Police are investigating a recent spate of pellet gun shootings around Los Angeles that included an attack on two Yeshiva students near Melrose Avenue in what authorities are calling a hate crime.
At 9:45 p.m. Thursday, two men in a black four-door car drove up near a group of young Jews dressed in traditional clothing, rolled down their windows and fired several rounds of pellets while yelling derogatory, anti-Semitic remarks, said Officer Jason Lee of the Los Angeles Police Department.
None of the men were seriously injured in the attack, but at least one was hit in the neck with a pellet, police said. Investigators believe the weapon used resembles a black handgun but fires hard pellets instead of bullets. The men, who were attacked near La Brea and Waring avenues, are students at a nearby Yeshiva, a Jewish school that trains rabbis.
Five pellet gun shootings between Thursday night and 4 a.m. Friday targeted residents in the Melrose and Mid-Wilshire areas, police said. Officers said they are still investigating the crimes, and though they seem similar and could be connected, they are not yet sure.
LAPD Assistant Chief Earl Paysinger said he has added extra patrols to the Melrose Avenue area and is working closely with Jewish leaders in the community to ensure that the upcoming High Holy Days are without incident.
In a show of political force and unity, LAPD officials along with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Councilman Jack Weiss joined with Jewish community leaders at Melrose Avenue Elementary School on Friday afternoon to denounce the violence.
Villaraigosa called the incident an “ugly act of anti-Semitism” and said the attack was a blow against all Angelenos.
“This attack will not go unanswered,” he said. “As one voice, as one city, we must come together to condemn this attack.”
(Source: LA Times)
3 Responses
Did they ID the offenders? Any security cameras?The more chance these types are caught, the larger the deterance
Wake up everyone.
“Ve’haya Mechanecha Kodosh Ve’raah Becha Ervat
Devar Veshav Meacharecha”.
My feeling has always been that as long as the holocaust survivors are alive, we have a special protection – Hashem wouldn’t have them go through such a thing twice – but as the last survivors leave this world, I fear that antisemitism could grow. I hope I’m wrong.