Jewish man shoots two Israelis after ‘mistaking them for Palestinians’ in Florida

Mordechai Brafman (27) allegedly fired 17 times at passing vehicle, injuring two men

A  police patrol drives past Temple Emanu-El synagogue in Miami Beach, Florida. Photograph: Marco Bello/AFP via Getty Images
A police patrol drives past Temple Emanu-El synagogue in Miami Beach, Florida. Photograph: Marco Bello/AFP via Getty Images

A Jewish man in Miami Beach is facing charges of attempted murder following accusations that he opened fire on two men he believed were Palestinians but reportedly turned out to be Israeli visitors.

According to arrest documents, at 9.30pm on Saturday surveillance video appeared to show Mordechai Brafman (27), getting out of his truck and opening fire with a semiautomatic handgun at a vehicle as it passed.

Brafman allegedly fired 17 times, striking one victim in the left shoulder and grazing the other’s left forearm.

While in custody, Brafman told detectives that while he was driving his truck, “he saw two Palestinians and shot and killed both”, arrest documents said.

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Police officials did not confirm if the victims were Palestinians.

The Miami Herald reported that they were actually two Israelis, naming them as Ari Rabey and his father.

Facebook posts after the shooting show Mr Rabey at Miami’s Jackson memorial hospital and his Hyundai with several bullet holes and markings.

The outlet reported that the alleged shooter was being held at the Miami-Dade correctional centre on two counts of attempted second-degree murder.

Mr Rabey reportedly posted “death to the Arabs” in a message on social media after the shooting. “My father and I went through a murder attempt against antisemitic background,” he wrote.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations’ Florida chapter has called for federal hate crime charges in the shooting.

“It is deeply ironic and telling that both the alleged pro-Israel perpetrator and the pro-Israel victim in the Miami Beach shooting reportedly hold racist anti-Palestinian views,” said the council’s national executive director, Nihad Awad, on X.

“This just the latest example of the hate targeting the Palestinian-American community in this country and Palestinians in their homeland. Policymakers in our nation should stop fomenting the anti-Palestinian hate that led to the genocide in Gaza and to hate crimes in America.” - Guardian