Suspect arrested in attack on Jewish man in New York's Times Square
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[May 22, 2021]
By Peter Szekely
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A man was arrested and
several others were being sought in connection with an attack on a
Jewish man in New York's Times Square that drew the attention of several
politicians and is being investigated as a hate crime, police said on
Friday.
The attack on Thursday, captured in a video that was shared on social
media, followed rival pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian demonstrations in
midtown Manhattan over the fighting in Gaza, which ended in a ceasefire
hours later. The demonstrations resulted in 26 arrests.
The 29-year-old Jewish man was attacked a short time after the
demonstrations and was taken to a hospital where he was in stable
condition, Sergeant Jessica McRorie, a police spokeswoman, said. The
victim's name was not released.
"The victim was approached by a group of five or six males who knocked
him to the ground, assaulted him while making anti-Semitic statements,"
McRorie said by phone. "They punched, kicked, pepper-sprayed and hit him
with some crutches during the assault."
The man who was arrested was identified as Waseem Awawdeh, who police
said used a crutch in the early evening assault. He faces charges of
second-degree hate crime assault, a second-degree gang assault, menacing
and criminal possession of a weapon.
A video of the incident showed a person striking a man on the ground
with a crutch and fleeing as other attackers also did. The victim got up
about a minute later and tried to pursue his attackers, but was
restrained by police.
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New York Police Department officers stand outside of a midtown
Manhattan office building in New York November 3, 2011.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson (UNITED STATES - Tags: DISASTER)
The New York Police Department's Hate Crime Task
Force said it was investigating the assault.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a statement that he was
dispatching the State Police Hate Crimes Task Force to assist.
Cuomo and several other elected officials, including Mayor Bill de
Blasio and U.S. Representative Jerry Nadler, whose district includes
the Times Square area, condemned what Cuomo called "anti-Semitic
violent gang harassment and intimidation."
Nassau County Executive Laura Curran, who also condemned the attack,
said in a statement that the victim is a resident of the county,
which is just east of New York City on Long Island.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely in New York; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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