Ex-journalist charged over bomb threats against Jewish groups

Former ‘Intercept’ writer Juan Thompson in custody in connection with eight US incidents

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department K-9 officers search the Jewish Community Center of Southern Nevada after an employee received a suspicious phone call that led about 10 people to evacuate the building on Monday in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photograph: Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department K-9 officers search the Jewish Community Center of Southern Nevada after an employee received a suspicious phone call that led about 10 people to evacuate the building on Monday in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photograph: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

US prosecutors in New York charged a St Louis, Missouri, man on Friday in connection with at least eight bomb threats made against Jewish organisations across the country.

Juan Thompson (31) was taken into custody on Friday morning in St Louis and was expected to make an initial court appearance there later in the day.

It was not immediately clear whether investigators believe Mr Thompson is responsible for all of the more than 100 threats that have been made by phone to Jewish Community Centers in dozens of states since January.

In a criminal complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan, authorities accused Mr Thompson of making at least eight threats, mostly by email.

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Prosecutors said Mr Thompson made the threats in an effort to harass a former girlfriend by telling the Jewish groups she was the person behind the alleged bombs.

Jewish community centres and schools in the US have received five waves of hoax bomb threats this year, stoking fears of a resurgence in anti-Semitism.

Based on Mr Thompson's Twitter account, which provided some of the evidence cited in the criminal complaint, the defendant appears to be a former reporter for The Intercept, a news website focused on national security.

Mr Thompson was fired from the website last year for allegedly fabricating quotes and sources, website said in February 2016.

Intimidation

US president Donald Trump, Israeli officials and Jewish groups have all condemned the surge in intimidation as well as cases of vandalism targeting Jewish cemeteries.

Police said last weekend that about 100 headstones were toppled at a Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia, about a week after a Jewish cemetery in St Louis was vandalised.

Some Jewish groups see the vandalism and threats as a sign that anti-Semitic groups have been emboldened by Mr Trump’s election. His campaign last year drew the support of white supremacists and other right-wing groups, despite Mr Trump’s disavowals of them.

Reuters