.

    The motion contends that “despite what the media continues to incorrectly portray, Cory and Jake were like family.” Young’s motion supports this assertion by including photos from Facebook, previously reported on by New Times, of Jake Kelly officiating at the Youngs’ marriage in a backyard ceremony in March 2023.

    Jan Kelly confirmed to New Times that these photos were taken around the time of the Youngs’ marriage. She said her son moved in with Shannon after being introduced by a mutual friend. Shannon needed help with the rent, and Jake needed a place to stay. She didn’t know exactly when Jake moved in. Cory Young moved in sometime after Jake.

    The relationship between the Youngs and Jake went south as the year progressed, she said. Jan Kelly regularly talked to her son, and the week before his death, he was depressed and had recently moved into a trailer behind the house he shared with the Youngs.

    Jake also had broken down crying at his job at a local Italian restaurant, and his boss had given him three weeks off to deal with whatever was troubling him, she said. He told his mother that he was very unhappy.

    “I said, ‘Do you want me to come to Arizona? Do you want me to come get you?’” she recalled. “He finally said, ‘That’s OK, Mom, I’m going to get a new place to live this week. I’ll talk to you next weekend.’ I never heard from him again.”

    Jan Kelly scoffed at the motion’s statement that there is “no evidence whatsoever that Cory is a threat to her or anyone in the community.”

    At a hearing in November to determine Cory Young’s bond, Jan Kelly asked the hearing commissioner to keep Young in jail over his alleged involvement in the killing of her son. She also feared for safety if Cory Young received a bond.

    The commissioner said she could not make him nonbondable, but she did make electronic monitoring a requirement if Young was released.

    click to enlarge Jan Kelly outside Maricopa County Superior Court

    Jan Kelly outside the Maricopa County Superior Court building in downtown Phoenix after three people charged in connection with her son’s death appeared in court on Nov. 22.

    Stephen Lemons

    Prison enforcer

    The motion states that Cory Young “has not been convicted of any crime” in connection with Jake Kelly’s slaying and is “presumed innocent under the law.”

    Still, Young has experience inflicting serious injuries upon others, according to records from the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry.

    In 2003, Young was doing a 10-year stint in prison for several felony charges, including burglary and aggravated assault, when he attacked another prisoner with his fists, leaving his victim in “a pool of blood.”

    Court records state that Young struck his victim “eight or nine times in the head.” In addition to other wounds, the victim “sustained several facial fractures, which eventually required surgery.”

    As a result, Young was charged with aggravated assault and convicted in 2004, adding three years to his sentence.

    In June 2007, Young and another prisoner allegedly attacked a fellow inmate. An ADCRR report on the incident described how Young and another attacker were “simultaneously striking their victim with closed fists in the head and face area.” The attack continued “even after their victim had fallen to the ground prostrate” and despite prison staff commanding them to stop.

    “Force (chemical agents) was required to stop this assault,” the report said.

    A supplemental report cited interviews with “many Caucasian inmates who align with the Skinhead Security Threat Group,” as well as “Aryan Brotherhood-affiliated” prisoners. According to the report, the assault was ordered by “white inmates on the yard” to punish a prisoner who had been recruiting for a rival skinhead group.

    Young’s body is a patchwork quilt of neo-Nazi and white supremacist tattoos, including a large Nazi swastika in the center of his chest.

    New Times interviewed Young in 2016 while he was working as a tattoo artist with Wolfskin Ink in Phoenix, which is no longer in business. Young was honest about his affiliations. “I was running with a lot of skinheads and the Aryan Brotherhood and stuff like that,” he said about his time behind bars.

    He claimed neo-Nazism was “a dead cause” but admitted to still having some of the same views as he did when he was in prison.

    Young continued plying his trade as an ink slinger. According to court records, he was arrested for his alleged involvement in the Kelly homicide while he was at the Glendale tattoo parlor where he had been working.

    He was a popular tattooist, judging by the praise he received for his work on the business’s Facebook page. That same tattoo parlor recently announced on a Facebook post that it will be closing its doors on March 16.

    A trial date for the Kelly homicide has not been set. Martin recently rescheduled a hearing from March 20 to July 22 to determine the trial date.

    Stephen Lemons

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  • Arlington neighborhood rallies as police investigate possible hate crime – WTOP News

    Arlington neighborhood rallies as police investigate possible hate crime – WTOP News

    A group of Arlington, Virginia, residents held a rally to support each other and make clear that hate-related acts are not welcome in their community.

    Michael Hemminger, President of the Arlington Chspter of the NAACP (L) Wanda Younger, James Younger talk after Friday’s rally in Arlington. (WTOP/Kate Ryan)

    After news that graffiti that included swastikas and a racial slur appeared outside several homes in Arlington, Virginia, a group of residents held a rally to support each other and make clear that hate-related acts are not welcome in their community.

    Friday morning, dozens of residents gathered outside the Rock Spring Congregational United Church of Christ in the Yorktown neighborhood. Mike Cantwell, President of the Yorktown Civic Association, stood before the attendees to say “hate has no place here,” and urged the crowd to repeat it together.

    The idea, Cantwell said, was to “make it clear that this kind of behavior is completely unacceptable.”

    “We also hope that we’re going to be able to find the perpetrators,” he said.

    While he said there should be “consequences,” Cantwell said the focus — as far as he’s concerned — isn’t about “punishment, it’s about understanding what’s motivated” the people behind the vandalism.

    Kathy Dwyer, senior pastor at Rock Spring Congregational United Church of Christ, said the vandalism is painful for a community that prides itself on being open, inclusive and prizing diversity.

    “These acts of vandalism really speak to how there is this hate and racism running underneath the surface,” of the community. “And it’s important that we confront it.”

    Michael Hemminger, president of the NAACP of Arlington, spoke at the rally and said he was gratified to see the response from the community. He said people concerned about hate-related incidents can take action and “not just be a bystander, and not just be an ally.”

    Hemminger said people can “use whatever tools, resources and privilege” they may have “to rise up against any form of hate. That’s how we begin to break it down.”

    Monique Bryant, who grew up in Arlington and is executive director of a group called Challenging Racism, agreed with the idea that just voicing disapproval of racism isn’t enough.

    “We have to think about education, and preventive measures, and dialogue.”

    Bryant, who is Black, said: “I’m just one generation from desegregation … so it really relates to home.”

    Rabbi Jeff Saxe, of Temple Rodef Shalom, said the spirit of Friday’s rally demonstrated empathy within the community.

    “I definitely think this group was united in the message that hate targets all of us, and that we all have to stand together,” Saxe said. “I think it’s a message that we have to bring to our whole community.”

    Friday, Arlington County police said the case remains under investigation and they urged anyone with information to contact them at the department’s tip line at 703-228-4180 or via email.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Kate Ryan

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  • Mass. marijuana shops pay towns hefty fees. Why that might change. – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Mass. marijuana shops pay towns hefty fees. Why that might change. – Medical Marijuana Program Connection


    … Monday. 
    Under current state law, marijuana establishments must pay a community … the costs imposed by the marijuana establishment.  
    “Reasonably related” means there … offset the operation of a marijuana establishment. Those costs could include …

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..



    MMP News Author

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  • He lobbed slurs and concrete to get street vendors out of his neighborhood, police say

    He lobbed slurs and concrete to get street vendors out of his neighborhood, police say

    A Glendale man accused of hurling concrete stones, rocks and racial slurs at street vendors in early November was charged with three misdemeanors, including a hate crime.

    The Glendale Police Department announced charges on Monday against Emanuel Gulakian, 36, with one count each of a violation of civil rights, assault of a person and battery.

    Gulakian was arrested Nov. 2 and is home awaiting trial on $30,000 bond. His next court date is Feb. 2.

    Police say Emanuel Gulakian threw concrete chunks at street vendors including the one above.

    (Glendale Police Department)

    Gulakian is alleged to have yelled racial epithets and profanities at Latino street vendors near the intersection of Sonora Avenue and San Fernando Road after 11:30 p.m. on Nov. 1, according to Glendale police. At least two vendors were targeted.

    Calls to a number listed for Gulakian were not returned.

    Police responded and arrested Gulakian shortly after he allegedly threw loose concrete pieces at the vendors. The projectiles were as big as softballs, according to police reports. One of the vendors was struck and suffered minor injuries.

    “Throughout the altercation, the suspect continued to spew racial slurs, perpetuating an atmosphere of hate and violence,” according to police.

    In a Nov. 27 incident caught on video, Gulakian appeared to be harassing Glendale street vendors along West Glenoaks Boulevard and North Brand Boulevard. Video posted to social media by street vendor activist Edin Alex Enamorado appears to show the incident.

    A man who appears to be Gulakian is filming a street vendor and says, “I don’t want this black market here; get all of it to Mexico.” In another post, he compares a Latina woman defending the street vendors to “your women in Tijuana.”

    He also berates the street vendors and tells them that he is not giving them permission to record him while simultaneously filming them on a public street.

    Andrew J. Campa

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  • 'Despicable act of hate': Suspect arrested after antisemitic assault in Beverly Hills

    'Despicable act of hate': Suspect arrested after antisemitic assault in Beverly Hills

    Raphael Nissel and his wife were walking to their Beverly Hills synagogue on Saturday morning when a man struck Nissel’s head from behind with a belt buckle.

    Nissel, who wore a yarmulke, was left dazed and bloodied by the attack.

    “My wife told me, ‘Watch out!’” Nissel, 75, told The Times on Sunday. “All of a sudden, something hard hit my forehead.”

    The assailant turned to Nissel’s wife, Rivka and allegedly said, “Jew, give me your jewelry” but fled after Nissel gave chase.

    Officers responded to a report of an assault with a deadly weapon that morning at North Rexford Drive and North Santa Monica Boulevard, near the Beverly Hills Police Department. They took over the pursuit of the suspect.

    Nissel suffered a deep cut to his head, which he said required four “staples,” and was treated at the scene.

    Scheduled to give a reading that day from the Torah at Young Israel of North Beverly Hills, an orthodox synagogue, Nissel didn’t allow the attack to deter him.

    “My wife had to run to the house to bring me a new shirt,” he said. “I walked to the synagogue and was able to perform.”

    Based on a description of the suspect, police later found and arrested Jarris Jay Silagi.

    In a Sunday afternoon news release, Beverly Hills Police Chief Mark Stainbrook said his officers acted swiftly in taking Silagi into custody.

    “This despicable act of hate against a member of our community will not be tolerated,” Stainbrook said.

    Silagi, 44, of Los Angeles was booked on the suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, attempted robbery, elder abuse and a hate crime. A prior conviction for an attempted second-degree robbery in 2012 also occurred in Beverly Hills.

    Silagi is being held at Los Angeles County Jail on $100,000 bail.

    He is due at the Los Angeles Airport Courthouse on Tuesday as Beverly Hills police continue their investigation.

    Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called the attack a “vile act” in a Sunday afternoon post on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter.

    A hate crimes report released last month by the Los Angeles County Human Relations Commission found that anti-Jewish offenses skyrocketed by 59% last year and accounted for an overwhelming majority of religiously motivated hate crimes.

    Officials have also noted a sharp rise in anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish hate crimes since the Israel-Hamas war began Oct. 7 which were not included in the 2022 report.

    Bass pledged that the city would continue to work with its partners to “actively combat antisemitism.”

    Nissel appreciated the mayor’s comments.

    “I’m doing well,” Nissel said. “The most important part are the incidents we have to prevent in the future.”

    Gabriel San Román

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  • New York increases security at Jewish sites after shots fired outside Albany synagogue

    New York increases security at Jewish sites after shots fired outside Albany synagogue

    New York increases security at Jewish sites after shots fired outside Albany synagogue – CBS News


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    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul put state police and the New York National Guard on high alert Thursday, and ordered the agencies to increase patrols at Jewish sites after a man armed with a shotgun fired two rounds into the air outside an Albany synagogue. Meg Oliver reports.

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  • Arsonist torches Star-of-David tarp outside Jewish-Japanese in Brooklyn: NYPD

    Arsonist torches Star-of-David tarp outside Jewish-Japanese in Brooklyn: NYPD

    An arsonist set fire to two window tarps adorned with the Star of David outside a Brooklyn restaurant, the latest hate crime targeting Jews, police said Friday.

    The incident happened at 4:08 a.m. last Saturday outside Shalom Japan, a Jewish and Japanese restaurant on S. 4th St. near Rodney St. in Williamsburg.

    The suspect approached the restaurant, which was closed for the night, and can be seen on video setting the fire using a lighter before running off.

     

    The firebug is being sought by police.

    There were no injuries and the restaurant didn’t suffer any structural damage.

    Police released a security camera video showing a bearded man setting fire outside a Brooklyn restaurant that was decorated with a Star of David. (NYPD)

    Last month, antisemitic incidents jumped 32% to 62 compared to 47 last November. There were seven crimes against Muslims last month, compared to zero last November, and there were five incidents labeled as ethnic, which includes victims thought to be Palestinian, compared to one last November.

    Anyone with information about the arsonist is asked to call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS.

     

    Rocco Parascandola

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  • UPDATE: Jussie Smollett May Return To Jail After Actor's Conviction For Hate Crime Hoax Is Upheld

    UPDATE: Jussie Smollett May Return To Jail After Actor's Conviction For Hate Crime Hoax Is Upheld

    Jussie Smollett may be returning to jail after an Illinois Appeals court upheld his conviction for staging a hate crime in 2019. As The Shade Room previously reported, the actor was found guilty in December 2021.

    In March of 2022, Smollett was sentenced to 150 days in the Cook County jail. Additionally, the actor was ordered to serve 30 days of probation and satisfy orders for restitution.

    Six days later, however, Smollett was released from police custody on an emergency motion. The motion granted the actor bail as his team worked to appeal his conviction.

    RELATED: The Osundairo Brothers Reenact Alleged Staged Attack Against Jussie Smollett (Video)

    More Details Regarding The Illinois Court’s Decision On Jussie Smollett’s Conviction

    According to Fox News, Smollett received a decision regarding his appeal from an Illinois court on Friday, December 1.

    The outlet reports that three judges gave the ruling 2-1. Justice David Navarro and Justice Mary Ellen Coghlan agreed to uphold Smollett’s 2021 conviction, while Judge Freddrenna Lyle reportedly “dissented.”

    According to AP News, Lyle reportedly believes Smollett paid his dues when he completed community service in exchange for prosecutors to drop his charges in 2019.

    A representative for Smollett and his legal team told the outlet they plan to “file an appeal with the Supreme Court.”

    “We wish to highlight that the decision was divided, with Justice Lyle offering a detailed analysis in favor of Smollett,” Holly Baird reportedly explained. “We are preparing to escalate this matter to the Supreme Court, armed with a substantial body of evidence.”

    A special prosecutor named Dan. K. Webb reportedly championed the Illinois Appeals Court’s decision.

    “As the appellate court noted, Mr. Smollett ‘challenge[d] virtually every aspect of’ the prosecution, and the appellate court correctly rejected each and every one of those challenges,” Webb stated, per Fox News. “Today’s decision is a validation of Winston & Strawn’s tireless work on this matter and a resounding victory for justice. We are proud to have prevailed in a case that, we believe, can help restore the public’s confidence in the Cook County justice system.”

    According to Fox News, after Smollett’s team files another appeal, the Illinois Supreme Court will decide whether to “hear the case.” Then, if the actor’s conviction is not overturned, he will return to Cook County jail to finish his 150-day sentence.

    A Look Back On The Actor’s Sentencing & Staged Hate Crime Hoax

    According to Fox News, Smollett was found guilty on five out of six charges of disorderly conduct in December 2021. In January 2019, the actor went viral after alleging he was the victim of a “racist and homophobic attack” by two men in ski masks.

    A police investigation revealed that Smollett orchestrated the plot. Additionally, the former ‘Empire’ actor hired the two men, Bola and Ola Osundairo, to participate as assailants for $3,500.

    Fox News reports that Smollett maintained his innocence during his sentencing. Additionally, his legal team alleges that Smollett’s “due process rights” were violated when he was given “renewed protection” and his initial deal, or “nonprosecution agreement,” with prosecutors was not honored.

    According to CNN, the court ultimately found that prosecutors never agreed to drop Smollett’s charges.

    “Here, the State’s nolle prosequi [dcision to no longer prosecute] of the indictment was not a final disposition of the case,” the court declared, per CNN. “Therefore, the State was not barred from re-prosecuting Smollett…”

    Furthermore, Smollett’s legal team reportedly accused the judge who presided over his conviction of having bias against the actor.

    “[In addition, the] circuit court judge improperly denied the defense motion for substitution of judge for cause because of his explicit bias towards Mr. Smollett, rendering every subsequent ruling and action in this case null and void,” Smollett’s legal reportedly disclosed in their March 2023 appeal filing.

    RELATED: ‘Basketball Wives LA’ Alum Brittish Williams Sentenced Over Fraud Charges

    Jadriena Solomon

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  • Palestinian college student speaks out about Vermont shooting which left him wounded

    Palestinian college student speaks out about Vermont shooting which left him wounded

    Palestinian college student speaks out about Vermont shooting which left him wounded – CBS News


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    One of three Palestinian college students who were shot and wounded in Burlington, Vermont, last weekend spoke to CBS News’ Errol Barnett about the horror of the ordeal. Kinnan Abdalhamid said he ran for his life after hearing the shots, fearing his childhood friends might be dead.

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  • Man pleads not guilty to shooting Palestinian students

    Man pleads not guilty to shooting Palestinian students

    Man pleads not guilty to shooting Palestinian students – CBS News


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    The man suspected of shooting three Palestinian college students in Vermont over the weekend pleaded not guilty on Monday. The man is charged with three counts of attempted second degree murder. Errol Barnett has the latest.

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  • Gov. Kathy Hochul outlines steps New York will take to combat threats of violence and radicalization

    Gov. Kathy Hochul outlines steps New York will take to combat threats of violence and radicalization

    NYPD ramping up security for Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade


    NYPD ramping up security for Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

    03:11

    NEW YORK — With officials concerned about New York facing looming threats of violence, Gov. Kathy Hochul on Tuesday morning announced new steps she’ll be taking to beef up security and deal with online threats and radicalization.

    The governor outlined several initiatives to stop hate speech online from becoming hate crimes in the state.

    Stopping online hate speech

    Included in the plan is $3 million to ensure every college campus has a threat assessment and management team on site to identify threats, targeted ads offering help for parents to identify if their child is involved in hate speech online, and media literacy tools for all public school students to make them smarter about identifying misinformation online.

    The announcement came after CBS News obtained a new threat assessment which points to “an increasing terror threat to New York state.”

    The intelligence center warns that the spread of antisemitic and anti-Palestinian rhetoric on social media is fueling an increase in hate crimes targeting Jews, Muslims and Arabs.

    The report says, “The expansion of Israeli operations against Hamas in the Gaza Strip and increase in civilian casualties raises the likelihood that violent extremist threat actors will seek to conduct attacks against targets in the West, with New York state being a focus. Terrorist messaging has placed focus on attacking ‘soft targets’ such as protests, group gatherings, and other public events.”

    Hochul spoke Tuesday about how the online threat assessment teams will work.

    “They’re not looking at your Instagram sunset posts or your tweets about your favorite football team, and they’re not here to penalize anyone for their political views. They have a simple goal, to find out what’s driving hateful behavior and intervene early before harm is done,” the governor said.

    Watch Jessica Moore’s report


    Gov. Hochul outlines steps N.Y. will take to combat threats of violence, radicalization

    02:47

    She also said she reached out to social media companies to criticize them for not better monitoring hate online.

    “They say they’re monitoring for hate speech and I’d say there are instances where you’re not successful. So, ramp up the number of people who are in charge of monitoring, because if my state police can find it, if college students can find it, the people you hire to find it should be able to do so and take it down immediately,” Hochul said.

    The governor said hate crimes against Jews, Muslims and Arabs have increased by more than 400% since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7.

    Stepped-up security at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

    In light of the report, the Hochul said the NYPD and state police have stepped up security around Thursday’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

    “Are we living in a heightened threat environment? Absolutely. Are we seeing an increase in calls for violence? Absolutely. Those calls are coming from outside the country and inside, but there are no credible threats to the parade or to New York at this time,” said Jackie Bay, commissioner of the Department of Homeland Security’s New York State Division. “Everyone should feel absolutely safe going out there and enjoying the holiday.”

    The governor pointed to the success of this month’s marathon as proof that her team is remaining vigilant about securing all large scale events happening in the city.

    She is reminding all New Yorkers to be vigilant as well.

    The NYPD says there are no credible threats to any New York event or to the city in general, but police are seeing increased calls to violence online, and the head of NYPD Intelligence and Counterterrorism told CBS New York’s Ali Bauman her office is monitoring that activity online and overseas to inform how their resources will be deployed for large events like the parade.

    “Our heavy weapons teams, our blocker trucks, officers deployed throughout the route,” Deputy Commissioner Rebecca Weiner said.

    The department is stepping up security for this year’s parade in part due to an assessment from the New York State Intelligence Center, obtained by CBS News, which points to an “increasing terrorist threat to New York State” since the war in Gaza began.

    “What are you seeing and how are you monitoring all of it?” Bauman asked.

    “Extremist and terrorist organizations across the spectrum, making statements, generalized calls to action, online rhetoric, real vitriolic rhetoric, some bias incidents, hate crimes,” Weiner said.

    The state assessment warns terrorist messaging has placed focus on attacking “soft targets” such as protests and group gatherings.

    This, of course, comes days after Mayor Eric Adams cut 5% of the NYPD’s budget and Tuesday said the department could face another round of cuts in January.

    “You have the parade you’re preparing for, you have heightened tensions and online rhetoric, you have protests popping up every other day throughout the city and on top of that are budget cuts the NYPD is dealing with. Is the department stretched too thin right now?” Bauman asked.

    “We will not compromise on public safety, absolutely not. Not in this environment, not when there’s so much going on, so we want to reassure everyone we’re there to protect your safety day in day out and we’ll continue to do so,” Weiner said.

    Weiner also told said the NYPD has an officer deployed in Tel Aviv giving her real time updates on the security situation there.

    She says this ramped-up police security will last as long as needed based on the threat assessment overseas.

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  • Far-right thugs, football hooligans blamed for violence at London march

    Far-right thugs, football hooligans blamed for violence at London march

    London’s Metropolitan Police said that physical violence by far-right thugs and football hooligans on the city’s streets Saturday was more dangerous than the far-larger pro-Palestinian demonstration that was largely peaceful.

    An estimated 300,000 people took to London’s streets on Saturday — as protesters did across other major European cities such as Paris and Brussels — to call for a cease-fire in Israel’s bombing campaign on Gaza. The London march was between Hyde Park and the U.S. Embassy.

    The London police condemned “extreme violence from right-wing protesters” who it said set out to confront Saturday’s pro-Palestinian march. Nine officers were injured and 126 people were arrested, the “vast majority” of whom were counter-protesters, the police said.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak blamed the violence on far-right “thugs” and “Hamas sympathizers” who had gtried to infiltrate the march. 

    Following the rally, Matt Twist, an assistant commissioner with the London Metropolitan Police, said that the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) event “did not see the sort of physical violence carried out by the right wing” on Saturday, which had looked to clash with the PSC and stop the rally.

    “This group were largely football hooligans from across the U.K. and spent most of the day attacking or threatening officers who were seeking to prevent them being able to confront the main march,” Twist said in a statement late Saturday. In searchers of the group members, the police found “a knife, a baton and knuckleduster … as well as class A drugs,” he said.

    Ahead of the weekend, U.K. Home Secretary Suella Braverman had described pro-Palestinian events as “hate marches.”

    Twist said some breakaway groups from the pro-Palestinian rally behaved in an “intimidating manner” with arrests made after officers were struck in the face with fireworks, but there was no comparable level of violence to the football hooligans.

    “There were also a number of serious offenses identified in relation to hate crime and possible support for proscribed organizations during the protest that we are actively investigating,” said Twist.

    Violent and intimidating protests were “deplorable,” Sunak said. “That is true for [far-right English Defence League] thugs attacking police officers and trespassing on the Cenotaph, and it is true for those singing antisemitic chants and brandishing pro-Hamas signs and clothing on today’s protest,” he said.

    Joshua Posaner

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  • Authorities investigating hit-and-run of Arab Muslim student at Stanford as hate crime

    Authorities investigating hit-and-run of Arab Muslim student at Stanford as hate crime

    An Arab Muslim student at Stanford University was struck by a driver in a hit-and-run collision that the California Highway Patrol is investigating as a hate crime, according to the university.

    The student was walking on campus about 2 p.m. Friday when the driver made eye contact before accelerating and striking the student, according to a news release from the university’s Department of Public Safety. The driver shouted, “F— you people,” as he sped away, the release said. The student’s injuries are not life-threatening.

    Stanford’s president, Richard Saller, sent a message to the community condemning the violence.

    “We are profoundly disturbed to hear this report of potentially hate-based physical violence on our campus. Violence on our campus is unacceptable,” he said. “Hate-based violence is morally reprehensible, and we condemn it in the strongest terms.”

    The driver remains at large, authorities said. The victim described him as “a white male in his mid-20s, with short dirty-blond hair and a short beard, wearing a gray shirt and round framed eyeglasses.”

    The vehicle was described as a black Toyota 4Runner, model 2015 or newer, with a tire mounted on the back with a Toyota logo in the center of the wheel. The victim said it had a white California license plate with the letters M and J, with M possibly the first letter and J in the middle.

    Campuses across the country have been pushed to confront anti-Arab racism, Islamophobia and antisemitism in the wake of Hamas’ Oct. 7 surprise attack on Israel, in which militants killed 1,400 Israelis and took about 220 people hostage.

    Relentless attacks by Israel in the Gaza Strip in the weeks since have killed more than 9,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

    Earlier this month, Stanford Provost Jenny Martinez spoke to the university’s faculty senate, detailing concerns from Palestinian American and Muslim community members who fear for their safety and who have described “troubling incidents and interactions rooted in Islamophobia.” She also relayed that Jewish and Israeli students have reported feeling fearful on campus, “feeling that they are targets of hate because of their identity.”

    The Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee has said it has heard from students across the country, including California, who have faced threats on campuses since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas.

    Abed Ayoub, the group’s national executive director, said his staff has also heard from students who are facing expulsion or losing job opportunities for expressing their beliefs. Others are having their social media posts monitored and are threatened with violence.

    Debbie Truong

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  • Person of interest being questioned after antisemitic threats made at Cornell University

    Person of interest being questioned after antisemitic threats made at Cornell University

    Gov. Hochul announces steps to combat antisemitism on New York college campuses


    Gov. Hochul announces steps to combat antisemitism on New York college campuses

    02:49

    NEW YORK — A person of interest is in custody following antisemitic threats made at Cornell University, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Tuesday. 

    Hochul visited the campus Monday and promised action. 

    “When I met with Cornell students yesterday, I promised them New York State would do everything possible to find the perpetrator who threatened a mass shooting and antisemitic violence on campus. Earlier today, law enforcement identified a person of interest as part of the investigation and this individual is currently in the custody of the New York State Police for questioning. Public safety is my top priority and I’m committed to combating hate and bias wherever it rears its ugly head,” Hochul said. 

    Tuesday, Hochul pledged to protect students on colleges campuses and in their communities, following a disturbing surge in hate and bias crimes.

    After both a trip to Israel, where she saw first hand the atrocities committed by Hamas, and a visit to Cornell University to discuss a series of violent antisemitic messages on a campus message board, the governor is not only decrying hate speech but doing something about it.

    Hochul spoke from the heart Tuesday at Columbia University as she continues to move expeditiously to identify and deal with threats of violence on campuses since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7.

    “Let me be clear: We cannot allow hate and intimidation to become normalized,” Hochul said.


    Watch: Gov. Hochul addresses rise in hate speech on college campuses

    09:36

    The governor was clearly motivated by two recent experiences, visiting a kibbutz near the Gaza border, where 70 people were murdered, and meeting with Cornell students as the FBI investigated threats, including one that said, “If you see a Jewish ‘person’ on campus, follow them home and slit their throats.”

    Hochul announced a number of steps to protect people, including:

    • Expanding the work of the New York State Police Social Media Analysis Unit to increase monitoring for school and campus threats of violence
    • $75 million in grants for law enforcement agencies to crack down on hate crimes
    • $3 million to expand the Red Flag Law to help officers respond to hate crimes or bias-motivated threats
    • Appointment of former Court of Appeals chief judge Jonathan Lippman to review antisemitism and anti-discrimination policies on city university campuses

    “While (Lippman’s) assessment will be focused on CUNY, his recommendations will be a road map for institutions across the state and the country,” Hochul said. “I’ve spoken to the SUNY and CUNY chancellors and representatives of private universities to share our concerns about the consequences of free speech crossing the line into hate speech by both students and professors. We will take on the antisemitism we have seen on college campuses.”

    The White House is also stepping in and monitoring the situation on college campuses, with the help of Homeland Security. It’s expected to provide guidance and resources as needed.

    The governor’s moves come as the Anti-Defamation League reported a nearly 400% increase in antisemitic incidents since hostilities in the Middle East started three weeks ago.

    The Council on American Islamic Relations has also reported a similar increase in bias incidents against Muslims.

    CBS New York’s Marcia Kramer will have more on this story on the News at 5 & 6 p.m.

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  • Antisemitic incidents on the rise in weeks after Israel-Hamas war, Anti-Defamation League says

    Antisemitic incidents on the rise in weeks after Israel-Hamas war, Anti-Defamation League says

    Antisemitic incidents on the rise in weeks after Israel-Hamas war, Anti-Defamation League says – CBS News


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    Threats against Jewish, Muslim and Arab communities in the U.S. are on the rise since the start of the Israel-Hamas war. Antisemitic incidents saw a staggering 388% increase, according to numbers released Wednesday by the Anti-Defamation League, while the Council on American Islamic Relations reported nearly 800 anti-Muslim incidents since Oct. 7, the highest in nearly eight years. Jeff Pegues has more.

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  • Newport Beach police investigate swastikas on school locker as hate crime

    Newport Beach police investigate swastikas on school locker as hate crime

    Newport Beach police are investigating the tagging of swastikas on a locker at Corona del Mar High School as a hate crime, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District said.

    The school district became aware of the vandalism last weekend and reported it to the police.

    “This behavior is unacceptable and will not be tolerated in our schools,” said Annette Franco, a spokesperson for the district. “We are investigating and have met with the Jewish Federation of Orange County to determine next steps in helping our school community to be better citizens. Immediate action is being taken as we develop longer-term plans.”

    A spokesperson for the Newport Beach Police Department said detectives were investigating.

    While the incident comes less than two weeks after the start of the war in Israel and Gaza, the school district has a history of antisemitic incidents.

    In 2019, police were notified after a group of high school students drinking alcohol at a house party took a photograph giving a Nazi salute around a table with red plastic cups arranged in the shape of a swastika.

    The students at that party attended Newport Harbor, Estancia and Costa Mesa high schools, not Corona del Mar High School.

    Reports of hate incidents have increased over the past few years in Orange County, spiking from 41 incidents in 2021 to 103 in 2022, according to a county report.

    Brian Levin, founder of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, said there has been an increase in antisemitic and anti-Muslim incidents since the start of the war, though the data is very preliminary.

    Levin said there were seven antisemitic hate crimes reported in the city of Los Angeles between Oct. 6 and 16 this year, compared with three in the same period last year.

    “We have seen increases in anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish hate. More of the increases are occurring with noncriminal incidents, and anti-Jewish incidents for now seem to be going up more,” Levin said.

    Noah Goldberg

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  • Hundreds mourn slain Muslim boy as FBI warns of rising threats of violence in U.S.

    Hundreds mourn slain Muslim boy as FBI warns of rising threats of violence in U.S.

    Hundreds mourn slain Muslim boy as FBI warns of rising threats of violence in U.S. – CBS News


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    The FBI warned of rising threats of violence in the U.S. on Monday amid the escalating Israel-Hamas conflict. The warning came as the Justice Department investigated the killing of a 6-year-old Muslim boy in Illinois as an alleged hate crime. Jeff Pegues reports.

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  • Funeral for 6-year-old Palestinian boy allegedly killed by landlord

    Funeral for 6-year-old Palestinian boy allegedly killed by landlord

    The 6-year-old Palestinian boy allegedly stabbed to death by his Chicagoland landlord will be buried Monday afternoon.

    “As they say, the smallest coffins are the heaviest,” CAIR-Chicago executive director Ahmed Rehab said in a statement announcing the 1 p.m. CT funeral for Wadea Al-Fayoume at the Bridgeview, Ill. Mosque Foundation.

    The victim, who recently celebrated a birthday, will be laid to rest at Parkholm Cemetery in LaGrange, Ill. following the service.

    The United States Department of Justice is investigating the killing of Al-Fayoume and the stabbing of his 32-year-old mom, Hanaan Shahin, as a federal hate crime. Shahin was stabbed multiple times but is expected to survive.

    Their landlord, Joseph Czuba, was arrested in connection with the attack believed to be fueled by the war between Hamas and Israel that began last week.

    “I am heartbroken by the abhorrent killing of Wadea Al-Fayoume, a six-year-old child who died after being stabbed 26 times with a military-style knife,” Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said in a statement announcing the federal government’s decision.

     

    Will County Sheriff’s Office

    Joseph Czuba, 71, was charged Sunday with first-degree murder and a handful of other crimes.

    Iman Negrete places two teddy bears outside the Plainfield Township home, Sunday, Oct. 15, 2023, where Joseph Czuba, 71, allegedly stabbed 6-year-old Wadea Al-Fayoume to death and seriously injured his mother on Saturday after targeting them because they were Muslim. According to the Will County Sheriff's Office, Czuba was upset about the ongoing conflict involving Hamas and Israel. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune via AP)
    Iman Negrete places two teddy bears outside the Plainfield Township home, Sunday, Oct. 15, 2023, where Joseph Czuba, 71, allegedly stabbed 6-year-old Wadea Al-Fayoume to death and seriously injured his mother on Saturday after targeting them because they were Muslim. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune via AP)

    The 71-year-old suspect is accused of murder, attempted murder and hate crimes at the local level.

    The victims moved into the ground floor of the Plainfield, Ill., home where the attack occurred in 2021 and had no previous issues with Czuba, according to ABC News. Family members said Shahin left the West Bank 12 years ago to escape turmoil in the Middle East. Al-Fayoume’s father said his son enjoyed soccer and basketball.

    Brian Niemietz

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