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State law would combat antisemitic acts like Jacksonville's

Jacksonville residents light candles during a vigil to push back against antisemitism in November 2022.
Dan Scanlan
/
WJCT News
Jacksonville residents light candles during a vigil to push back against antisemitism in November 2022.

After incidents such as antisemitic messages being projected onto buildings in Jacksonville, lawmakers Thursday called for passing a measure that would define certain acts as hate crimes and increase criminal penalties.

Under the bill (HB 269), people who take actions such as defacing or damaging religious cemeteries, projecting images of religious “animus” on property without permission or harassing others because of religious-based garments could be charged with third-degree felonies.

“I will not stand here and do nothing,” Rep. Mike Caruso, a Delray Beach Republican who is sponsoring the bill, said during a news conference. “I will not be complacent, and I will not sit around. For, with that attitude, are we just going to wait for these haters to start breaking the glass windows and storefronts of Jewish store owners again, like they did in the past, before we wake up?”

The legislation, filed this month, follows a series of antisemitic incidents in the state. As an example, an antisemitic message was projected on the outside of TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville, onto a Downtown apartment building and later onto the headquarters of CSX.

Also, anti-Semitic banners have been hung from interstate overpasses in Jacksonville and elsewhere, and anti-Semitic fliers have been distributed in Jewish communities in South Florida.

Rep. Randy Fine, a Brevard County Republican who is Jewish, said hate speech and hate crimes have made many Jewish people in Florida feel unsafe.

“The reason we must speak is that silence in the face of evil is evil itself,” Fine said. “What we are doing here today is we are saying in the Florida House, that there is no room for this.”