Kosher market shooting spree prompts security drills for anti-Semitic threats

This week's fatal shooting spree at a kosher supermarket in New Jersey underscores the array of threats facing Jewish Americans, community leaders say, as well as the importance of training to cope with unexpected dangers in everyday situations.

The shooting left six people dead, including the two attackers and a detective.

It's a "reminder to the community, although we don’t need one, that whether someone is inside in a synagogue, at a Jewish summer camp, or shopping at a kosher supermarket, we are a community that faces a complex and dynamic threat environment,” Michael Masters, CEO and national director of the Secure Community Network, told FOX Business.

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Secure Community Network is the homeland security and safety organ that works on behalf of the Jewish Federations of America and other Jewish organizations. A nonprofit headquartered in Chicago, it serves as the official liaison between federal law enforcement and the Jewish community and has offices throughout the country.

“Threats range from violent white supremacist extremists to violent Islamic extremists and, as we saw this week, black Hebrew Israelite members, as well as everyday criminals,” he said. “We have to be prepared for and protected against all of those diverse threats.”

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On Tuesday, David Anderson, 47, and Francine Graham, 50, fatally shot Jersey City police Detective Joseph Seals, then drove a rental van to the area of JC Kosher Supermarket in Jersey City, where Anderson climbed from the driver’s seat and immediately opened fire, with Graham following behind him.

They shot and killed three people – market employee Douglas Miguel Rodriguez, 49; Mindel Ferencz, 31, who owned the store with her husband; and 24-year-old Moshe Deutsch, a rabbinical student who was shopping at the time. A fourth person was wounded but survived, according to officials.

Another suspected victim, a 34-year-old Jersey City resident named Michael Rumberger, was discovered with head injuries on Saturday, Dec. 7, just over 6 miles away in Bayonne, New Jersey. State and local authorities believe that attack was related to the shootout a few days later.

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Anderson and Graham died during a firefight with police at the supermarket. The pair had with them five guns, including an AR-15-style rifle and a shotgun they were using when they entered the store. An operable pipe bomb was also found inside their vehicle, Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said.