Innocently Barbecuing Jewish Institutions
"This wasn't the only thing that was bizarre about this hearing. Before it began, I, a videographer and another reporter waited in the hallway near the elevators and close to the courtroom, where signage expressly permits filming, hoping for an image of Akodad, who has no pictures online.""A man approached and tried to tell us who we could film. When asked who he was, he replied, 'Don't worry about who I am'.""Later, I learned the man was El Amine Serhani, director of the Listening and Assistance Centre for Maghrebi People in Quebec. The same organization lists Akodad's lawyer Saaty as a 'citizen mentor' and his father Fouad Akodad as a 'human pillar'.""All three were present in court. The scene grew even more bizarre when the court constable shook Serhani's hand after the hearing."Terry Newman, The National Post
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| The accused, Mohamed Ilyess Akodad, said he accepted a $15,000 contract to set fire to Congregation Beth Tikvah on Dec. 18, 2024. (Simon-Marc Charron/Radio-Canada) |
On
Thursday in a Montreal courtroom, Mohamed Ilyes Akodad, 21, appeared in
court for his sentencing after having pleaded guilty to firebombing a
synagogue and Jewish community centre. He had, he said, no idea that the
two buildings had Jewish occupancy. He and his layer, Nazar Saaty,
earnestly addressed the judge with the difficult-to-believe claim that
Akodad was merely carrying out a business agreement, a paid contract for
'three barbecues' arranged through Signal and FaceTime for unknown
locations.
The
court was informed that the job accepted by Akodad presented when he
attended a party with a friend that took place somewhere his memory
failed him to identify, as a result of undue stress experienced at the
time along with the desensitization of time and place due to drug use.
The job for which he was to be paid a princely $15,000 entailed
fire-bombing three locations. Duly early morning of December 18, 2024,
Akodad smashed the windows of the Federation CJA's West Island offices
in Dollard-des-Ormeaux with a hammer.
He
followed that up by crossing the street to Beth Tikvah synagogue to
set a fire, located next to a Jewish day school awaiting the arrival of
children that morning. About four months later he was arrested. While he
asked for release at his first bail hearing a month later, he was
denied bail, and has been in custody since that time. Pleading guilty to
three of the six arson-related charges, along with the intentional or
reckless damage caused by fire or explosion to property, mischief
respecting property with a value exceeding $5000, and arson by
negligence, the maximum sentences reflecting such offences are 14, 10
and 15 years respectively.
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| A firefighter on the scene after a firebomb was thrown at Congregation Beth Tikvah, Montreal, Dec. 18, 2024. (Credit: Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs) |
That
aside, following the hearing of last week, reporters were informed by
Crown prosecutor Christopher Hadjis-Chartrand that a two-year prison
sentence is sought by the Crown even as Akodad's lawyer has recommended a
sentence of nine to 12 months under condition that his client enter
therapy, perform community work and apologize to the community. The
actual sentencing decision will not be delivered until September 10 when
court reconvenes. However, taking into account time already served
Akodad could be released that very day.
The
court heard of the difficult childhood experienced by Akodad leading to
low self-esteem and problems with drug addiction. There was also a
complaint about "difficult conditions" his pre-trial detention had
exposed him to, with limited family visits, placement with gang members,
a situation so very difficult for a man like Akodad who has been
convicted of car thefts. That is another story, that criminal gangs pay
young men willing to steal vehicles that are then shipped abroad with
the profits realized used to buy and smuggle guns from the U.S. into
Canada.
During
his testimony, Akodad's mother wept while his father testifying in
support of his son berated him in a demonstration that it could not
possibly have been the way he was raised that turned him to crime. He
had agreed to the offer by a stranger to commit to three criminal acts
which, when videoed as proof that he had carried out the mission as per
contract would net him $15,000. The 'three barbecues' mission did not go
off directly as ordered, and in the end he was given a mere $2,500 for
an incomplete job.
Now,
with Akodad claiming he had no idea that his targets had anything to do
with the Jewish community, his lawyer argues the arsons were strictly a
business proposition, his client earning a fee, and there was no hate
motivation involved, and in the absence of proof beyond reasonable
doubt, that the miscreant had any knowledge it was Jewish institutions
he was to target -- for that, he should be granted "benefit of the
doubt".
For
his part, Crown prosecutor Hajis-Chartrand questioned the claims that
Akodad was unable to recall details of the events that occurred as a
result of stress and drugs, suggesting he had been able to plan, recall
details, carry out the acts and then film them as proof. Pressed whether
he hadn't realized these were Jewish institutions Akodad lashed back
that he "wasn't stupid" and could recognize what the Star of David
represented.
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| Cantor Henry Topas, centre, and Rabbi Emeritus Dr. Mordecai Zeitz, right, at the firebombed entrance to Congregation Beth Tikvah in Dollard-des-Ormeaux on Dec. 18, 2024. (John Mahoney / Montreal Gazette files) |
Labels: Arson Perpetrator, Court Leniency, Innocent Offender, Jewish Institutions, Justice in Abeyance, Montreal, Synagogue Vandalization




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