Conspiring Jews Interrupted by Guy Looking For Rabbi
News
San Francisco CA
Description
According to the Northern California Jewish Weekly, a guy interrupted some Jews: Ranting disbarred lawyer disrupts Berkeley synagogue service, then goes looking for Chabad rabbi A disbarred attorney previously convicted for stalking was arrested Saturday after entering Congregation Netivot Shalom in Berkeley and shouting out an antisemitic and aggressive screed, then proceeding to the nearby Chabad house, where he asked for the rabbi. Berkeley police arrested 37-year-old Anatoly Smolkin on a hate crime charge for “willfully threatening a person based on their perceived characteristics,” the department said in a press release. According to reports and interviews, Smolkin walked into the sanctuary of Netivot Shalom on University Avenue in the middle of morning Shabbat services. “He came in, he yelled a little bit, he was asked to leave and he left,” said the synagogue’s executive director Ken Schnur, who was not present but watched the security footage. He said Smolkin referred to “Jewish doctors and lawyers” ruining his life. Smolkin was allowed in through the locked gates into the courtyard under the assumption that he was there for services. The doors to the sanctuary were open. Once Smolkin entered and started shouting, congregants immediately realized something was wrong and came forward to intercept him. About 50 congregants were at the service, which was lay-led. “It’s unsettling, but we’re really lucky that no one was hurt,” Schnur said. A congregant called the police, by which time Smolkin had proceeded to the Chabad of Berkeley, also on University Avenue. According to Rabbi Yehuda Ferris, the center’s director, Smolkin spoke to a Chabad-affiliated person on the sidewalk outside the building. Smolkin asked for the rabbi and was told he wasn’t there, so Smolkin used an expletive. “He did not come inside,” Ferris said. “We keep [the door] locked.” Smolkin was arrested and taken to Santa Rita Jail but was no longer in custody by Tuesday, according to Berkeleyside. It’s not the first time Smolkin has been involved with the law, nor the first time he’s made threats. According to the California State Bar’s disciplinary records, between November 2011 and January 2012, Smolkin “engaged in a campaign of threats, harassment and intimidation by sending emails to victims, targeting his wife, his 11-year-old daughter, and others with sexual violence and death threats.” He was convicted of 30 felonies and 17 misdemeanors involving 17 victims. He was released from jail in 2017 but arrested that same year for violating probation after writing a delusional letter to the Solano district attorney’s office. However, in 2020 an appellate court found that a “reasonable listener” would not have understood the letter to be a true threat. In it, Smolkin said he was a Russian operative. “I will charge, but effectively sentence, the entire Solano County DA’s office with kidnapping punishable by death by Russian military firing squad,” he wrote. “It is clear to any rational person that I pose no threat to anybody.” Ferris said that while Smolkin’s actions were disturbing, “We want to be welcoming. We don’t want to be Fort Knox. But there are crazy people out there.” Schnur said the Saturday incident at Netivot Shalom, though brief, was “a wakeup call” regarding synagogue security. He also said that Netivot’s security committee, of which he’s a member, bears responsibility for what happened. While the synagogue has security measures in place, some had lapsed as the pandemic wore on. “It was our mistake in not immediately reinstating protocols that we had pre-Covid,” he said. Rafael Brinner, director of community security at the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund, said security issues have evolved over the course of the pandemic. “Now that we’re gathering in communal spaces again, we’re getting more requests for security training,” he told J. in an email. “If anything, people are more focused on the need for it after antisemitic attacks in LA and NYC in May and the unrest of the past year, not to mention the Zoombombings that sporadically disrupted online activities during the pandemic.” In Berkeley, a man who last year was arrested and then convicted of a hate crime for vandalizing Temple Sinai in Oakland, was arrested again recently for violating the terms of his probation. Here, let me unwrap that for you. A disbarred attorney previously convicted for stalking... what they are trying to say, here, is that this lawyer mistakenly trusted some Jews, not realizing they were intent upon setting him up and stripping him of his livelihood. ... then proceeding to the nearby Chabad house, where he asked for the rabbi., means, that he came to this place looking for the rabbi, because that's where the rabbi is. He was looking for the rabbi because he was under the illusion that Judaism is a religion, with ethics, and right, and wrong, and he wanted to discuss the right and wrong of what had been done to him by people whom, he mistakenly thought, acknowledged the rabbi's authority. They do acknowledge the rabbi's authority... but only in matters related to other Jews. Ganging up on, and preying upon those whom are not Jews, however, is an accepted practice. So is protecting fellow Jews from the consequences of their predatory actions, by exaggerating emotions and injuries - your basic drama queenery, which the Jewish culture is so famous for. Hence, the dramatic outcry and the relentless posturing, as victims of this bad, bad, BAD lawyer who SCARED them while they were WORSHIPPING THEIR GOD (Whomever that might be). The rest is PR. You don't want to be Fort Knox, but you are. With gates and men - not women! - guarding them, to keep out the goyim. The only reason they let him in was because he looks Russian, so they figured he was a foreigner, like them, and let him in. These people are not religious... there is no morality, here, there are only business interests... and that was not a worship service, dude "interrupted". Enough of the nonsense. You don't need a locked gate or a security guard, or a even dedicated building (that's just a convenience) to worship God. Who do you think you're fooling? A disbarred attorney previously convicted for stalking was arrested... 50 congregants were at the service... With fifty people present, the odds are excellent that there were one or two convicted child molesters in the crowd, as well as AT LEAST five or ten men who had, themselves, been the targets of restraining orders by their wives or girlfriends, over the past twenty or thirty years. So maybe that lead sentence should read A disbarred attorney previously convicted for stalking was arrested, after interrupting a gang of around fifty men, including at least one known child molester and almost a dozen rowdies whom had been the recipients of domestic violence restraining orders - there, fixed that for you.
Discussion
By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.