US synagogue massacre led to string of attack plots: Report

At least 12 arrested for white supremacist plots while 780 anti-Semitic incidents reported in the first half of 2019.

Tree of Life Mourners
Mass shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue was the deadliest attack on Jews in recent US history [File: Matt Rourke/AP]

At least 12 white supremacists have been arrested on allegations of plotting, threatening or carrying out anti-Semitic attacks in the US since the massacre at a Pittsburgh synagogue nearly one year ago, a Jewish civil rights group reported. 

In a report published on Sunday, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) also counted at least 50 incidents in which white supremacists were accused of targeting Jewish institutions’ property since a gunman killed 11 worshippers at the Tree of Life Synagogue on October 27, 2018.

Those incidents include 12 cases of vandalism involving white supremacist symbols and 35 cases with white supremacist propaganda distributed.

The ADL said its nationwide count of anti-Semitic incidents remains near record levels. It counted 780 anti-Semitic incidents in the first six months of 2019, compared to 785 incidents during the same period in 2018.

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The ADL’s tally of 12 arrests for white supremacist plots, threats and attacks against Jewish institutions includes the April 2019 capture of John T Earnest, who was charged with killing one person and wounding three others in a shooting at a synagogue in Poway, California.

The group said many of the cases it counted, including the Poway shooting, were inspired by previous white supremacist attacks.

In online posts, Earnest said he was inspired by the deadly attacks in Pittsburgh and on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, where a gunman killed 51 people in March.

The ADL also counted three additional 2019 cases in which individuals were arrested for targeting Jews but weren’t deemed to be white supremacists. Two were motivated by “extremist” ideology, the organisation said.

The ADL said its Center on Extremism provided “critical intelligence” to law enforcement in at least three of the 12 cases it counted.

‘Clear and present threat’

Last December, authorities in Monroe, Washington, arrested a white supremacist after the ADL notified law enforcement about suspicions he threatened on Facebook to kill Jews in a synagogue.

The ADL said it also helped authorities in Lehighton, Pennsylvania, identify a white supremacist accused of using aliases to post threatening messages, including a digital image of himself pointing an AR-15 assault rifle at a group of praying Jewish men.

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In August, an FBI-led anti-terrorism task force arrested a Las Vegas man accused of plotting to firebomb a synagogue or other targets, including a bar catering to LGTBQ customers and the ADL’s Las Vegas office.

The ADL said it warned law enforcement officials about the man’s online threats.

“We cannot and will not rest easy knowing the threat posed by white supremacists and other extremists against the Jewish community is clear and present,” the group’s CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement.

The ADL said it counted at least 30 additional incidents in which people with an “unknown ideology” targeted Jewish institutions with acts of arson, vandalism, or propaganda distribution the group deemed to be anti-Semitic or “generally hateful,” but not explicitly white supremacist.

“These incidents include the shooting of an elderly man outside a synagogue in Miami, fires set at multiple Jewish institutions in New York and Massachusetts, Molotov cocktails thrown at synagogue windows in Chicago, damaged menorahs in Georgia and New Jersey, as well as a wide range of anti-Semitic graffiti,” an ADL report said.

Source: AP