Town hall meeting targets antisemitic shootings

Wave Wire Services

LOS ANGELES — Mayor Karen Bass, other elected officials and Jewish leaders across Los Angeles County attended a town hall Feb. 20 in the Pico-Robertson neighborhood that drew over 100 people to address antisemitic violence, following the shootings of two Jewish men last week after they left services at synagogues in the area.

A suspect was arrested Feb. 16 and charged with committing hate crime acts in connection with the shootings. But officials speaking at the town hall — held at the YULA High School gym — spoke about a sense of unease that remains in the neighborhood and the city given a rise in antisemitism.

Bass called for more cameras and license plate readers, and for the Los Angeles Police Department to increase patrols.

“Antisemitism has no place in Los Angeles, and I’m grateful to see my fellow elected officials and law enforcement leaders here locking arms with Jewish leaders against hateful acts in our community,” Bass said.

Bass said it was important as hateful messages spread via flyers and freeway banners that “we act aggressively and immediately at the first sign of anything.”

“First we had one shooting, and then a second, and we have no way of knowing if it’s going to stop,” Bass said.

Some of the officials who joined Bass included City Council President Paul Krekorian, Councilwoman Katy Yaroslavsky, U.S. Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove, Assemblymen Isaac Bryan and Jesse Gabriel, County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto. 

Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore and Sheriff Robert Luna also were in attendance.

Yaroslavsky said she planned to introduce a motion calling for more funding for the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles’ Community Security Initiative, which provides security and support services to local Jewish institutions.

“As a people, we know always have to be vigilant, but the unease we feel in our city — in Los Angeles, in 2023 for crying out loud — is deeply disturbing and wholly unacceptable,” Yaroslavsky said.

The federal complaint against the suspect alleges that 28-year-old Jamie Tran targeted the two victims because they were Jewish or he believed them to be Jewish. Because the complaint contains allegations that Tran attempted to murder the two victims, the maximum possible penalty for each of the two hate crimes is life without parole in federal prison.

In a Mirandized, recorded interview, Tran acknowledged having intentionally shot the two victims, according to an affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint and arrest warrant.

Tran allegedly told agents that he searched for a “kosher” market on the social media application Yelp. After locating a kosher market, Tran drove to the market and selected his victims because of their “head gear,” he said, according to the affidavit.

The first shooting occurred around 10 a.m. Feb. 15 in the 1400 block of Shenandoah Street, near Pico Boulevard, between Robertson and La Cienega boulevards. A man in his 40s was shot in the lower back while walking to his vehicle.

The second shooting occurred at 8:30 a.m. Feb. 16 in the 1600 block of South Bedford Street, two blocks south of Pico Boulevard and one block east of Shenandoah Street. The man was shot in the arm. Both victims survived.

Moore said there is no current indication of any copycat threat related to the shootings, but that “we recognize the potential could be there.” 

The police chief urged people to call out hate speech online and said education was key to preventing hateful acts. He told the crowd to not allow for “those few voices [to] outspeak the audience of this room tonight.”

“You’re many, many hundreds fold higher in authority and right and power to change our society because of your beliefs and the things that you do in your own home,” Moore said.

When Bass spoke about the need to increase the number of LAPD officers, she also wondered out loud about the number of Jewish officers in the department.

Moore responded: “Not enough.”

“You heard it from the chief: Not enough,” Bass said.

In response to a question about potential alternatives to increasing law enforcement because that may create more anxiety in the community, Bass pointed to her recent hires of deputy mayors of public safety and community safety.

She said her administration would poll all the neighborhoods in the city to get a sense of “what do Angelenos need to feel safe?”

“Frankly, neighborhoods are as diverse as our city,” Bass said. “People have a lot of different ideas about what they want in order to feel safe. I feel that’s the best way to have an overall strategy for Los Angeles.”

Feldstein-Soto said her office is making addressing hate crimes a priority, adding that the point of a hate crime is “much more than to target an individual” but to “terrorize a community.”

“And that is why tonight is so incredibly important … for us to be able to stand up and say: `We will not be afraid. We will come together, and we will come together in a Jewish school to oppose this attempt to separate, to oppose this attempt to terrorize,” she said.

Yaroslavsky and Gabriel both spoke about the stress they feel when walking their children to school, with security guards, locked gates and metal detectors.

“It’s an incredible feeling to think about the fact that [I] have to take my two pre-schoolers and walk them through a metal detector when they’re going to school,” said Gabriel, chair of the California Legislative Jewish Caucus.

That feeling was not something that Gabriel said he faced when growing up.

“The world has changed in very powerful ways, and we are all feeling that anxiety,” Gabriel said.

The day after the meeting, City Councilwoman Katy Yaroslavsky sought more funding for the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles’ Community Security Initiative, which provides security and support services to local Jewish institutions.

Yaroslavsky filed a motion seeking to allocate $150,000 to expand the initiative, asking for various departments to report to the council’s Budget and Finance Committee within 30 days on identifying the funding.

The Community Security Initiative provides security at no cost to more than 500 Jewish institutions across Los Angeles, including active shooter training and installing security and defensive equipment.

Demands for services have increased with a rise in antisemitic activity, as “more and more Jewish synagogues, institutions, and nonprofit organizations seek to protect themselves against this rising wave of violence,” according to the motion.

Hate crimes in 2021 in Los Angeles rose to levels not seen since 2002, and nearly three-quarters of religious hate crimes targeted Jewish populations, according to the Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations’ annual report.

Los Angeles is home to 560,000 Jews, the largest number of Jewish people outside of Israel and New York, according to the motion.