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Flatbush Shomrim: Man Arrested For Trying To Lure Orthodox Jewish Children; Follows Night With Four Arrests


A man was arrested on Monday for trying to lure children in the vicinity of Avenue N and East 17 Street.

Sources tell YWN that people had called Flatbush Shomrim and the NYPD multiple times in the past few weeks reporting incidents of the same man attempting to give children candy and toys. The man did this at least five times in the past 4 weeks.

Thankfully, on Monday afternoon, Flatbush Shomrim spotted the man, and police took the suspect into custody.

Please speak to your children about the dangers of talking to strangers. This is a classic example of a strangers offering candy to children.

This incident followed a night where four people were arrested in Flatbush.

In the first incident, three suspects were arrested on Avenue N and East 21 Street for graffitiing multiple construction sites at around 12:45AM.

That followed by a man taken into custody for breaking into a vehicle at around 1:30AM.

Shomrim has dozens of volunteers patrolling the streets of Flatbush while the community is asleep, and are responsible for many arrests that many never get to hear about.

Shomrim reminds the community to always call 911 immediately if you see something suspicious, and then call the 24 hour Shomrim hotline at 718-338-9797.

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)



8 Responses

  1. just curious by law is offering a kid a candy in a park grounds for arrest? meaning assuming he didnt do anything YET how can they arrest him?

  2. @abenzev, you are quoting a newspaper in Phoenix Arizona i believe, here in NYC there are no laws against loitering and prowling unless its on or near school grounds, as a matter of fact there were uproars i the past against these kinds of rules, i mean do you really want police to regulate where you can loiter and who you talk to ?was this near a school?

    see link

    https://codes.findlaw.com/ny/penal-law/pen-sect-240-35.html

  3. Don’t be lulled into thinking the main threat is from “stranger danger” – statistics show that the vast majority of child abuse happens from people known to the victim ie friends family teachers etc. It’s time we face reality and make sure our children know the more likely scenario that it could be someone who they think is a friend, such as someone in shul, a Rebbe etc. It’s all about teaching children to identify abusive behaviours. Rabbi
    Yaakov Horowitz has an excellent book to teach these skills in a kosher manner

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