Borgen is now on a Road to Justice Following Sentencing Recommendations and One Perpetrator Being ImmediatelySentenced
The Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) praised theproposed three and a half to 15 year sentences sought by New York City District Attorney Alvin Bragg for two of the three perpetrators of a brutal and violent anti-Semitic hate crime that sent aninnocent Jewish man, Joey Borgen, to the hospital with serious injuries. Of the three individuals who pled guilty, one of the perpetrators has already been sentenced to 3 yearsspecifically.
“We hope the judge will use the DA’s suggestion as the baseline for sentencing of these violent Jew-haters. Withanti-Semitic hate crimes on the rise in New York and across the US it is crucial that such criminals be held fully accountable for all hate crimes,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, SWC Associate Dean and Director of Global Social Action and Michael Cohen, SWC EasternDirector.
“The real hero here is Joey Borgen, who refused to be a passive victim. We recall that he left his hospital bed to leadthousands of New York Jews who participated in our protest rally against violent anti-Semitism and has pursued justice utilizing the system. The SWC was proud to be there for him each step of theway, but this is his victory and we are all safer because of his tenacity and courage,” Cooper and Cohen concluded.
The New YorkPost reported that “The melee began in the Diamond District when a pickup truck full of Palestinianflag-waiving protesters shot a firework from the vehicle into a crowd of Israeli activists who came out during renewed hostilities between the groups in the MiddleEast.”
Video of the fight went viral. Borgen, who was wearing a yarmulke, was pepper-sprayed by a pack ofmen as they hurled anti-Semitic slurs at him. He was left with a concussion, wrist injury, black eye and bruises all over his body.
For further information, please email Michele Alkin, Director of Global Communicationsat malkin@wiesenthal.com or Shawn Rodgers at srodgers@wiesenthal.com,join the Center on Facebook, orfollow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sent directly to your Twitter feed.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center is an international Jewish human rights organization. It holds consultative statusat the United Nations, UNESCO, the OSCE, the Council of Europe, the OAS, and the Latin American Parliament (PARLATINO).