Official: Jersey City Shooters Were Motivated By “Hatred Of The Jewish People”
New Jersey officials believe the two shooters at a kosher supermarket in Jersey City were motivated by bias against Jews and the police.
“We believe that the suspects held views that reflected hatred of the Jewish people as well as a hatred of law enforcement,” the state’s attorney general, Gurbir Grewal, said at a news conference Thursday.
Four people died in the attack Tuesday at the kosher store, in addition to the gunmen. The victims include Mindy Ferencz, 32, the market owner with her husband, and Moshe Deutsch, 24, who are Jewish, and a store employee, Miguel Douglas, 49. A police officer, Joseph Seals, 39, was killed at a nearby cemetery.
After shooting Seals, the suspects, who have been identified as David Anderson and Francine Graham, drove a van a mile away to the JC Kosher Supermarket and entered firing, according to local law enforcement officials. Police arrived on the scene and a shootout began that lasted more than an hour.
When it was over, police found the bodies of three civilians and the gunmen. Police also found an active pipe bomb in their van.
Grewal said the incident was being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism.
“The evidence points towards acts of hate,” he told reporters. “I can confirm that we are investigating this matter as potential acts of domestic terrorism, fueled both by anti-Semitism and anti-law enforcement beliefs.”
U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito said the suspects targeted only people in the store as well as the police, and that a video showed that they had not shot at passersby.
“They were clearly targeting that store. They were clearly targeting the New Jersey Police Department,” he said at the news conference.
Grewal said investigators were looking into social media posts that allegedly were written by the suspects. He said they were also probing possible ties with the Black Hebrew Israelites, a movement of African-Americans who believe they descended from the biblical Israelites. Some adherents hold anti-Semitic views.
“We have evidence that both suspects expressed interest in this group, but we have not definitely set any formal links to that organization or any other formal group,” Grewal said.
He added that investigators believe that the shooters were acting on their own.
Ferencz and Deutsch were among a number of haredi Orthodox Jews who recently made Jersey City their home. Some 100 families moved to the area from Brooklyn because of increasing rents. Community members say the Jews got along well with other residents in the Greenville neighborhood, which has a significant African-American population.
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Jersey City Suspect Turned ‘Dark’ After Dating Fellow Shooter, Neighbors Say
Neighbors of one of the suspects in the attack on a Jersey City, New Jersey kosher grocery store told reporters that she was a pleasant and friendly person before she began dating the man who allegedly embarked on the shooting spree with her.
Francine Graham worked as a home health aide and lived in the nearby city of Elizabeth, a neighbor in her former condominium complex told The New York Times.
“She was nice, she had a caring nature, she was a standup person,” the neighbor said. Another neighbor told the New York Post that she was “desperate for a boyfriend.”
But after she met David Anderson in 2017, the neighbor told the Times, she underwent a “Jekyll and Hyde” transformation.
Anderson was an Army Reserve fuel and electrical systems repairman from 1999 to 2003, but after he left the service, he was arrested four times between 2003 and 2011, including on weapons possession and probation violation charges, spending more than a year in jail on a 2007 weapons charge. He was also a former adherent of Black Hebrew Israelite ideology, law enforcement sources told local station NBC4.
Neighbors said that after Anderson moved in with Graham, they started hearing both of them conducting loud chanting of religious verses inside the apartment. Anderson reportedly made frequent statements that Judaism and Christianity were false religions, and one neighbor told the Times that he often played recordings of someone that sounded like Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.
Graham eventually stopped paying her water bill and condo fees and was evicted in 2018, neighbors said. Neighbors said they moved into a van - the same U-Haul that was allegedly used to transport them to the JC Kosher Supermarket, where three people were shot dead. Inside the van, officers found an operational pipe bomb, other weapons, and what authorities described to the Times as as “rambling” manifesto.
Aiden Pink is the deputy news editor of the Forward. Contact him at pink@forward.com or follow him on Twitter @aidenpink
Scammers Create Fake GoFundMe Pages After Jersey City Anti-Semitic Shooting
Scam artists have set up a number of fake fundraising pages to solicit donations after the tragic shooting in Jersey City last night, the United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey said in a Wednesday press conference.
“They’re creating fake GoFundMe pages to try and solicit donations, purportedly for the families of these victims, to line their pockets,” said U.S. Attorney Craig Carpentino. “I can’t — no words. I can’t find the words of how disgusting this conduct is.”
Carpentino said as of last night, there were no legitimate pages set up to benefit the victims, so anyone who gave donations has been inadvertently giving money to the scam artists. He did not quantify the number of fake sites, but the Forward has identified two.
Carpentino encouraged any donors to contact the FBI and to check charities with the Jersey City police department to make sure money is going to a legitimate site. He said authorities are investigating the scammers.
“A reprehensible group of people are online, trying to profiteer off of the misfortune of others,” he said. “If anyone has any information about that, please contact the FBI immediately.”
Molly Boigon is the investigative reporter at the Forward. Contact her at boigon@forward.com or follow her on Twitter [@MollyBoigon](https://twitter.com/MollyBoigon
Shooting’s Two Jewish Victims — A Scholar And A Beloved Leader — To Be Buried Thursday
The two Jewish victims of yesterday’s protracted shootout in Jersey City, N.J. will be buried tomorrow, according to a Hasidic community leader.
“They understand the urgency of needing to bury them in a Jewish cemetery as soon as possible,” said Hasidic community leader Yankev Meir during an interview on the Yiddish-language radio/podcast app, Yiddish24 today.
Leah Mindel Ferencz, 33, worked in the JC Kosher Supermarket and was the wife of owner Moishe Ferencz. She and her husband have three children, according to Chabad.
She was a “pioneer” in Jersey City, said Rabbi David Niederman, Executive Director of the United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburg during a press conference Wednesday.
“She and her husband were from the first people who moved to Jersey City, who could not afford a home for their growing family and figured, let’s go to place where it’s cheaper, and I’ll make an example, I’ll go there, I’ll open a grocery store so families can go and shop locally,” he said, “therefore growing the community — alleviating the pain of so many families who live under unbearable conditions.”
Rabbi Yitzchok Leifer and his wife, Bracha Leifer, lead a synagogue around the corner from the kosher grocery store where the shooting happened. Leah Mindel Ferencz was an “askente,” said Bracha— a Yiddish word used to describe a leader or beloved figure in the community.
When the Leifers’ daughter was getting married, Leah Mindel came early to the sheva brachot ceremony to bring food and set up.
“She’d do anything to help a fellow Jew,” said Yitzchok. “I can’t imagine what the town will do without her.”
The other victim is Moshe Deutsch, 24, the son of a leader in the Satmar community in Brooklyn, according to Hasidic news sources. Other outlets report he was the cousin of Mrs. Ferencz.
Deutsch was a devoted scholar and was involved in the organization of a major food drive that benefits 2,000 families, according to Niederman. He also participated in a two-day bike ride to benefit a charity serving children with cancer.
The charity, Chai Lifeline, described Deutsch as a “devoted” volunteer.
A third victim is being named as Miguel Douglas by the authorities, but his family’s social media posts indicate his name is Douglas Rodriguez. He was 49 and an employee at the store who was not a member of the Jewish community, according to Niederman. He came to the United States from Ecuador and has an 11-year-old daughter, according to elected officials. A relative on Twitter called him “un modelo a seguir,” a role model.
Niederman became emotional as he spoke about “a few hundred bullets” that killed Deutsch.
“How can we, as a community, as a people, hear that?” he said.
There are about 20 individuals, mainly volunteers, called misaskim that are at the scene of the crime, preserving the bodies as mandated by Jewish law. They typically visit crime scenes where Orthodox Jews are among the deceased to collect all of the organic matter to make sure everything is buried.
The bodies have been taken to the medical examiner‘s office in Newark.
A police officer also died on Tuesday; Det. Joseph Seals was a father of five lauded as “our leading police officer in removing guns from the street.” He was killed at a cemetery after encountering the alleged perpetrators, David Anderson and Francine Graham, and trying to question them about the U-Haul they were driving. That vehicle had also been linked to the Bayonne, N.J. murder of an Uber driver. Anderson and Graham drove to the nearby JC Kosher Supermarket in that U-Haul, which had a pipe bomb and firearms inside. Anderson and Graham died inside the market.
Aiden Pink contributed reporting.
Molly Boigon is the investigative reporter at the Forward. Contact her at boigon@forward.com or follow her on Twitter @MollyBoigon
Ari Feldman is a staff writer at the Forward. Contact him at feldman@forward.com or follow him on Twitter @aefeldman