Anonymous ID: 473b8d July 4, 2021, 7:09 a.m. No.14051987   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2022 >>2051 >>2065 >>2360 >>2364 >>2371 >>2416 >>2600 >>2767

https://dailycaller.com/2021/07/03/armed-race-seperatist-group-blocks-i-95-11-arrested-rise-of-moors/

 

 

Armed Racial Separatist Group Blocks I-95 — 11 Arrested

 

July 03, 2021

10:33 PM ET

 

KENT SHI

CONTRIBUTOR

 

Heavily-armed individuals claiming to be associated with a racial separatist group were arrested following a standoff with the police that temporarily shutdown I-95 near Wakefield, Massachusetts.

 

The situation started around 1:30 am, when the Massachusetts State Police (MSP) spotted two vehicles in the breakdown lane with hazard lights on near Exit 57, according to WCVB.

 

When a state trooper approached the cars to offer help, military-style tactical gear and weapons were seen on some of the individuals. The group claimed to have run out of fuel on their “training” trip from Rhode Island to Maine and failed to show identification or firearm licenses to the trooper, after which more back-up was called, according to WCVB.

 

The group refused to comply with orders from the police to put down their arms, although no active threats were made At some point during the standoff, several of the group descended into the wooded area near the Interstate highway, Massachusetts State Police Col. Christopher Mason said, according to WCTI 12.

 

Shelter-in-place orders were in place in the nearby towns of Wakefield and Reading until 11:30 am, after the MSP Special Tactical Operations Team detained 11 armed individuals of the group.

 

Brandishing a Moroccan flag, the armed individuals who caused the blockade self-identified as part of “Rise of the Moors,” a Moorish sovereign citizens group based in Rhode Island, whose main webpage claims that the 14th Amendment is a “tool of usurpation.”

 

The leader of the standoff has been identified as Jahmal Latimer, also known as Talib Abdulla Bey, according to CBS Boston. Latimer claims that his followers are not American citizens and that he is the “grand chief” of the territory of “Rhode Island.”

 

 

Moorish sovereign citizen groups such as Rise of the Moors believe that African Americans, as descendants of the historical Moors, make up an elite class within American society that are immune to Federal or State authority, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. They have been known to engage in both political violence and “paper terrorism,” acting against the American government through financial means.

Anonymous ID: 473b8d July 4, 2021, 7:34 a.m. No.14052093   🗄️.is 🔗kun

 

So a few days earlier an Egyptian national tries to steal a van…i'm sure it is just a coinky.

 

Nothing to see here.

 

>>14052051

https://www.nbcboston.com/news/local/vigil-to-be-held-for-rabbi-recovering-from-brighton-stabbing/2420266/

 

==‘An Act of Hate And Darkness': Leaders Denounce Violence at Vigil for Recovering Rabbi

New details about the attack were revealed in court hours after city and religious leaders gathered to speak out against violence against Boston's Jewish community==

 

By Mary Markos, Asher Klein and Abbey Niezgoda • Published July 2, 2021 • Updated on July 2, 2021 at 11:54 pm

 

Rabbi Shlomo Noginski of the Shaloh House, who was stabbed in Boston's Brighton neighborhood Thursday, used judo training to divert the violent attack out of sight from children, according to his colleague.

 

"The stabbing happened right here, where you stand," said Rabbi Dan Rodkin, executive director of the Shaloh House, a Chabad center that runs a school, camp and more. He was speaking to a swath of elected officials, Jewish leaders and community members who gathered in a show of support Friday in Brighton Common, the scene of the stabbing.

 

Noginski was stabbed eight times in the arm and shoulder just outside of the Jewish Day School on Chestnut Hill Avenue Thursday afternoon. His accused attacker, Khaled Awad, appeared in court Friday, where prosecutors said that the incident began with Awad holding a gun and demanding that Noginski give him the keys to a van.

 

2:33

Man Charged in Stabbing of Rabbi in Brighton

A vigil was held for a rabbi who was stabbed nine times outside of a Boston Jewish community center, while the suspect appeared in court.

Police were investigating whether the attack was a hate crime, though many of the speakers at the vigil argued the stabbing was an act of hate.

 

Noginski's wife told NBC10 Boston he remained very weak but was happy to be out of the hospital and was looking forward to getting back to work as soon as possible.

 

A black belt in judo, Noginski used his expertise to defend himself and save children from the traumatic event, Rodkin said. The school told parents that it went into lockdown, but all the children were safe.

 

"We are here to send a message to everyone that we, Boston, are not going to sit back," Rodkin said. "We will fight back. We will bring goodness to the world. We'll make sure that we will become better people and we will send a strong message that evil has no place in America."

 

As rain drops fell, speakers including Boston Mayor Kim Janey, Suffolk County District Attorney Rachael Rollins and Jewish community leaders denounced anti-Semitism and demanded that the Jewish people be afforded the same rights to freedom and safety as all Americans.

 

"The brutal stabbing of Rabbi Shlomo Noginski here yesterday, right here, was an act of hate and darkness," said Shira Goodman, the chair of the board of Combined Jewish Philanthropies. "This attack happened at a school where teachers teach, where children learn and play and frolic, and where parents bring their most precious children. … This attack intends to scare us from Jewish living, but it's not going to work."

 

Rabbi Marc Baker, CEO and president of the Combined Jewish Philanthropies, called for the incident to be investigated as a hate crime.

 

"We must investigate this incident as a hate crime," Baker said. "I don't think there's a member of our Jewish community, who did not hear about this stabbing and think to themselves, 'Oh my God, it's happened here in Boston,' with thousands of years of history behind us."

 

Janey asked people Friday morning to lift Noginski in prayer and wish him a speedy recovery.

 

"An attack on any member of our community is an attack on all of us in the City of Boston," the mayor wrote on Twitter. "We must work together to eliminate violence and fear in our communities.

 

Gov. Charlie Baker also tweeted his best wishes to Noginski on Friday, adding that there is "no place for hate in Massachusetts."

 

Boston police said Thursday night that Awad, a 24-year-old from Brighton, was arrested on charges of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon and assault and battery on a police officer. He was arraigned in Brighton District Court Friday.

 

In court, Suffolk County prosecutors said Noginski was held up with a gun, as Awad asked for the keys to his van, which belongs to the Shaloh House. When he ordered Noginski into the van, the rabbi tried to run, but Awad chased after him into the park.