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President Donald Trump reportedly suggested in a conversation with the state attorney generals that the recent spate of desecration of Jewish cemeteries and bomb threats of Jewish community centers may be false flag operations intended to make certain people look bad.
Shapiro stopped short of saying Trump thinks his supporters are being framed for bomb threats. But he seems to think that’s what he meant. — Anna Orso (@anna_orso) February 28, 2017
originally posted by: gladtobehere
Donald Trump Suggests Anti-Jewish Threats Came From ‘The Reverse’ to ‘Make Others Look Bad’.
President Donald Trump reportedly suggested in a conversation with the state attorney generals that the recent spate of desecration of Jewish cemeteries and bomb threats of Jewish community centers may be false flag operations intended to make certain people look bad.
Shapiro stopped short of saying Trump thinks his supporters are being framed for bomb threats. But he seems to think that’s what he meant. — Anna Orso (@anna_orso) February 28, 2017
Some people will immediately call this "insane".
Are there legitimate "hate" crimes? Of-course.
Theres no way to definitively know who was responsible for these specific acts of vandalism but we do know that some "hate" crimes have been staged.
A simple search will yield the results but here are some examples:
Another swastika at GW. This one was posted by a Jewish student.
Freshman who reported swastikas drew them as well.
Professor convicted of staging hate crime.
And it goes without saying that its not just the Jews, especially recently:
Top 10 Trump 'Hate Crime' Hoaxes of 2016.
Is Trump out of line for making this suggestion?
YOU be the judge.
originally posted by: TheBulk
a reply to: spiritualzombie
How can you say baseless when so many examples have been shown?
It doesn't take but half a brain to realize that you are being duped hard core.
A swastika was posted on the bulletin board of a Jewish fraternity in a George Washington University dorm on Monday, leading upset students to immediately report it to police.
***
GW’s president, Steven Knapp, wrote in a message to the campus community that “while the student claims his act was not an expression of hatred, the university is referring the matter to the MPD for review by its Hate Crimes Unit.”
On Tuesday, the student was expelled from the fraternity by national leaders of Zeta Beta Tau.
The University found the student who reported several swastikas on her Mitchell Hall door was the one who drew them.
Using footage from a hidden video camera, the University Police Department linked freshman Sarah Marshak with the vandalism. She will now appear before Student Judicial Services and could face federal and District charges, a spokesperson announced Monday afternoon.
A college professor convicted of staging a hate crime by spray-painting her own car with racist slurs was ordered to undergo 90 days of psychological testing at a state prison.
Pomona Superior Court Judge Charles Horan on Friday delayed Kerri Dunn's sentencing but called her a "bald-faced liar."
Authorities have determined that tombstones disturbed at a historic Jewish cemetery in New York this weekend were damaged by environmental causes and not by vandalism.
A New York City Police Department hate-crime task force had been investigating whether the damage to the granite and marble tombstones at Washington Cemetery in Brooklyn was intentional.
The task force concluded its investigation on Sunday, finding that the cause was environmental, which can include soil erosion and lack of maintenance.
A Jewish teenager was arrested Thursday in connection with a series of bomb threats that have rattled Jewish institutions and community centers across the US and other countries, Israeli police said.A months-long international investigation led to the 19-year-old suspect, who used “advanced camouflage technologies” to cover his tracks, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.
The suspect holds dual American-Israeli citizenship, an Israeli security official told CNN. He was arrested in Israel after an undercover investigation with the FBI.
The threats were made against sites in the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. In one case, an airline had to make an emergency landing because of the threats, Rosenfeld said.
Law enforcement officials have told CNN they believe many of the threatening calls to Jewish community centers originated overseas.
Israeli police are still trying to determine the teen suspect’s motive.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions commended the FBI and Israeli National Police for their work on the case.