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Search resuls for: "Afaf Nasher"


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CNN —A former National Security Council official has reached a plea deal on hate crime charges after going on racist, anti-Palestinian and Islamophobic rants against a food cart vendor in New York in November. Stuart Seldowitz, 64, pleaded not guilty in November to two counts of fourth-degree hate crime/stalking and one count of second-degree aggravated harassment, court records show. In another video, Seldowitz tells the vendor, “We’re going to put big signs here saying this guy believes in Hamas.”In another video, Seldowitz asks the man whether he’s familiar with Egypt’s General Intelligence Service, better known as the Mukhabarat. Mohamed Attia, of the Street Vendor Project, told CNN the vendor said he did not instigate the conversation with Seldowitz. His family’s landlord was charged in what police are calling a hate crime and has pleaded not guilty to charges including murder.
Persons: CNN —, Stuart Seldowitz, Seldowitz, , Afaf Nasher, We’re, “ Mukhabarat, ” Seldowitz, Barack Obama’s, hasn’t, Mohamed Attia Organizations: CNN, National Security Council, Manhattan, Attorney’s Office, Islamic Relations, CAIR’s, ” CNN, Egypt’s General Intelligence Service, National Security Council South, Directorate, Gotham Government Relations, New, CAIR Locations: New York, York, Egypt, New York City, Israel, Chicago, Vermont
At a court appearance Wednesday, Manhattan prosecutors said that if the man, Stuart Seldowitz, completed the program through the organization Queens Counseling for Change, had no new arrests and did not violate a protective order, they would ask that his charges be dropped. Mr. Seldowitz agreed, according to prosecutors. Mr. Seldowitz, 65, has no other criminal history and prosecutors frequently refer people who have committed nonviolent, misdemeanor hate crimes for such training. In recent years, the Manhattan district attorney’s office has sent 10 cases to the Queens organization, according to a spokeswoman. Afaf Nasher, the executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations of New York, said in a statement on Thursday that “light punishments are a slap in the face to the victims.”
Persons: Stuart Seldowitz, Seldowitz, Afaf Nasher, Organizations: State Department, Queens, Islamic, New Locations: Manhattan, Queens, New York
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