The deadly shooting rampage at a New Jersey kosher market has cast a spotlight on a fringe movement known for its anti-Semitic strain of street preaching and its role in a viral-video confrontation at the Lincoln Memorial this year.
Investigators believe that the man and woman who killed three people at the Jersey City grocery Tuesday in addition to gunning down a police officer at a cemetery hated Jews and law enforcement and had expressed interest in the Black Hebrew Israelites movement, New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said Thursday.
鈥淏ut we have not definitively established any formal links to that organization or to any other group,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ased on the available evidence, we believe that the two shooters were acting on their own.鈥
Not all sects of the movement spew hateful rhetoric, but many Black Hebrew Israelites subscribe to an extreme set of anti-Semitic beliefs. Those followers view themselves as the true 鈥渃hosen people鈥 and believe that blacks, Hispanics and Native Americans are the true descendants of the 12 Tribes of Israel, said Oren Segal, director of the Anti-Defamation League鈥檚 Center on Extremism.
鈥淭hey view white people as agents of Satan,鈥 Segal said. They believe 鈥淛ews are liars and false worshippers of God. They view blacks as the true Israelites, and not the impostor Jews.鈥
Most who encounter the movement鈥檚 followers have seen them proselytizing and provoking arguments with passersby in places like Times Square in New York.
Last January, videos of a confrontation at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington probably introduced many people to the movement. A group of black street preachers who referred to themselves as Black Hebrew Israelites shouted insults at Native Americans and Catholic high school students from Kentucky who had participated in an anti-abortion rally in Washington. Videos of a face-to-face encounter between a Native American activist and a student wearing a red 鈥淢ake America Great Again鈥 hat quickly spread on social media.
J.J. MacNab, a fellow at George Washington University鈥檚 Program on Extremism, said the Black Hebrew Israelites have used Facebook and YouTube to spread their message and attract new followers. Prisons also have been fertile recruiting grounds for the sects, some of which have thousands of members, according to MacNab.
鈥淥nce you go online, you find a bigger world. They take pride in confronting Jewish people everywhere and explaining that they are evil, that they are heathens,鈥 MacNab said.
MacNab said the Black Hebrew Israelites also include elements of the anti-government 鈥渟overeign citizen鈥 movement, which has been linked to deadly attacks on law enforcement officers.
鈥淭here is no purity test,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e generally radicalizing online, you鈥檙e going to pick up bits and pieces from all over the place.鈥
The Jersey City killers, who died during the attack, were identified as David N. Anderson, 47, and Francine Graham, 50.
An Instagram account that apparently belonged to Anderson shows he was an aspiring rapper whose posts included at least one reference to Black Hebrew Israelite philosophy 鈥 a list of the 12 Tribes of Israel from the Bible, with each tribe equated to a modern-day ethnic group or country. 鈥淎merica has NOTHING for us but DEATH,鈥 a caption on one of his posts read. The account went dormant a few years ago.
On Wednesday, the FBI searched the Harlem offices of a major Black Hebrew Israelite group, according to a law enforcement official, who was not authorized to discuss the case publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Israel United in Christ, a Black Hebrew Israelite group with more than 40 U.S. locations and a large social media following, condemned the attacks.
The group said it does not 鈥渃ondone nor teach this type of behavior.鈥
In October, a self-proclaimed black Israelite was charged with assaulting two people leaving a prayer service at a synagogue in Miami, according to the ADL. The defendant, Larry Greene, threatened to stab the worshippers to death, called them 鈥渇ake Jews鈥 and told them to 鈥済o back to Israel,鈥 the ADL said, citing an arrest affidavit.
But the Black Hebrew Israelites don鈥檛 have a significant record of violence, Segal said, noting that the ADL has been tracking the movement since the late 1970s or early 1980s.
Grewal, the attorney general, said authorities are investigating the shootings as 鈥減otential acts of domestic terrorism, fueled both by anti-Semitism and anti-law enforcement beliefs.鈥