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Hanukkah stabbing suspect has ‘history of mental illness’ and no ties to hate groups, family says Knife-wielding man shattered night of celebration, witnesses say, renewing fears of violence against Jews
(32 minutes later)
The man accused of stabbing multiple people celebrating Hanukkah at a rabbi’s home in New York has “a long history of mental illness and hospitalizations,” according to a family statement issued by his lawyer. MONSEY, N.Y. Inside the rabbi’s home on the seventh night of Hanukkah, the candlelight ceremony was winding down and the large crowd was filtering into the neighboring synagogue when a man with a covered face barged through the front door.
“He has no known history of anti-Semitism and was raised in a home which embraced and respected all religions and races. He is not a member of any hate groups,” attorney Michael Sussman said in the statement emailed Sunday evening to the Mid Hudson News.
The stabbing, which officials said began after 10 p.m. Saturday, lasted less than two minutes and left five people wounded.
Within two hours of the attack in an Orthodox Jewish community north of New York City, police tracked down and arrested Grafton Thomas, a 37-year-old resident of Greenwood Lake, based on the license plate number of a silver Nissan that witnesses had seen fleeing the scene.
Thomas was arraigned on five counts of attempted murder and one count of burglary during a court appearance Sunday. He pleaded not guilty, according to the Associated Press, and his bail was set at $5 million. Sussman said he plans to seek “immediate mental health evaluation” for his client.
“We believe the actions of which he is accused, if committed by him, tragically reflect profound mental illness,” Sussman said, for which “Grafton has received episodic treatment before being released.”
Although Sussman said Thomas has no criminal convictions or “history of like violent acts,” a security official briefed on the case, who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity, said he had been arrested at least seven times since 2001, including an arrest for assaulting a police horse.
Saturday’s attack in the New York City suburb of Monsey — the 13th anti-Semitic incident in three weeks in the state — was the most recent in a string of violence targeting local Jewish communities. Earlier this month, four people were fatally shot in what officials called an attack on a Jersey City kosher grocery store motivated by hatred of Jews and law enforcement.
As news of the latest assault spread, advocacy groups and local leaders called for concrete steps to address anti-Jewish attacks.
New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D), who labeled the ambush an act of domestic terrorism and directed the state’s Hate Crimes Task Force to investigate, called for harsher punishments for mass attacks motivated by hatred of an identity group.
President Trump and leaders in Congress were also united in condemning anti-Semitism after the attack, though some Democrats said Trump should take a more forceful public stance and blamed him for stoking bigotry.
On Sunday afternoon, Trump tweeted, “The anti-Semitic attack in Monsey, New York, on the 7th night of Hanukkah last night is horrific. We must all come together to fight, confront, and eradicate the evil scourge of anti-Semitism."
Rabbi Rottenberg told about last night's attack in Monsey: there was no warning, nothing said—just hate."A country is not just what it does—it is also what it tolerates." I do not tolerate thisWe must call this what it is: Domestic terrorism & our laws must treat it that way pic.twitter.com/HMJFtnkXWh
Saturday’s stabbing shook a county where a third of the population is Jewish and where officials said anti-Semitism has risen in recent years as increasing numbers of Orthodox Jews have made homes there. Last month, police said that they would increase patrols in Monsey in response to Jewish residents’ fears. National concerns have prompted similar vows of heightened security across the country.
“People in the Orthodox community are connecting dots and are genuinely frightened of the escalation,” said Rockland County legislator Aron Wieder.
Wieder said anti-Semitism began to rise in the area about a decade ago and has increased noticeably in the past five years. As more Orthodox Jews have moved into the community, other residents taunted them anonymously online, then etched swastikas onto the dirty window of a van and a “for sale” sign in front of a home. An ad for the county’s Republican Party accused Wieder of “plotting a takeover” that threatens “our way of life.”
Then, last month, a 30-year-old rabbi said two people approached him from behind on a secluded street in Monsey and beat him for several minutes. Police Chief Brad Weidel has said there is no evidence that the man was targeted for his religion, but concerns flared up in the Orthodox community.
Knife-wielding man shattered night of celebration, witnesses say, renewing fears of violence against Jews
A security official briefed on the case said the attacker entered the rabbi’s house and closed the door behind him before saying, “Nobody going anywhere.”
He unsheathed what witnesses described as a sword nearly the size of a broomstick and started slashing at random, moving through the entryway, then into the dining room and eventually toward the kitchen, where dozens of people — from children to senior citizens — were trying to flee through a back door.He unsheathed what witnesses described as a sword nearly the size of a broomstick and started slashing at random, moving through the entryway, then into the dining room and eventually toward the kitchen, where dozens of people — from children to senior citizens — were trying to flee through a back door.
Attendee Joseph Gluck eventually hit the attacker in the head with a small coffee table from the entryway. Both men moved outside, and Gluck realized that the man was headed toward the synagogue, where congregants locked the doors after hearing the commotion at the rabbi’s house. Gluck screamed warnings, then watched as the man tried a second door. The attack, which officials said began after 10 p.m. Saturday in the New York City suburb of Monsey, would last less than two minutes, leave five people wounded and further unsettle the region’s fearful Hasidic community after a spate of recent attacks on Jewish people.
The attacker fled to a car and sped away. Authorities and witnesses said Gluck was able to catch the license plate number, the critical information that allowed authorities to catch the suspect in Harlem around midnight covered in blood and smelling of bleach, prosecutors said, according to the Associated Press. It would also prompt calls for action to prevent more violence, as New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) called for a law punishing mass attacks motivated by hatred of an identity group as domestic terrorism.
Yisroel Kraus, a 26-year-old teacher who was celebrating Hanukkah at the rabbi’s home with his family, said it was lucky that people had already started to filter out for the night. Within hours, authorities tracked down and arrested Grafton E. Thomas, a 37-year-old resident of neighboring Orange County, based on the license plate number of a silver Nissan that witnesses had seen fleeing the scene.
“If he had come 10 minutes earlier, the place would have been packed,” said Kraus. “No way to move. No way to run. It was a miracle. It was a Hanukkah miracle.” Thomas pleaded not guilty to five counts of attempted murder and one count of burglary during a court appearance Sunday, according to the Associated Press. His bail was set at $5 million.
Jersey City shooting is being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism, authorities say Thomas’s attorney, Kristine Ciganek of the Rockland County public defender’s office, declined to comment.
Two of the five victims remain hospitalized, and at least one was in critical condition with a head wound, Cuomo said at a Sunday news conference. Local news outlets reported that Ciganek said in court that her client had no criminal record. But according to a security official briefed on the case, Thomas has been arrested at least seven times since 2001, on offenses that include assault, resisting arrest, killing or injuring a police animal, driving while under the influence, possessing controlled substances and menacing a police or peace officer. He appears to have received a jail sentence only for a 2013 arrest for possession of a controlled substance.
Thomas is next scheduled to appear in court Friday. Officials have yet to announce a motive in the stabbing in Monsey, about 30 miles north of Manhattan, but state leaders were quick to denounce the attack as an act of anti-Semitism. Weeks earlier, four people were fatally shot in what officials called a targeted attack on a Jersey City kosher grocery store motivated by hatred of Jews and law enforcement.
Sussman said the family expresses “our deepest concern and prayers for those injured physically and otherwise deeply affected by the events of Saturday night and our family’s earnest yearnings for their well being.” Saturday’s stabbing shook a county where a third of the population is Jewish and where officials said anti-Semitism has risen in recent years as increasing numbers of Orthodox Jews make their homes there. Police said last month that they would increase patrols in Monsey in response to Jewish residents’ fears, as concerns prompt similar vows of heightened security across the region.
Read more “People in the Orthodox community are connecting dots and are genuinely frightened of the escalation,” said Rockland County legislator Aron Wieder.
Facebook disables some misleading ads on HIV prevention drugs As news of the latest assault spread, advocacy groups and local leaders called for concrete steps to address anti-Jewish attacks. Former New York Assemblymember Dov Hikind said the state’s Jewish residents are “sick and tired” of tweets condemning anti-Semitism and want action.
Colleges want freshmen to use mental health apps. But are they risking students’ privacy? “When will enough be enough?” the Anti-Defamation League echoed in a statement, saying a week of anti-Semitic incidents in the area make it clear that “the Jewish community needs greater protection.”
Gunman kills 2 in Texas church before parishioners returned fire, authorities say Cuomo said the state police’s hate crime task force will investigate and called the Monsey stabbing “domestic terrorism” New York’s 13th anti-Semitic incident in three weeks, he said.
Is revenge porn protected speech? Lawyers weigh in, and hope for a Supreme Court ruling “This is an intolerant time in this country,” Cuomo said Sunday. “We see anger, we see hatred exploding. It is an American cancer in the body politic.”
The president and leaders in Congress were also united in condemning anti-Semitism after the attack, though some Democrats said President Trump should take a more forceful public stance and blamed him for stoking bigotry.
On Sunday afternoon, Trump tweeted, “The anti-Semitic attack in Monsey, New York, on the 7th night of Hanukkah last night is horrific. We must all come together to fight, confront, and eradicate the evil scourge of anti-Semitism."
Community members said that three of the five victims had been treated and released by doctors. Two others remained hospitalized, and at least one was in critical condition with a head wound, Cuomo said at a news conference.
The violence shattered a night of celebration for a tightknit community, witnesses said. The security official briefed on the case said witnesses told law enforcement the attacker entered the rabbi’s house and closed the door behind him before saying, “Nobody going anywhere.”
He started to stab and slice at people seemingly at random, the official said, leaving victims with grave injuries requiring surgery: ruptured hand tendons, a partially amputated limb, wounds to the head, neck, back and arm.
Yisroel Kraus, a 26-year-old teacher who was celebrating Hanukkah at the rabbi’s home with his family, said the assailant swung what looked like a long sword at “everyone he could.” It was lucky, he said, that people had already started to filter out for the night.
“If he had come 10 minutes earlier, the place would have been packed,” he said. “No way to move. No way to run. It was a miracle. It was a Hanukkah miracle.”
Guests tried to fight the attacker off, he recounted: Unable to run, one elderly man threw a chair at the assailant and beat him with a cane.
But the hero of the evening, Kraus said, was his brother-in-law, Joseph Gluck.
Gluck had watched as the attacker unsheathed a “big sword” and began swinging it at those inside, he told MSNBC. Gluck would eventually hit the attacker in the head with a small coffee table from the entryway, he recounted. Both men moved outside.
That’s when Gluck realized that the man was headed toward the synagogue, where congregants locked the doors after hearing the commotion at the rabbi’s house. Gluck screamed warnings, then watched as the man tried a second door.
As the attacker fled to a car and sped away, authorities and witnesses said, Gluck was able to catch the license plate number. That was the critical information that allowed authorities to catch the suspect in Harlem by around midnight, police said — covered in blood and smelling of bleach, prosecutors said, according to the Associated Press.
Kraus ran out the back door of the rabbi’s house and jumped over a gate, he said, ending up at a home a few blocks away where he saw a menorah and knew he’d be welcomed.
An hour later, he gathered with others at the synagogue, where the rabbi spoke of resilience.
“We went on with our daily lives,” Kraus said. “We danced and thanked God that no one got killed.”
Three state troopers were stationed Sunday on a sidewalk across from the rabbi’s house where the attack occurred. Hasidic men and boys gathered around the home and the synagogue next door after the morning ceremony.
Dani Dayan, consul general of Israel to New York, arrived at the house in a black Ford Explorer and met with the rabbi.
“We are in a completely different mode now,” he told reporters gathered on the lawn when he came outside. “In this Hanukkah, we suffered more anti-Semitic incidents than the candles we lit. Impossible to bear.”
Wieder, the county legislator, said anti-Semitism began to rise in the area about a decade ago and has increased noticeably in the past five years. Parents express concern that their children’s schools might be targeted, he said. Synagogue members question the wisdom of open-door policies that have allowed anyone to walk in to pray.
As more Orthodox Jews have moved into the community, Wieder said other residents taunted them anonymously online, then etched Swastikas onto the dirty window of a van and a “for sale” sign in front of a home. An ad for the county’s Republican Party said Wieder was “plotting a takeover” that threatens “our way of life.”
Then, last month, a 30-year-old rabbi said two people came up behind him on a secluded street in Monsey and beat him for several minutes. Police Chief Brad Weidel has said there is no evidence that the man was targeted for his religion, but concerns flared up in the Orthodox community.
On Sunday there was mourning, singing and dancing at a procession of more than 100 Hasidic Jews that ended at the crime scene. The march, led by five law enforcement vehicles, was a previously scheduled celebration to introduce a new Torah at another nearby synagogue.
Rabbi Yossi Fried, 34, shepherded a group of schoolchildren holding oil torches as a light rain fell.
His message for the day: “It has been tough, but in the Jewish religion, we are always taught that there is light, even among the darkness, especially with the children.”
“That is the message we give, no matter what,” he said.
Knowles, Iati and Mettler reported from Washington. Souad Mekhennet in Quiberon, France; Shayna Jacobs in New York; Emily Wax-Thibodeaux in Austin; and Alice Crites in Washington contributed to this report.