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Jewish Israeli Cybertruck Owner Calls for Hate Crime Charge After Swastika Drawn on Car in Brooklyn

March 12, 2025, Seattle, Washington, USA: A row of brand-new Tesla Cybertrucks stands in a Tesla Motors Logistics Drop Zone in Seattle, Washington, USA, on Wed., March 12, 2025. Photo: ZUMA Press Wire via Reuters Connect

The Jewish Israeli owner of a Tesla Cybertruck said the man who scrawled a swastika message on his electric car in Brooklyn should face a hate crime charge.

“The police, the DA [district attorney], and the city should charge people like this and should prosecute people like this,” Avi Ben Hamo, 45, told “Fox & Friends” on Monday. He said that people like the man who targeted his car need to face consequences for their actions, adding that “otherwise, other people are not going to be safe and Jewish people are not going to be safe in the city.”

Ben Hamo described the incident as an act of antisemitism and said, “as a Jew, I don’t feel safe anymore in Brooklyn or New York.”

Thursday, a fellow Jewish man drew a message on Ben Hamo’s Cybertruck that equated Tesla CEO and US Department of Government Efficiency head Elon Musk, who also serves as a senior advisor to President Donald Trump, with a swastika. The message said “Elon” and below his name was the equal sign. Underneath that was the Nazi symbol.

Ben Hamo had parked his Cybertruck on Washington Avenue in Prospect Heights and while standing on the sidewalk, he saw the suspect double-park his Subaru, exit the vehicle, approach Ben Hamo’s car, and then proceed to scribble in dust on the driver’s door the hate message. Ben Hamo quickly ran over and confronted the man.

“I saw this guy messing with my car, I don’t know what was going on, and then I saw this very antisemitic swastika on the car,” Ben Hamo told “Fox & Friends” during an appearance on the show. “I approached [the suspect] and asked him, ‘What are you doing?’ and he told me very, very disgusting things. And he tried to run away.”

Ben Hamo blocked the suspect’s car from driving away from the scene while the Cybertruck owner called the police. Ben Hamo said the man tried to run him over with his car in an attempt to flee the scene. The latter then got out of the car, ran away on foot from the area, and came back an hour and a half later. At that point, police had arrived and arrested him on suspicion of aggravated harassment. He was later released from custody and not charged. He was later identified as 42-year-old Michael Lewis.

A lawyer for the suspect told “Fox & Friends” on Monday that Lewis “deeply regrets touching the other man’s car and using a hate symbol in the message.”

“He was dealing with a host of personal issues at the time and the action was out of character,” attorney Mark Luccarelli added. “He was released from custody without any charges because no damage was done to the vehicle and no crime was committed.”

Tesla vehicles, dealerships, and charging stations have recently been vandalized, destroyed and even set on fire around the US by those protesting Musk’s new Department of Government Efficiency and its slashing of government spending, which has led to major federal job cuts.

Thursday’s incident targeting Ben Hamo’s car is at least the third attack on a Cybertruck in New York City in recent days, according to the New York Post. “People hating Elon Musk is one thing, but to do something like this is next level. I’m speechless,” Ben Hamo told the publication. “That’s just wrong. I don’t understand how someone thinks because I bought a car it gives them the authorization to do this.”

The post Jewish Israeli Cybertruck Owner Calls for Hate Crime Charge After Swastika Drawn on Car in Brooklyn first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Brooklyn Nets Select Israeli Basketball Players Ben Saraf, Danny Wolf in NBA Draft

The opening tip between the Brooklyn Nets and Washington Wizards, at Barclays Center, in Brooklyn, New York, Dec. 13, 2020. Photo: Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Connect

In a landmark night for Israeli basketball, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf were selected in the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft by the Brooklyn Nets, marking the first time two Israeli players have been drafted in the same year.

Saraf, a 19-year-old guard known for his explosive athleticism and creative playmaking, was taken with the 26th pick. A standout with Maccabi Rishon LeZion and a rising star on Israel’s youth national teams, Saraf gained international attention with his electrifying scoring and commanding court presence.

With the 27th pick, the Nets selected 7-foot center Danny Wolf out of the University of Michigan. Wolf, who holds dual US-Israeli citizenship and represented Israel at the U-20 level, brings a versatile skill set, including sharp passing, perimeter shooting, and a strong feel for the game. After his name was called, Wolf grew emotional in an on-air interview, crediting his family for helping him reach the moment.

“I have the two greatest brothers in the world; I have an unbelievable sister who I love,” Wolf said. “They all helped me get to where I am today, and they’re going to help me get to where I am going to go in this league.”

The historic double-pick adds to the growing wave of Israeli presence on the NBA stage, led by Portland Trail Blazers forward Deni Avdija, who just completed a breakout 2024–25 season. After being traded to Portland last summer, Avdija thrived as a starter, averaging 16.9 points, 7.2 rebounds, and 3.8 assists. In March alone, he posted 23.4 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 5.2 assists per game, including two triple-doubles.

“I don’t think I’ve played like this before … I knew I had it in me. But I’m not really thinking about it. I’m just playing. I’m just free,” Avdija told reporters in March

With Saraf and Wolf joining Avdija, Israel’s basketball pipeline has reached unprecedented visibility. Israeli President Isaac Herzog called the moment “a national celebration for sports and youth,” and Israeli sports commentators widely hailed the night as “historic.”

Both Saraf and Wolf are expected to suit up for the Nets’ Summer League team in July. As the two rookies begin their NBA journey, they join a growing generation of Israeli athletes proving that their game belongs on basketball’s biggest stage.

The post Brooklyn Nets Select Israeli Basketball Players Ben Saraf, Danny Wolf in NBA Draft first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Iran Denies Any Meeting With US Next Week, Foreign Minister Says

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi attends a press conference following a meeting with Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow, Russia, April 18, 2025. Photo: Tatyana Makeyeva/Pool via REUTERS

Iran currently has no plan to meet with the United States, Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Thursday in an interview on state TV, contradicting US President Donald Trump’s statement that Washington planned to have talks with Iran next week.

The Iranian foreign minister said Tehran was assessing whether talks with the US were in its interest, following five previous rounds of negotiations that were cut short by Israel and the US attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The US and Israel said the strikes were meant to curb Iran’s ability to create nuclear weapons, while Iran says its nuclear program is solely geared toward civilian use.

Araqchi said the damages to nuclear sites “were not little” and that relevant authorities were figuring out the new realities of Iran’s nuclear program, which he said would inform Iran’s future diplomatic stance.

The post Iran Denies Any Meeting With US Next Week, Foreign Minister Says first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Ireland Becomes First European Nation to Advance Ban on Trade With Israeli Settlements

A pro-Hamas demonstration in Ireland led by nationalist party Sinn Fein. Photo: Reuters/Clodagh Kilcoyne

Ireland has become the first European nation to push forward legislation banning trade with Israeli communities in the West Bank and East Jerusalem — an effort officials say is meant “to address the horrifying situation” in the Gaza Strip.

On Wednesday, Irish Foreign Affairs and Trade Minister Simon Harris announced that the legislation has already been approved by the government and will now move to the parliamentary Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade for pre-legislative scrutiny.

“Ireland is speaking up and speaking out against the genocidal activity in Gaza,” Harris said during a press conference.

The Irish diplomat also told reporters he hopes the “real benefit” of the legislation will be to encourage other countries to follow suit, “because it is important that every country uses every lever at its disposal.”

Joining a growing number of EU member states aiming to curb Israel’s defensive campaign against the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas, Ireland’s decision comes after a 2024 advisory opinion by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) declared Israel’s presence in the West Bank and East Jerusalem illegal.

The ICJ ruled that third countries must avoid trade or investment that supports “the illegal situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

Once implemented, the law will criminalize the importation of goods from Israeli settlements into Ireland, empowering customs officials to inspect, seize, and confiscate any such shipments.

“The situation in Palestine remains a matter of deep public concern,” Harris said. “I have made it consistently clear that this government will use all levers at its disposal to address the horrifying situation on the ground and to contribute to long-term efforts to achieve a sustainable peace on the basis of the two-state solution.”

“Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory are illegal and threaten the viability of the two-state solution,” the Irish diplomat continued. “This is the longstanding position of the European Union and our international partners. Furthermore, this is the clear position under international law.”

Harris also urged the EU to comply with the ICJ’s ruling by taking a more decisive and “adequate response” regarding imports from Israeli settlements.

“This is an issue that I will continue to press at EU level, and I reiterated my call for concrete proposals from the European Commission at the Foreign Affairs Council this week,” he said.

Last week, Ireland and eight other EU member states — Finland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, and Sweden — called on the European Commission to draft proposals for how EU countries can halt trade and imports with Israeli settlements, in line with obligations set out by the ICJ.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar condemned the latest move by European countries, calling it “shameful” and a misguided attempt to undermine Israel while it faces “existential” threats from Iran and its proxies, including Hamas.

“It is regrettable that even when Israel is fighting an existential threat which is in Europe’s vital interest — there are those who can’t resist their anti-Israeli obsession,” the top Israeli diplomat said in a post on X.

The post Ireland Becomes First European Nation to Advance Ban on Trade With Israeli Settlements first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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