4 men charged in a Brooklyn synagogue tunnel scuffle are awaiting trial
in April
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[January 15, 2025]
By JAKE OFFENHARTZ
NEW YORK (AP) — Four men accused of damaging a Brooklyn synagogue during
a melee that followed the discovery of a secret tunnel at the global
headquarters of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement of Hasidic Judaism are set
to stand trial after turning down a plea deal offered by prosecutors.
The men face felony criminal mischief charges for their alleged role in
a brawl last January that damaged parts of the famed complex, a deeply
revered Jewish site that receives thousands of visitors annually.
At the time, scores of young men had gathered to protest an attempt by
synagogue leaders to seal off a makeshift tunnel that some congregants
had dug without permission in an effort to expand the worship space.
When police arrived, prosecutors say some of the men ripped wooden
siding off the wall, flung prayer books in the air and refused to leave
the dusty excavation site.
Sixteen people were arrested following the altercation, which was
partially captured on video, drawing widespread social media attention
and curiosity.
At a court conference Monday, six defendants pleaded guilty to lesser
charges and agreed to an order of protection that prohibits them from
making “alterations, excavations or demolitions to the synagogue” for
three years. Six others have previously pleaded guilty to reduced
charges.
“This is a blemish on the Chabad movement as far as I’m concerned,”
Judge Adam Perlmutter told the men, scolding them for not consulting
with synagogue leadership about the expansion plan. “They built
buildings all over the world. It involves raising money, hiring
architects, getting building permits and any rezoning as necessary. It
is the only way that it gets done in this town.”
Four of the defendants — Yaakov Rothchild, Yisroel Binyamin, Yerachmiel
Blumenfeld and Menachem Maidanchik — declined the plea deal offered by
the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office. They are scheduled to face
trial on April 28 on a felony charge that carries a maximum prison
sentence of 7 years.
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Hasidic Jewish students observe as law enforcement establishes a
perimeter around a breached wall in the synagogue that led to a
tunnel dug by students, Jan. 8, 2024, in New York. (Bruce Schaff via
AP, File)
Jonathan Strauss, an attorney for Blumenfeld, called the charges an
“outrage" and described his client as a participant in a “civil
dispute that’s been going on for many, many years.”
“He’s a 20-year-old kid,” Strauss said. “Kids don’t decide on their
own to take the actions he did without being told to do so by much
older and wiser people of authority.”
Proponents of the tunnel said they were carrying out the wishes of
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the longtime leader of the Chabad
movement and one of Judaism’s most influential figures, who spoke of
expanding the densely packed religious space before his death in
1994. Some members of the Chabad community believe Schneerson is
still alive and that he is the messiah.
The messianic view has long been rejected by Chabad’s
administrators, who characterized the illicit passageway as a rogue
act of youth vandalism.
“There is no righteous justification, theological or otherwise, for
their lawless and violent behavior," said Rabbi Motti Seligson, a
spokesman for the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. “We pray that they
actually heed the Rebbe’s teachings of highest ethics and see the
grave error of their ways, and make moral and religious amends for
the immense pain and damage they’ve wrought.”
Stretching 60 feet (18.3 meters) long and 8 feet (2.4 meters) wide,
the tunnel connected multiple buildings in the Jewish complex
through holes cut in basement walls.
An investigation by the Department of Buildings found the excavation
had destabilized multiple nearby buildings, prompting vacate orders.
The tunnel has since been filled with cement.
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