Guardian Angels will start Brooklyn patrols after increase in anti-Semitic attacks

The Guardian Angels, a private, unarmed crime-prevention group, said it would start patrolling in Brooklyn after an increase in anti-Semitic attacks in the New York City borough.
Borough Park, Brooklyn (Wikimedia Commons/Lord Ice/https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en)

The Guardian Angels, a private, unarmed crime-prevention group, said it would start patrolling in Brooklyn after an increase in anti-Semitic attacks in the New York City borough.

The group’s founder, Curtis Sliwa, told NBC News that the patrols would start today, first at noon in the Crown Heights neighbourhood and later in the day in Williamsburg and Borough Park.

The announcement came in the wake of at least eight attacks on Jews in Brooklyn since Dec. 13, and hours before an attack on a Hanukkah party at a Hasidic rabbi’s home in Monsey, New York in Rockland County, that left five injured.

Sliwa said local leaders of the Lubavitch-Chabad movement asked for his group’s help. He said believes the Guardian Angels patrols will stop the attacks.

“We’re a visual deterrence in our red berets and our red satin jackets,” he said. “Nobody’s going to commit an attack when we’re around.”

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