A Moorpark professor has modified his plea to responsible within the dying of a Jewish man at a protest in Thousand Oaks. Because of this, he may keep away from spending time in state jail.
Loay Abdel Fattah Alnaji was accused of hitting Paul Kessler on the top with a megaphone, inflicting him to fall and strike his head on the pavement at a protest in November 2023, in line with the Ventura County district legal professional’s workplace.
Alnaji had joined the rally on the nook of Westlake and Thousand Oaks boulevards in assist of Palestine, whereas Kessler had attended as a a counter-protester in assist of Israel. Kessler died the next day at age 69.
The tragic incident happened across the outset of the Israel-Hamas conflict and have become a lightning rod for controversy as tensions between supporters of Israel and Palestine soared throughout the nation.
Alnaji initially pleaded not responsible to all counts and allegations, and the case was set to proceed to trial.
However on Tuesday, the 53-year-old Moorpark resident reversed course, pleading responsible to felony involuntary manslaughter and felony battery inflicting severe bodily harm, prosecutors stated. He additionally admitted to personally inflicting nice bodily harm, utilizing a weapon and that the sufferer was notably susceptible.
The utmost sentence for his costs is 4 years in state jail. Nonetheless, the court docket has indicated that, by altering his plea, Alnaji will seemingly be sentenced to probation with the potential of as much as 12 months in county jail, prosecutors stated. In county jail, an individual serves time regionally, usually with prospects for work launch, digital monitoring or early launch.
His sentencing listening to is scheduled for June 25, and he stays out of custody after posting $50,000 bail, prosecutors stated.
The indication that Alnaji might keep away from state jail time has been met with pushback from the district legal professional’s workplace and members of the Jewish group.
“Alnaji ought to be sentenced to jail for his violent conduct, and our workplace strongly objects to any lesser sentence,” stated Dist. Atty. Erik Nasarenko in a press release. “Whereas no quantity of punishment will ever totally account for the Kessler household loss, a jail dedication underscores the severity of this crime and can deter others from committing comparable acts of violence.”
Joshua Burt, a regional director for the Anti-Defamation League, referred to as the urged sentence “woefully insufficient” and stated he feared it will embolden violence towards the Jewish group.
“With out actual, lasting penalties, males with evil intent or anger of their hearts won’t be deterred from harming an already susceptible group, aged and Jewish alike,” stated Burt, who represents the ADL in Santa Barbara, Ventura and San Luis Obispo counties, in a press release.
Rabbi Noah Farkas, president and chief government of the Jewish Federation of Los Angeles, stated that the Jewish group continued to mourn Kessler’s loss and welcomed “the act of contrition for this heinous crime.”
“Whereas we might have appreciated a harsher sentence that higher displays the ache of the Kessler household, we respect the authorized course of,” Farkas stated in a press release. “Our hope is that as we speak’s information helps deliver closure to his household and provides our group the flexibility to reveal safely.”
Main questions swirled within the instant aftermath of the deadly encounter as witnesses from each side of the protest gave conflicting statements about what led to Kessler’s fall and who the aggressor was.
Throughout a preliminary listening to, prosecutors offered DNA proof matching blood discovered on the rim of Alnaji’s megaphone to that of Kessler. A Ventura County health worker testified that Kessler died from blunt pressure trauma attributable to the blow from the megaphone and the next fall to the pavement.
Though there was proof of antisemitic speech on the protest, the district legal professional’s workplace didn’t discover proof that Alnaji had participated on this and declined to file hate crime costs.
Kessler was a longtime member of Thousand Oaks’ Temple Etz Chaim and an advocate for liberal causes who usually penned his opinions in witty letters to the Thousand Oaks Acorn. He had attended the protest carrying an Israeli flag in response to a name from a neighbor to indicate assist for the state of Israel at an intersection that had turn into a gathering level for Free Palestine rallies.
“The tragedy of Paul Kessler’s dying reaches many ranges,” Farkas stated Wednesday. “Not solely was he the primary Jew to die through the Israel-Hamas protest motion after October seventh, however he did so whereas peacefully supporting his folks.”











