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Arresting development: finally cops unite against anti-Semitism.png

January 24, 2025

Friday 24 January 2025
Liam Mendes, Joanna Panagopoulos and Alexi Demetriadi
The Australian


 The nation's police chiefs have finally united to establish a cross nation taskforce to fight antisemitism and quash the escalating hatred of Australian  Jews, as suspects involved in an attack on a Jewish deli allegedly refused to  hand over passwords to allow officers to access their devices.
 
 Some of the men alleged to have carried out some of the summer's worst  anti-Semitic hate crimes were revealed on Friday to have links to NSW's  criminal underbelly.
 
 Adam Hawi, the son of murdered bikie boss Mick Hawi, was charged with  refusing to tell police who was behind the wheel of his car when it was  allegedly used in an extensive anti-Jewish attack in Sydney's eastern suburbs  in November. A day after police commissioners from every state and territory  met to discuss the rise of anti-Semitism across the country, a second man was  tasered and arrested in Sydney on Thursday over his alleged part in the  attempted arson of the Newtown synagogue.
 
 The commissioners vowed to establish a "dedicated anti-Semitism  co-ordination group" to "consolidate existing joint arrangements  and ensure a specific formal forum for collaboration on this  issue"."Ongoing engagement with the Jewish community, as well as  the many diverse communities that call Australia home, will continue to be  prioritised by all jurisdictions," the commissioners' statement said.
 
 There are 15 investigations spearheaded by the AFP's Operation Avalite, the  specialist taskforce set up to investigate threats, violence and hatred  towards the Australian Jewish community.
 
 It is up to state and territory police to request AFP assistance, but it is  understood the AFP has "always" offered support to all states and  territories.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson called on NSW Police and the  AFP to work "seamlessly together" to ensure all commonwealth and  state legislation was used to investigate the offences, after two men  allegedly involved in what police say was an anti-Semitic-related incident  allegedly refused to provide passwords to allow investigators to forensically  examine the contents of their mobile phone.
 
 "The Coalition in government introduced tough new laws to facilitate  access to encrypted communications including account takeover and network  access warrants that are only available to federal agencies like the AFP. It  could seriously impede any investigation if these powers aren't being used in  close co-operation with state and federal police," Senator Paterson  said.
 
 When asked whether it would hand over a client password to police if it is  ordered to do so under a warrant, Tech giant Apple referred The Australian to  a portion of its website that said "legal team reviews requests to  ensure that the requests have a valid legal basis".
 
 Police are investigating the origin of the mysterious criminal "James  Bond", who is alleged to have puppet-mastered at least one of the  anti-Semitic firebombing attacks, and authorities continue to probe whether  foreign adversaries and organised crime gangs are playing a role in  orchesContinued on Page 2
 
 Arresting development: finally cops unite trating the hate crimes. The  alleged refusal of the two men to provide their phone details to NSW Police  followed allegations in The Australian on Thursday that two other men were  initially and separately hired to firebomb the same alleged target Lewis  Continental Kitchen.
 
 They mistakenly hit a Bondi brewery with a similar name on October 17,  telling each other in an encrypted group chat, "I'm starting to think he  (James Bond) has sent us to the wrong place lol".
 
 Three days later, on October 20, Wayne Ogden, 40, who has never held a  licence, allegedly stole a BMW in Arncliffe in Sydney's inner south about  2am, drove it to Bondi Beach and set Lewis Continental Kitchen on fire.
 
 While detained on remand in Silverwater prison, Mr Ogden then allegedly  "failed to comply with a digital evidence order" related to handing  over his password, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.
 
 Police allege Mr Ogden's coaccused, Juon Majok Mal Amuoi, attended the  Campbell Parade deli five days earlier, on October 15, dressed in black and  armed with a sledgehammer "with the intention of causing damage to the  property", before he was scared off by a security guard who alerted  police. He has not been charged in relation to the October 20 firebombing.
 
 Mr Amuoi is also allegedly refusing to hand over his phone password to police  and is facing additional charges for "failing to comply with a lawful  direction given under the order by an executing officer".
 
 It is not clear whether "James Bond" is behind the other attacks  and attempted attacks on the business. Neither Mr Ogden nor Mr Amuoi have  entered pleas.
 
 As police ramp up their fight against anti-Semitism, another alleged offender  was arrested over the attempted firebombing of the Newtown Synagogue. Charges  are yet to be laid.
 
 During his arrest, the man was tasered, with paramedics treating him at Day  Street police station.
 
 Video provided by NSW Police shows officers from anti-Semitism taskforce  Strike Force Pearl leading the alleged vandal from the site of his arrest to  a police truck.
 
 Both in Pyrmont and upon his arrival at Day Street he is hunched over and  shirtless, with what seem to be bruises along his lower back.
 
 That follows the arrest of 33year-old Pyrmont man Adam Moule on Tuesday for  allegedly vandalising the same synagogue in Sydney's inner west with Nazi  symbols and trying, unsuccessfully, to set it on fire. NSW Police  Commissioner Karen Webb confirmed on Thursday police did not know the  identity of "James Bond".
 
 The AFP said it was exploring whether "overseas actors" had  enlisted local criminals to carry out anti-Semitic attacks, while  intelligence also suggested Australian based organised crime gangs could have  paid perpetrators behind recent attacks.
 
 "At the moment we don't know who that person is, and that's why these  remain active investigations to identify the principals in these  matters," Commissioner Webb told ABC Radio National.
 
 She called the practice "Airtasker for criminals".
 
 Commissioner Webb said police "were keeping our mind very open to any  possibility" when asked if "James Bond" was an individual,  state actor or terrorist organisation.

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